Cultural Competency
Cultural Competency
Cultural Competency
Northeast and Islands Regional Educational Laboratory (LAB) The Education Alliance at Brown University is home to the Northeast and Islands Regional Educational Laboratory (LAB), one of ten educational laboratories funded by the U.S. Department of Educations Institute of Education Sciences. Our goals are to improve teaching and learning, advance school improvement, build capacity for reform, and develop strategic alliances with key members of the regions education and policymaking community. The LAB develops educational products and services for school administrators, policymakers, teachers, and parents in New England, New York, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Central to our efforts is a commitment to equity and excellence. Information about all Alliance programs and services is available by contacting: The Education Alliance at Brown University 222 Richmond Street, Suite 300 Providence, RI 02903-4226 Phone: 800.521.9550 Fax: 401.421.7650 E-mail: info@alliance.brown.edu Web: www.alliance.brown.edu
Authors: Elise Trumbull and Maria Pacheco Editors: Elizabeth Devaney and Julia Noguchi Designer: Sara Ladds
This publication is based on work supported by the Institute of Education Sciences (IES), U.S. Department of Education, under Contract Number ED-01-CO-0010. Any opinions, ndings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reect the views of IES, the U.S. Department of Education, or any other agency of the U.S. Government.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The development of The Teachers Guide to Diversity: Building a Knowledge Base was a true collaborative effort among numerous contributors, editors, and publications staff. We wish to thank Fran Collignon, Elizabeth Devaney, Jane Donnelly, Chad Fogleman, Margaret Freedson-Gonzalez, Lowry Hemphill, Erica Kenney, Alex Kozulin, Sara Ladds, Sharon Lloyd-Clark, Julia Noguchi, Sara Smith, Adam Urbanski, Cynthia Way, and Maria Wilson-Portuondo for their thoughtful review, contributions, guidance, and suggestions during the preparation of this guide. This guide builds on The Diversity Kit: An Introductory Resource for Social Change in Education, published by The Education Alliance in 2002. We also wish to acknowledge the support and collaboration of the many people who worked on the original Diversity Kit, including: Charles Ahearn, Deborah Childs-Bowen, Tom Crochunis, Maria Coady, Ken Dickson, Susan Erdey, Charlene Heintz, Joshua Honeyman, Kendra Hughes, Sherri King-Rodrigues, Maria Pacheco, Maggie Rivas, Brenda Rodrigues, Jessica Swedlow, Elise Trumbull, Kim Uddin-Leimer, L. David van Broekhuizen, Maria Wilson-Portuondo, and Belinda Williams.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 5 10 12 13 13 14 14 15 15 16 16 16 17 17 17 18 19 20 22 24 25 26 28
The Development of Mind in Activity Activity 3: Applying Activity Theory Information Processing Theory Behaviorism E. The Neurosciences and Education What Do We Know? Evaluating Some Common Assumptions Where Do We Go From Here? F. Notions of Intelligence Can Intelligence Be Dened and Measured? Is Intelligence General or Multiple? Is Intelligence Inborn and Fixed? G. Resources Print Materials Web Sites
29 30 32 33 34 34 36 39 40 40 41 44 45 45 46
47 50 51 52 54 57 59 60 62 63 64 65
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VII
The Culture of Poverty Home Environment Factors Maintaining High Expectations Detracking for Equity Intervening With Institutional, Cultural, and Individual Racism Racism and Ethnic Stereotypes Different Perceptions Taking Positive Action The Culture of School Promoting a School Culture That Works for Teachers and Students E. Resources Print Materials Web Sites
108 109 110 111 113 114 115 115 117 117 118 118 120 123 125 126 128 129 131 132 134 135 136 137 138 141 144 144 145 147
REFERENCES
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
What are the reigning theories of human development and cognition? How are human development and culture related? How does identity development intersect with achievement motivation? What is intelligence? How can our knowledge of human development inform our work as educators working with an increasingly diverse student population? What is known about how to work successfully with families from non-dominant cultural groups? In this volume of The Teachers Guide to Diversity: Building a Knowledge Base, we tackle these questions and more. The four sections we describe below collectively point to a vision of schooling that is both an ideal and a possibility. Many educational leaders have said that we now know what we need to do; we just need the will to follow through. In the rst part of this volume, Current Perspectives on Human Development, Culture, and Cognition, we review recent literature on these topics as well as interrelationships among development, culture, and learning. The prevailing perspective is sociocultural and constructivist, based in the philosophy, research, and theory of Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky. We show how human development is not only a function of biological, neurological, and cognitive growth; it is also a process largely mediated by and situated in social and cultural contexts. To understand human development and cognition, one must draw from multiple disciplines, such as cultural psychology, cultural anthropology, and sociology, among others. We present brief summaries that illustrate how each of ten disciplines has contributed to current understanding. In addition to supporting a sociocultural and constructivist view of learning and development, research increasingly indicates that intelligence itself is both multiform and changeable throughout life. Thus, there are good reasons to incorporate greater variety in teaching strategies and materials and to have high expectations for all students. The second part, Culture, Identity, and Schooling, examines how students healthy identity development and the ways schools foster that development are intimately related to their engagement in learning. Research shows a relationship among a sense of belonging (being accepted for who one is), achievement motivation, and learning outcomes. Identity can be complex, particularly for bicultural and mixed-heritage students. The messages students receive outside of their homesparticularly in schoolscan affect how they see themselves academically and interpersonally. For these reasons, we have included a whole section on the topic of identity. The third part, Culture in Teaching and Learning, moves from learning principles and standards that can guide high-level learning for all students to specics of culturally responsive pedagogy. We use the example of African American students to illustrate how cultural links can go beyond curriculum content to the ways instruction is organized in the classroom. Readers will see connections between this example and the more thorough treatment of African American language styles and use in the Volume II: Language. A substantial portion of this section addresses what might be called equity pedagogy, that is, approaches and strategies that have been identied as
necessary and useful in promoting equity. Among these are anti-racist education, high expectations, and moving beyond decit thinking. Finally, the section offers a vision of a positive school culture that works for teachers, students, and families. The fourth part, Culture, Families, Communities, and Schools, reviews research and promising practices related to involving parents in the schooling of their children. Immigrant families, others from non-dominant communities, and those living in poverty face particular barriers to school involvement, but there are ways around those barriers. As important as specic strategies may be, perhaps even more important is the stance that schools take toward families. Research and theory suggest that a strengths-based approach works best; identifying what families can do as opposed to what they cannot or wont do results in much better outcomes. We use Benards work on resilience, Molls concept of funds of knowledge (Moll, Amanti, Neff, & Gonzalez, 1992), and Bourdieus notion of cultural capital to think about ways we can capitalize on student and community strengths (Bourdieu, 1977).
