Title: Developing Culturally Responsive Educational Systems, Resources, and Practices
1Developing Culturally Responsive Educational
Systems, Resources, and Practices
National Center for Culturally Responsive
Educational Systems
Shelley Zion August 16, 2005 Wisconsin Summer
Institute
2NCCREStNational TA D Center
- Provide technical assistance and professional
development to - close the achievement gap between students from
culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds
and their peers, and - reduce inappropriate referrals to special
education.
3Outcomes
? the use of prevention and early intervention
strategies, ? inappropriate referrals to special
education, and ? the of schools using
effective literacy and behavioral interventions
for students who are culturally and
linguistically diverse.
4Features of Culturally Responsive Educational
Systems
- Culture, language, heritage, and experiences of
ALL students and families are - valued
- respected and
- used to facilitate learning and development.
5Features of Culturally Responsive Educational
Systems
- Practitioners and Administrators assume
responsibility for the learning of ALL students
from ALL cultural and linguistic backgrounds. - Every student benefits academically,
socioculturally linguistically. - Access to high quality teachers, programs,
curricula, and resources is available to every
student.
6Whats in an Educational System?
7What is Systemic Change?
- SimultaneousRenewal in Multiple Layers of the
System
8Changing the vision
- Eliminating disproportionality is an adult
issue. (Joseph Olchefske, Superintendent of
Seattle Schools) - We must change the way we think about ability,
competence and success and encourage schools to
redefine support so that the need to sort
children is reduced. (Testimony before the
Presidents Commission, 2002)
9Why Culturally Responsive Educational Systems?
- Access
- Participation
- Equity
10Questions-
- What do you see as barriers to access,
participation, and equity in your systems? - What are you doing that is assisting with the
removal of those barriers? - What do you need to continue to create
opportunities for access, participation, and
equity?
11Building Culturally Responsive Systems
12Engaging People
13Questions-
- What works to ensure presence, participation, and
emancipation? - What challenges exist?
14Examining Policies
Federal
- Educate
- Inform
- Equitable
- Emancipate
- Create Access
State
District
15Questions-
- Think about a current policy that you are
implementing in the district/school- what have
you done to educate? Inform? Ensure equity?
16Examining Practice
- Discourse
- Tools
- Collaboration
- Evidence
17Questions-
- Choose an area of your practice- think about the
tools you need, the opportunities for
collaboration and discourse, and the evidence
that this is an effective practice
18So What Should be the Focus of Change?
19How do we know what to change or where to begin?
20Data about People
- Who are our students?
- What are their concerns?
- How are they doing?
- Are different groups of students experiencing
different levels of success? - What do we know about their school experiences?
21People
- Students- who is achieving? Who is not? Who is
in what programs? - Families- What is involvement? Who is involved?
Who is not? - Communities- Have you identified community
assets? Are community partners represented in
all conversations? - Practitioners- Do practitioners have time to
work together? Do practitioners receive support,
resources, and training? Is there a plan in
place to recruit diverse practitioners? How do
practitioners become aware of the importance of
culture- their own, and others? - Administrators- Do administrators come together
to share successes and challenges? Do they have
support, resources, and training? Are
administrators committed to leading in a
culturally responsive educational system?
22What do we know about practices?
- What is being taught and how?
- What is being learning and by whom?
- What are the contexts for learning?
- Do they differ from classroom to classroom?
- From school to school?
- Why?
23Practices
- Curriculum
- Instruction
- Assessment
- Pre-referral and referral processes
- Discipline
- Graduation and post-secondary supports
24What do we know about policies?
- How do classroom policies affect different kinds
of learners? - How do school policies affect different kinds of
learners? - What about district or state policies?
- What policies help practitioners reach out to
their students?
25Policies
- Explicit
- Flexible
- Equitable
- Evaluated
- Revised
26Culturally Responsive Practices What are they?
27Personal
- Individuals value cultural diversity as well as
cultural similarities, holding respect for the
unique characteristics of each individual, and
acknowledging the similarities we all share as
well. - Individuals believe in the relevance of learning
about and valuing customs, traditions and beliefs
he or she is unfamiliar with, in order to
understand and appreciate cultural diversity
better. - Individuals see themselves as agents of change,
assuming the role and responsibility of providing
students with empowering instruction, being
committed with the political nature of their
work. - Individuals are aware of the influence cultural
knowledge that children bring to school has in
their way of thinking, behaving, being and
learning. - Individuals are interested in knowing about the
lives of their students, getting to know more
about students experiences outside school.
28Personal
- What needs to happen in order for educators to
develop these beliefs?
29Professional Practices
- Values individuals cultural and linguistic
knowledge and skills, using them as resources for
moving ahead, instead of focusing on differences
or deficiencies - Holds high professional and personal expectations
for others - Treats others as competent, assuming their
success. - Encourages others to develop a broader and
critical consciousness about social inequalities
and the status quo. - Facilitates going beyond the constrained ways of
knowing, and a single version of truth. - Builds bridges between everyday experiences and
new ideas - Encourages individuals to apply cultural
knowledge in their work - Supports professional learning so that it becomes
a contextualized and meaningful experience. - Leads in multidimensional ways that surface
beliefs, feelings and factual information in
teaching practices.
30Professional
- What needs to happen in order for educators to
develop these skills?
31Institutional Practice
- Provide organization members with opportunities
to consume and create new knowledge, by embracing
a culture of inquiry. Active work as scholars
allows them to address problems or questions
through the systematic study of teaching and
learning. - Promote a collaborative environment, by providing
time for teams to share read and think together
about what they are doing and how it improves
cultural practice - Encourage and organize the use of staff resources
to gather and develop knowledge about culturally
responsive practices, inside and outside the
organization. - Make effective use of everyones time,
responsibilities and materials to provide
learning opportunities about culturally
responsive practices in daily work. - Embrace organizational values, beliefs and norms
that support culturally responsive professional
communities. - Adopt leadership styles that allow collaborative
work at the different administrative levels.
32Institutional
- What needs to happen in order for institutions to
change?
33Building Culturally Responsive Systems-
Committing to an Equity Agenda
34References
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responsive teaching and supervision A handbook
for staff development. New York Teachers College
Press. - Bowers, C. Flinders, D. (1990). Responsive
teaching An ecological approach to classroom
patterns of language, culture and thought. New
York Teachers College Press. - Gay, D. (2000). Culturally responsive teaching.
New York Teachers College Press - Hollins, E. (1996). Culture in school learning
Revealing the deep meaning. Mahwah, NJ Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates. - Irvine, J. Armento, B. (2001). Culturally
responsive teachers Lesson planning for
elementary and middle grades. New York
McGraw-Hill. - Ladson-Billings, G. (1994) The dreamkeepers
Successful teachers of African American children.
San Francisco Jossey Bass. - Ladson-Billings, G. (1995). But thats just good
teaching! The case for culturally relevant
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