Title: Culture Mismatch
1Culture Mismatch
- Teachers perceptions and assumptions of urban
children - Antoinette Miranda, Ph.D.
- Associate Professor
- The Ohio State University
2- The future of American society will be
determined in large measure by the quality of its
urban schools. - Pedro Noguera, 2003
3Cultural Mismatch Home-school incompatibility
- Many researchers have argued that teacher
preparation programs fail to adequately prepare
teachers for urban schools - Teachers backgrounds are often vastly different
from their students
4Culture Shock
- How do I work with these kids?
5Pedagogy of Poverty
- Instructional style that maintains the status quo
6We Cant Teach What We Dont Know
- Socially isolated from our students lives
outside the classroom
7Other peoples children are my children
- Would you want your child or a family member to
have you as a teacher?
8Understand the sociopolitical nature of Urban
Schools
9How we fail urban children
- Students from low SES, A-A, and Latino/a are
already 2 years behind other students by fourth
grade - By 12th grade poor and minority students are
nearly 4 years behind (Robelen, 2002) - National Center for Education Statistics (2001)
reported that in 1999, only one in 100 A-A
students at the end of high school could read and
comprehend specialized text
10Lack connectedness
- Perceive education has failed them
- No relationship
11Lack of Rigor
- Little is demanded
- Low expectations
12Students dont believe they control their destiny
- What happens to a dream deferred?
- Langston Hughes
13Educators rarely see themselves as contributing
to the problems
- The problems are generally viewed as outside of
their control
14 15Leave No Teacher Behind
- Know your students and the communities they
reside in
16Recommit to the mission
- Honesty question our assumptions
- Empathy connecting with the experience of
others. Listen to others stories
- Advocacy opening the circle of power to those
who have historically been marginalized by it - Action recognition that each choice we make has
implications for equity and social justice
17Change your assumptions about urban children
18Be open and appreciative of cultural differences
19High expectations?
20Use Cultural Mediators
21Become cross-culturally competent
- Awareness
- Knowledge
- Skills
22Examine your socialization
- Understand your own culture before you attempt to
understand another
23- Even the smallest victory is never to be taken
for granted. Each victory must be applauded,
because it is so easy not to battle at all, to
just accept and call that acceptance inevitable. - Audre Lorde
- American poet and writer
24Resources
- Campus and Classroom Making schooling
multiculturalCarl A. Grant Mary Louise Gomez - Thriving in the Multicultural Classroom
Principles and practices for effective
teachingMary Dilg - Turning on Learning Five approaches for
multicultural teaching plans for race, class,
gender, and disabilityCarl A. Grant Christine
E. Sleeter
25Resources cont
- Reclaiming Democracy Multicultural educators
journeys toward transformative teachingJaime J.
Romo, Paula Bradfield, Ramon Serrano - Affirming DiversitySonia Nieto
- Why do all the black kids sit together in the
cafeteriaBeverly Daniel Tatum - Crossing over CanaanGloria Ladson-Billings
26Resources cont
- Framework for understanding povertyRuby Payne
- Getting around BrownGregory Jacobs
- Social Class and School Knowledge1982 Harvard
Review, Jean Anyon - Unpacking the invisible knapsack, white
privilegePeggy McIntosh - The Dreamkeepers successful teachers of
African-American childrenGloria Ladson-Billings - We Cant Teach What We Dont Know White
teachers, multiracial schoolsGary R. Howard - Transforming Urban EducationJoseph Kretovics and
Edward J. Nussel
27Take the attitude of a student never be too
big to ask questions, never know too much to
learn something new.by Og Mandino
28- A teacher affects eternity he can never tell,
where his influence stops. - Henry B. Adams
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