Cultural Capital The human, social, and material resources that families can use to reach desired goals; sometimes the term social capital is used to refer to the social networks and institutional supports available in a given community (Coleman, 1988, cited in Diamond, 2000).
If we combine what the past two decades have taught us about how students learn with a more inclusive philosophythe belief that all students, not just a few, deserve a top-notch education, as called for by the federal No Child Left Behind Act of 2001our society can make great strides toward meeting the needs of all students and establishing a truly democratic society. Most important to the process of addressing the needs of learners from a wide range of backgrounds is a positive, ongoing process of exploration and constructive conversation among the professionals who serve such students and between professionals and students families.
In this part of Volume 1, we synthesize current views of human development, cognition, culture, and their interrelationships. This is a broad domain, indeed, and readers must bear in mind that our treatment of these topics can serve only as an orientation. Meaningful approaches to human development, for example, have become increasingly multi-disciplinarysomething we try to convey here by explaining contributions from several disciplines. Readers are encouraged to explore areas of particular interest further, and our recommended resources are intended to serve that purpose.
Human Development The pattern of age-related physical, cognitive, moral, social, and emotional changes humans undergo during their lives, as a result of biological and environmental inuences. Culture The total lifeways of a people; alternatively, a system of socially based models for thought and action that are unevenly distributed throughout a group; the lifeways or models for thought and action associated with an institution, such as the school. Example: The typical American school has an implicit set of values that represent a model for how to go about the daily business of schooling children or young adults. Among these are the valuing of individual mastery of knowledge and skills linked to a range of content standards and of individual demonstration of learning through individual assessments; an expectation that students learn best when grouped with age peers and (at secondary level) according to ability or performance in order to learn best; the belief that individual districts and teachers are responsible for determining the best ways to ensure that students meet standards. Cooperative learning is valued for promoting learning and helping students to learn how to work in groups, but students generally have individual responsibilities and receive individual grades. This adds up to an independent cultural model of schooling, which contrasts with settings where learning is a group matter, individual assessment is of less concern, and students may be mixed by age level, much as siblings are in a family where they help each other learn and accomplish tasks (a more interdependent cultural model).
Cognition Mental activity associated with knowing, perceiving, thinking, reasoning, problem solving, and remembering. Learning A change in the organization of ones mental structures caused by experience, which may be expressed by new behaviors. Stage Theories of Development Stage theories, such as those of Jean Piaget (1954, 1970, 1973) and Erik Erikson (1950, 1968) propose that human development occurs in identiable periods (stages) that are sequential and predictable and reect distinct and substantive changes in mental organization. Piagets theory, probably the most inuential theory of development in the 20th century, holds that there are four stages: 1) sensorimotor, during which the infant constructs an understanding of the world largely through interacting with it physically; 2) pre-operational, during which the child begins to use language and images to represent the world; 3) concrete operational, during which the child can reason about concrete events and objects; and 4) formal operational, during which the child (adolescent) begins to reason more abstractly and logically. Two important mental processes facilitate learning: assimilation, or the incorporation of new information into existing knowledge structures (schemata), and accommodation, or the adjustment of existing knowledge structures in order to respond to new information or learning.
Human development refers to the ways that people change systematically over timephysically, cognitively, morally, socially, and emotionallyas a result of biological and environmental inuences (Lerner, 1998; Santrock, 2002). In this volume, we are largely concerned with cognitive development, which is related to knowing, thinking, and learning. However, other aspects of development are also relevant to students success in school. For example, the complex construction of cultural/ethnic/racial/gender identity that becomes highly evident during adolescence is a product of several aspects of development and is an important factor in how children and adolescents see themselves as students (Steele & Aronson, 1995). We no longer speak strictly of child development, as if it were only in childhood that human beings develop. We know that development in all areas continues throughout a persons life, and hence many have turned to the terms human development or lifespan development. Culture has been referred to as the total way of life of a people (Kroeber & Kluckhohn, 1952, p. 24). This broad denition incorporates everything from modes of dress and cooking practices to cultural rituals, social customs, religious observances, and ways of communicating, thinking, and behaving. Shore (2002) has suggested thinking of culture as a system of socially based models for human thought and action that are variably distributed throughout a group, much in the way that there is biodiversity within any population (Rodseth, 1998). Shared social institutions (marriage, family organization, work, and schooling) form the basis for peoples mental models of how to act and think. For example, in some cultures, marriage means that women assume certain roles and men others; marriage is permanent except in case of death, or sometimes, when
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the man decides that the marriage is no longer desirable. Not every person within the group will share every model. These models tend to remain invisible because they are so familiar (Gallimore & Goldenberg, 2001). This way of conceptualizing culture helps to unify the bits and pieces often cited as components of culture, and it recognizes variation among individuals within a culture. Psychologist Sheldon White (in the Foreword to Cole, 1996) states: The words we speak, the social institutions in which we participate, the man-made physical objects we use, all serve as both tools and symbols. They exist in the world around us; they organize our attention and action in that world and, taken together, they create alternative worlds. (p. xiv) Whereas culture seems to include virtually everything bearing on peoples lives, in this volume, we focus more on the ideational or symbolizing aspects of culture. We take this cognitive approach (Fetterman, 1989) because our interest is mainly in those aspects of culture most related to cognitive development and schooling: beliefs, values, knowledge, and ways of acquiring and demonstrating knowledge. We also show how cultural values and beliefs are reected in parents ethnotheories of how children learn and in their child-rearing practices. Cognition can refer both to the set of processes involved in learning and the state of ones knowledge and understanding. Cognitive processes entail the perceptual (auditory, visual, and so forth), memory and organizational processes related to encoding and retrieval of memories, reasoning, and problem solving. Education focuses mostly on cognitive development, though all aspects of development are intertwined. As children develop, their cognitive processes become more complex and sophisticated (Woolfolk, 2005). They are increasingly able to see relationships among concepts and mentally organize them much more efciently (Bransford, Brown, & Cocking, 2000). Early in development, children may have excellent memory for familiar routines, but as they get older, they can use language to represent this knowledge to themselves and manipulate it mentally outside of its original context (Nelson, 1997; Vygotsky, 1978). As Nelson notes: In many ways language is the key to critical aspects of cognitive change. The dramatic transformations in childrens thinking between the ages of 3 and 5 years are a function of the new potentials that language makes possible both cognitively and communicatively. The child can begin to understand anothers point of view as represented in the others expression of her understanding, and can supplement her own experientially based system of knowledge with knowledge gained indirectly from presentations of others (p. 112). Learning is any change in the organization of ones mental structures. Change may occur as a result of explicit teaching or as the result of experience, observation, or self-instruction. Even learning a single new word results in some reorganization of a learners mental lexicon: The new word is logged in memory not just as an individual piece of information but also in relation to other words in his or her vocabulary (Sigman & Cecchi, 2002). Learning and development occur in reciprocal transactions (Parrila, Ma, Fleming, & Rinaldi, 2002); that is, they are highly interactive and mutually supportive. Critics of the grand theories of human development (e.g., Piagets) have frequently pointed out that development is heavily inuenced by learning, and that learning occurs through experiences
in a cultural context (Greeneld, 2000; Rogoff, 2003). Practices in Western schooling, which children enter by age 5 or 6, have a great deal to do with the typical course of early childhood development. As Rogoff notes: Differences in development are often considered to be differences in the rate of maturation along a natural developmental time course, perhaps sped up or retarded by generic environmental circumstances. Such an approach overlooks the near complete association of age with the specic experience of schooling in nations where school is compulsory. (Laboratory of Human Cognition, 1979, cited in Rogoff, 2003, p. 171). Piagets broad stages (sensory-motor, pre-operational, concrete operational, and formal operational) can be used to understand changes in childrens thinking from early childhood through adolescence in a very large range of cultural settings (Cole, 1996; Greeneld, 2000; Piaget, 1954). The challenge lies in how to get at the childs thinking. As Cole and colleagues note in an early study, Cultural differences in cognition reside more in the situations to which particular cognitive processes are applied than in the existence of a process in one cultural group and its absence in another (Cole, Gay, Glick, & Sharp, 1971, p. 233, cited in Cole, 1996, p. 80). For instance, Greeneld has shown how Zinacantec mothers in Chiapas, Mexico, sense when their daughters are ready to move from a toy loom for weaving to a regular loom that requires the mental transformations associated with concrete operational thinking. Greeneld observes, If one thinks of Piagetian stages as age-dependent sensitive periods, then learning how to set up a real loom using a warping frame can be seen as an activity that actualizes concrete operations in a culture-specied form (p. 253).
A. A MULTIDISCIPLINARY ENDEAVOR
Investigating and understanding relationships among human development, learning, culture, and education are multidisciplinary endeavors. Disciplines such as educational psychology, developmental psychology, cognitive psychology, cultural anthropology, educational anthropology, cultural psychology, cross-cultural psychology, the neurosciences, sociology, and sociolinguistics (dened in Figure 1) have contributed to our current understanding of these relationships. In this volume, we draw from theory and research in all of these disciplines in order to provide a broad understanding of relations among human development, culture, and cognition. The implications for education are not always immediately clear, but we will guide the reader to approaches and practices that many lines of evidence suggest are justiable and effective.
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Cole, 1996, p. 1
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Research that can inform effective schooling practices may draw upon foundational knowledge in two or more of these disciplines. For example, the research of Lipka and colleagues in Alaska, who are developing culturally responsive mathematics curricula and instructional practices for Yupik students (Lipka, with Mohatt & The Ciulistet Group, 1998; Lipka & Adams, 2004), incorporates learning from cultural anthropology, educational psychology, and sociology. These researchers use ethnographic interviews (a tool of anthropology) to learn about traditional mathematics and science practices. They use educational psychology research methods to design instruments, train teachers, and evaluate the impact of new curriculum. And they use sociological knowledge of the community to understand the roles of people and institutions in relation to education. The interdisciplinary nature of some of the recent contributions to education is illustrated by the scholarly path of Howard Gardner, best known for his theory of multiple intelligences (1988, 1999). Gardner, who focused on history, psychology, and sociology as an undergraduate, earned his doctorate in developmental psychology and specialized in cognitive psychology and its implication for education. He has also conducted neuropsychological research, notably on how the right hemisphere is involved in language (Winner, n.d.). In addition, methods from one discipline have been borrowed to suit the needs of another: Ethnography, for example, has been borrowed from anthropology to study educational phenomena (Freedman, Simons, Kalnin, Casareno, & The M-Class Teams, 1999; Lipka et al., 1998; Lipka & Adams, 2004; Trumbull, Greeneld, Rothstein-Fisch & Quiroz, 2001). It can be convincingly argued that a good understanding of human development and cognition requires integrating knowledge from the domains listed above with others, such as linguistics (e.g., how language can be characterized), psycholinguistics (e.g., linguistic processes involved in oral and written language use), and history (e.g., studies of migration patterns). In fact, the research of Lipka and colleagues, mentioned above, incorporates a historical dimension as well because the traditional number system of the Yupik has interacted with that of Russians and others who migrated to what is now Alaska, beginning around 1740.
EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY
Research in the realm of educational psychology has shed light on many topics related to teaching and learning, such as how: children and adults learn in different kinds of educational settings (Bernard et al., 2004). various grouping patterns work with students from different linguistic backgrounds (Cohen & Lotan, 1994; Slavin & Madden, 1999). motivation operates (Ryan & Deci, 2000; Stipek, 2002) and how it may operate differently, depending on student background (Cokley, 2003; Rothstein-Fisch & Trumbull, 2005). teachers can support the growth of students metacognitive processes (Pressley, 2002). those processes transfer from one language to another in the course of learning to read (Garcia, 2000). different testing formats affect the performance of English language learners (Abedi, Lord, Hofstetter, & Baker, 2000).
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COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
Cognitive psychology, with its emphasis on mental processes and structures, has provided insights on how: students remember what they learn (Anderson, 1995). readers mentally organize what they read in order to comprehend and remember (Jimnez, Garcia, & Pearson, 1996; Rumelhart, 1980). learners perceive and represent problems and self-regulate (Glaser, 2000). learning to spell in English is inuenced by ones home language (Fashola, Drum, Mayer, & Kang, 1996). mental images facilitate learning and memory (Paivio, 1990). new learning is built on what one already knows (Bransford, Brown, & Cocking, 2000). people learn by doing and the nature of the knowledge they need to do so (Lesgold & Nahemow, 2001).
One of the most important ndings of cognitive psychology research is that learning does not proceed exclusively from low-level to higher level concepts; children can also grapple with complex ideas before they have mastered basic skills (Ceci, 1996; Resnick & Klopfer, 1989). This nding has implications for students who are thought to need remediation. Such students also need curriculum that challenges them to think. New theories of intelligence have come from cognitive psychologists (Sternberg, 1998) as well as from those trained in other disciplines who have a strong interest in cognitive aspects of development (Gardner, 1988, 1999). We discuss several of them below.
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
From the eld of developmental psychology, research can help educators understand how students develop intellectually (Bruner, Olver, & Greeneld, 1966; Flavell, Miller, & Miller, 1993; Piaget, 1954), socially and emotionally (Eisenberg & Mussen, 1989), and morally (Kohlberg, 1969; Turiel, 1998), and physically (Santrock, 2002) during the school years. This eld of study helps us understand particular aspects of developmental phenomena in which all facets of development seem to converge, such as identity formation (Erikson, 1968). Yet, as Cole (1996) suggests, it is difcult to consider any aspect of human development outside of a cultural context, and identity development is a powerful illustration of that observation (see, e.g., Sheets & Hollins, 1999). Therefore, characterizations of development as universal are suspect, and educators will want to turn to theorists who take a cultural perspective (Bruner, 1996; Greeneld, 2000; Rogoff, 2003; Weisner, 2005).
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NEUROSCIENCES
The neurosciences, particularly the study of brain behavior and brain-learning relationships (neuropsychology), have helped educators understand the brain as an organ whose development is affected by interaction with the environment (Caine & Caine, 1994; Diamond, 2001; Diamond, Rosenzweig, Bennett, Lindner, & Lyon, 1972; Kleim, Viz, Ballard, & Greenough, 1997). Also, research has yielded information about critical periods, which are time-limited windows of opportunity related to the development of sensory processes like sight (Hubel & Wiesel, 1965) as well as higher order processes like language (Lenneberg, 1967; Pinker, 1994). A third area of research that has resonated with educators is research on differences between the left and right hemispheres of the brain. For example, in most people, the left hemisphere is specialized for linguistic processing and the right for spatial processing (Elman et al., 1997). Fourth, brain research (much of it on non-human primates) has revealed the plasticity of brainsparticularly
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young ones (Elman et al., 1997). What is meant by plasticity is that areas or structures usually devoted to one kind of processing can shift to new functions, so that a child suffering damage to the left hemisphere might develop language-processing abilities in the right hemisphere. These ndings, among others, have spawned a plethora of brain-based educational interventions, many of which are questionable from a scientic perspective (Bruer, 1999). We devote a section below to examining what neuroscience has to offer the educator.
SOCIOLOGY
A sociological perspective is informative because humans are social creatures, and much of their learning is situated within groups of various sizes and kinds (Bronfenbrenner, 1979). Sociologists study group structures and relationships, from peer dyads to social institutions. They explore the inuence of social and economic conditions on the lives of individuals and groups, considering such factors as status, power, poverty, racism, and politics (Rosenthal & Jacobson, 1968; Werner, 1990). Sociological research has broadened our understanding of the dynamics of heterogeneous groups in the classroom (Cohen & Lotan, 1994); the nature and sources of student resilience (Werner, 1996); how social factors and race interact to affect academic achievement (Ogbu, 1992, 2003); and the ways social policies, such as racial segregation, have affected schooling for particular students (Guajardo & Guajardo, 2004). Theories of change as related to schools are fundamentally sociological, focusing on how groups and institutions operate (Fullan, 1991).
SOCIOLINGUISTICS
Sociolinguistics, a sub-eld of linguistics, is particularly useful to education because of the prominence of language in the learning process and distinct differences in how children are socialized to use languagedifferences that may matter in the classroom (Erickson & Mohatt, 1982; Heath, 1983; Lee, 1995; Wolfram, Adger, & Christian, 1999). Sociolinguistic research on cross-cultural communication can be applied to the understanding of teacher-parent talk, when the teacher is from one background and the parent another (Greeneld, Quiroz, & Raeff, 2000). Interpreters who share a parents cultural background often help to interpret not only the language but also the cultural context, for example, the expectations behind the words of a teacher or parent (Lopez, 2002). See Communication in the nal part of this volume, Culture, Families, Communities, and School, for information on this topic. Classroom communication is discussed in the volume on language.
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ALL LEVELS (FROM CELL TO SOCIETY) FORM THE CONTEXT FOR DEVELOPMENT
[I]ndividual development involves the emergence of new structural and functional properties and competencies at all levels of analysis (e.g., molecular, subcellular, cellular, organismic) of a developmental system, including the organism-environment relational level (Lerner, 1998, p. 5, synthesizing Gottlieb, 1992). Development is caused by the relationships among these elements in a larger context that includes many layers of social organization, from family through institutions in the wider society, such as schools and government (Bronfenbrenner, 1979). To understand an individuals development, one must consider the relations among all of these levels. Educators may not need to consider a students molecular life (though some developmental issues involve a persons chemistry), but they do need to understand the student as developing within his or her family, community, and other social contexts.
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Emergence The process of coming into existence over a period of time. Readiness The condition of being prepared; in development, the condition of being equipped to engage in certain learning experiences.
Conceptions of human development as the maturation of skills and abilities according to a biological schedule are linked with the notion of readiness. The term is probably most associated with reading, although kindergarten children in many school districts are still given general readiness tests, such as the Metropolitan Readiness Test or the Gates-MacGinitie Readiness Test, to determine whether they are ready to learn to read, write, and do arithmetic. Alphabet and number knowledge, motor skills, and ability to identify visual patterns are typical targets of assessment. An overview of issues related to kindergarten readiness testing concludes that such tests have some predictive validity vis--vis kindergarten performance but not beyond that grade (Mehafe & McCall, 2002). The term emergence is associated with a focus on processes of development and reects the view that children (and adults) often gradually attain the skills and understanding necessary to engage in a particular kind of task, such as reading. The seeds of mature prociency in a domain are sprouting long before they come to full fruition. Literacy theorists have coined the term emergent literacy to refer to childrens developing understanding that print encodes word and meaning (Strickland & Morrow, 1989; Teale & Sulzby, 1991). Very young children often have some knowledge about literacy, for example, that books are sources of information or entertainment, that the print somehow represents spoken words, or that books in English open from right to left and proceed from left page to right page. A child who knows these things may still perform poorly on a readiness test that requires differentiation among letter forms or sequences yet be quite ready to learn such things. The fact that readiness tests in kindergarten are not longer range predictors suggests that experience and learning are more important determinants of the childs skill level.
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A dynamic approach to assessment is highly compatible with a developmental view of students and suggests that abilities emerge rather than appear full-edged. This method of assessment, compatible with Vygotskian theory, emphasizes what a student knows and can do with and without assistance and how he or she learns best (Feuerstein & Feuerstein, 2001; Grigorenko & Sternberg, 1998; Pena, 2001). Focusing on how to determine both the students current level of functioning and the students potential for learning, the teacher interacts with himsometimes probing, sometimes prompting. The student is tested, taught, and retested; during the process, the teacher or examiner evaluates how the student engages with the task. Typical testing assesses only the students actual level of functioning; dynamic assessment attempts to identify what Vygotsky termed the students zone of proximal development (ZPD), that is, what he or she is ready to learn next (Chaiklin, 2003; Pena, 2001; Vygotsky, 1986). The ZPD is the developmental level at which a student can perform successfully with the aid of a more competent person. It can be thought of spatially as a place where students engage in learning through interaction with teachers, artifacts, or more capable peers. More recently, scholars have extended the notion of ZPD to a third space, that is, a hybrid space created when students interact with teachers or peers while engaged in learning (Gutirrez, Baquedano-Lpez, & Tejada, 1999; Gutirrez, Rymes, & Larson, 1995). These scholars conceptualize this as a space in which alternative and competing discourses and positionings transform conict and difference into rich zones of collaboration and learning (Gutirrez et al., 1999, p. 286). Some research has shown that with preschoolers whose language experiences do not parallel those of the dominant culture (African American and Puerto Rican), dynamic oral vocabulary testing can reduce test bias (Pena, 2001; Pena, Quinn, & Iglesias, 1992). One reason appears to be that for children who have little experience with test-like questions, mediation by the adult helps them focus on critical features of the task at hand. When they do poorly, the examiner cannot know whether it is because they do not have the knowledge or skills or simply because they do not know how to respond in the expected way to an unfamiliar situation. Therefore, good assessment elicits student participation. Dynamic assessment is often used in conjunction with other assessment in order to get a full picture of a learners cognitive development. The childs behaviors or performance on tasks are assessed at different times, via different methods, in different settings (individual, group; in and
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out of the classroom; in the context of an instructional activity and independent of one), and with and without adult help. Such an approach yields a more realistic view of the learners competence in different contexts as well as his or her potential. It is certainly in line with recommendations in the eld of education, despite recent federal and state emphases on standardized, once-ayear testing (Anastasi, 1990; DAoust, 1992; Shepard, 1992, Stiggins, 1997; Valencia, Hiebert, & Aferbach, 1994; Wiggins, 1993; Wolf, Bixby, Glenn, & Gardner, 1991). Dynamic assessment is a powerful complement to the standardized testing in which virtually all districts engage.
Cultural Ecology The study of the ways human groups relate to their environment, including the physical, economic, social, historical, and cultural environments. Ecological Niche The role or position of a group within an environment; different groups nd particular roles that allow them to co-exist with others in the same environment, for example, not to compete for the same resources. Ecocultural Relating to cultural aspects of a person or groups functioning within a particular ecological niche. Ethnotheory The implicit concept of human development held by lay people (as opposed to psychologists); an implicit denition of the ideal child and beliefs about what socialization practices will produce this ideal (Greeneld et al., in press, p. 6).
Weisner (2002) argues, The cultural pathways in which human development occurs constitute the most important inuences shaping development and developmental outcomes (p. 276). Weisner, who takes an ecological approach to human development, describes cultural pathways as being the everyday routines that families and children engage in that foster a particular course of development. These daily sets of activities crystallize culture because they reect the goals and values of people, make use of local resources, involve people in relationship to each other, and are carried out according to a script that reects the norms of the group for the particular activity (p. 275). These activities take place within a specic ecocultural contexta particular environment where people have shared cultural knowledge that is adaptive. Weisners perspective is grounded in activity theory, which we will explore further below.
Many development theorists have used this term (e.g., Weisner, 2005, and Greeneld et al., in press).
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Many developmentalists like Weisner talk about the ecological niche occupied by a cultural group, meaning the role or position of the given group within a larger society. Super and Harkness (2002) use the term developmental niche to represent the combination of physical and social settings, the customs of child care and child rearing that are maintained (and changed) by a group over generations, and the ethnotheories of caregivers about human development. These ethnotheories tend to have stability across generations in rural, subsistence-based ecological environments but to change more, even within a generation, in fast-changing technologically oriented urban ecologies (Greeneld et al., in press). Every cultural group has an unspoken set of prototypical goals for child and human development, representing an ideal to which child-rearing techniques are geared. This ideal child is quite culturally variable, and within the U.S., parents from different cultural orientations could be said to hold different concepts of the ideal child (Greeneld et al., in press). As suggested, it can be hard to recognize cultural values and beliefs because they tend to remain subconscious. One source of insight into cultural values is the proverbs of a group or society. For instance, It is the wise man who wants what he has communicates the value of accepting ones lot in life and making the most of ones talents or resources.
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Discussion
What impact have these proverbs had on you? Which proverbs stand for values that are typically thought of as dominant culture in America? What are those values? What other values are expressed by some of the proverbs? How could these different values lead to different behaviors in the classroom?
One ethnotheory (noted in cultures that value interdependence) is that children develop best, that is, they maintain close, respectful ties to family, when the mother treats her baby as an extension of herselfkept in close physical contact throughout infancyand relies on empathy and non-verbal means to communicate with the child (Azuma, 1994; Choi, 1992). Another ethnotheory (noted in cultures that value independence) is that children develop best when caregivers provide them opportunities to explore the environment and develop some psychological distanceand rely on verbal communication to bridge the physical distance (discussed in Greeneld et al., in press). Scientic theories of development, such as those of Piaget, Erikson, or Vygotsky, are simply more formal and explicit versions of ethnotheories, with their own cultural roots (Greeneld et al., in press). One of the most important and interesting differences between developmental orientations that pertain to both ethnotheories and scientic theories has to do with the relative emphasis on fostering scientic intelligence versus social intelligence in growing children. Piaget was interested in Western scientic thought as a goal of development (Piaget, 1963/1977), whereas an African counterpart, Nsamenang (1992), has developed a theory of development that emphasizes social prociency as a goal of development. Piagets approach is associated with a broad cultural dimension called individualism, whereas Nsamenangs is associated with collectivism. In the former, technical cognitive skills are seen as ends in themselves; in the latter, they are seen as the means to social goals (Greeneld et al., in press). These differences in emphasis can cause conicts in school settings when they remain invisible. Dasen (1984) reports that the central component of intelligence among the Baoul of Cte dIvoire is the willingness to help others. Likewise, among people living in the island nation of Chuuk in the Federated States of Micronesia, a prominent value is collaboration. According to a Chuukese educational leader, their language has many terms for collaboration, reecting the importance of pitching in without being asked to, group accountability, and the joy people expect to experience when they help others (Trumbull, 2005). Members of a sociocultural group are taught directly or indirectly that their culture-based ways of behaving and thinking are true or right (Garcia, 1994, p. 51). Geertz (1973) asserts that members of cultures go about their daily lives within shared webs of meaning. But culture itself is often invisible to its practitioners or members (Greeneld, Raeff, & Quiroz, 1996; Philips, 1983). That is, people may not be able to articulate or identify the elements that create the shared web of meaning that underpins their own cultural experience.
THE EDUCATION ALLIANCE at Brown University 23
24
Discussion
Share a value, belief, or idea from your cultural background with the group. Where might it have originated? How has it been functional, that is, how has it served members of the group well? Does it conict with a value, belief, or idea that is prevalent in the dominant U.S. culture? How did this value, belief, or idea inuence your experience and success as a student?
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refers to what society as a whole possesses and a cultural inheritance is what each individual possesses. In other words, each individual inherits or takes on some, but not all, of the cultural heritage of the group. When we encounter a culture that is different from our own, we are faced with a set of beliefs that manifest themselves in behaviors that differ from our own. Other peoples cultures are often more apparent to us than our own, and many educators have consequently learned a lot about other cultures but very little about their own. Our own culture is often hidden from us, and we may simply describe it as the way things are. Nonetheless, ones beliefs and actions are not any more natural or biologically predetermined than any other groups set of beliefs and actions; they have emerged from the ways ones own group has dealt with and interpreted the particular conditions it has faced. Cultural values inuence both human development (including language, values, perceptions, motivation, emotions, and interpersonal behavior) and schooling (how we teach and learn) (Greeneld, 1994; Heath, 1983; Lustig & Koester, 1999; Rogoff, 2003). However, as mentioned, cultural values tend to be subconscious, out of the range of scrutiny. It seems right, for example, to a preschool teacher to expect children to learn how to remove their outer clothing and hang it up in their cubbies. When a mother follows the child into the classroom to take care of those tasks, the teacher may worry that the child is being babied or made too dependent (Zepeda, Rothstein-Fisch, Gonzalez-Mena, & Trumbull, in press). However, from the parents perspective, she is both maintaining closeness within the family and modeling how to be a good, helpful adult (Greeneld et al., in press). This kind of scenario is, no doubt, repeated countless times across the nation daily. However, because the values underlying behaviors are never fully explored or named, teachers and parents may not have the opportunity to understand differences in their rationales and expectations. Neither set of values is superior, but they certainly are different and potentially conicting in cross-cultural settings like schools. The ways that schools are organized and carry out their perceived mission reect tacit values, culture-based styles of interaction, notions of how children learn best, and expectations for how students and their parents should behave. Some policies serve practical ends, such as the need to conserve resources or manage the daily life of schools, but even these are chosen within a context of culture-based beliefs.
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children and families can benet from understanding the nature of the social contexts in which learning takes place at home and in school, how they may place different kinds of demands on children, and how skills and approaches children are learning at home can be marshaled in service of learning in school. Unfortunately, most current reform efforts have not offered strategies for meeting students learning needs based on their life contexts and ways of learning (Gallimore & Goldenberg, 2001). In actuality, culture has most often been considered an external factor that interferes with formal schooling (Valencia & Solrzano, 1997). By understanding learning as a sociocultural process, we look to sociocultural research for insights into how to organize schools and instruction to meet the needs of students from many different cultural and linguistic backgrounds (Au & Kawakami, 1994; Gallego, Cole, M., & The Laboratory of Comparative Human Cognition, 2001; Greeno et al., 1996; Wozniak & Fischer, 1993; Zeichner, 1996).
Constructivism The cognitive theory that posits that learners actively develop new knowledge based on prior knowledge and new data; social constructivism emphasizes that this construction of knowledge is accomplished within a social and cultural context, using particular cultural tools; Vygotsky (often cited as the originator of social constructivism) stresses the importance of activity in context. Information Processing Theory The cognitive theory that claims that individuals actively take in and organize information for storage and retrieval by coding it in particular ways, using interpretive and memory strategies. Behaviorism The theory that learning can be inferred only from observable behavior; unlike cognitive theories, it does not rely on a theory of mind or infer mental operations from behavior; from the perspective of behaviorism, all behavior is learned through teaching by or observation of others, shaped by the use of rewards.
In the realm of education, the current, most inuential theory of how people learn is constructivism; however, information processing theory has contributed a great deal to our understanding. Behaviorism, which has proven less useful in understanding how people learn and develop, still has something to offer educators who work with students with developmental problems who seem to benet from the external shaping of behaviors that are dysfunctional. For instance, behavior modication has been shown to be useful in reducing the pica of developmentally disabled students. Pica is the consumption of nonfood items such as paste, glue, or paper (McAdam, Sherman, Sheldon, & Napolitano, 2004). In this section, we explore constructivism more deeply than information processing theory and behaviorism because of its current primacy and sway in the eld of education. Theories of intelligence have also played a strong role in shaping educators views of learning and teaching. We discuss several such theories later on.
THE EDUCATION ALLIANCE at Brown University 27
CONSTRUCTIVISM
A constructivist view means that learners must make connections between their own understandings and new ideas and information from the environment, such as the classroom (Bransford, Brown, & Cocking, 2000). They need to actively engage in the work of establishing the relationship between curriculum and meaning in their daily lives. Whether students are learning by observing expert models (as in an apprenticeship approach) or participating in traditional teacher-directed instructional programs, they are actively constructing their own meanings (Bransford et al., 2000; Cobb, 1994; Perkins, 1999; von Glasersfeld, 1992). Vygotsky and Piaget can be considered the fathers of constructivism, but neither used the term itself (e.g., Piaget, 1954; Vygotsky, 1986). However their versions of constructivism are quite different from each others. Whereas Piaget emphasized the childs independent exploration of his or her environment, Vygotsky emphasized mediated interactions. Vygotskys approach stressed the importance of the childs interactions with adults and peers in promoting cognitive growth. Learning, in his view, was an eminently social act, particularly in early development. From Vygotskys perspective, active mediation by a more competent other ensures that children do not form misconceptions; Piaget accepted the notion that the misconceptions sometimes resulting from independent exploration could be corrected later by education. Recent research on mathematical education of young children supports the belief that early instruction about the properties of numbers can prevent a common error that children makeassuming that the properties of whole numbers can be applied to all numbers (Schmittau, 2003). That error leads to widespread problems in dealing with fractions, an issue many teachers have confronted: Fractions do not behave the same way whole numbers do, for instance, when they are multiplied. Acknowledging the learners active role does not diminish the important role of the teacher, but rather suggests that he or she must understand the students point of view and prior knowledge in order to cultivate the most powerful learning experiences (Fitzgerald & Graves, 2004; George, Raphael, & Florio-Ruane, 2003; Tharp et al., 2000). In fact, the teacher is immeasurably important as a mediator or facilitator of learning who assists the learner in identifying and improving his or her cognitive processes and guiding the student into the zone of proximal development (Vygotsky, 1978). This guide is grounded in the sociocultural theory of Vygotsky, who suggested (1) that human development and learning occur as a result of an individuals interaction with society and (2) that this interaction takes place in and is informed by a particular cultural context. Vygotskys work emphasized that individuals make sense of their world through discourse and interaction with others. Thus, knowledge is socially constructed and situated in culture. Vygotsky further posited that learning occurs when students are effectively scaffolded to acquire new knowledge; this happens as a result of classroom interactions. In scaffolding, teachers or more capable peers identify the knowledge that students already have and bridge that knowledge to acquire new knowledge. Scaffolding occurs in the zone of proximal development (ZPD). Like Howard Gardner, Vygotsky has inuenced thinking and research in several sub-disciplines of psychology, sociolinguistics, and education. His intellectual descendants include many whose work we cite in this volume: Jerome Bruner, Michael Cole, Reuven Feuerstein,3 Ronald Galli3
According to Vygotskian scholar Alex Kozulin, Feuerstein came to his notion of mediated learning without having read Vygotsky (Kozulin, personal communication, September 18, 2005), yet Feuersteins theoretical framework of learning shares many features with Vygotskys.
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more, Howard Gardner, Claude Goldenberg, Patricia Greeneld, Kris Gutirrez, Barbara Rogoff, Roland Tharp, Thomas Weisner, and James Wertsch, among others. All of these theorists have expanded on Vygotskys version of sociocultural constructivism in their own ways.
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Community/Participants
Object/Product
Outcome/Learning Goals
Teachers Role
30
Rules of Participation
Cultural Tools
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Discussion
Is it useful to analyze an instructional activity this way? Why? If you were to change one element of the activity structure, how would it alter the dynamics of the activity? Why would it be advisable to vary the ways of organizing instruction? What new ideas did you get for organizing your own instructional activities?
Information processing theory has captured important aspects of the learning process; it has also been the key theory informing development of computer programs that help computers learn (Johnson-Laird, 1988; Schank, 1984; Schank & Colby, 1973). Like the constructivists, information processing theorists are interested in what goes on within the mind and brain. They are focused on the processes of learning rather than stages in development or the social contexts of learning. Therefore, their research attempts to identify and characterize the steps involved in performing mental tasks (Meece, 2002). Feuerstein, for example, has used information processing theory as well as sociocultural theory to design a program of assisted learning called Instrumental Enrichment, through which the teacher takes the student through progressively more complex applications of mental processes, such as comparison, spatial orientation and analysis, and making inferences (Feuerstein & Feuerstein, 1991). Information processing research has centered on attention; perception; encoding and storage of information in short-term, working, and long-term memory (Sweller, van Merrinboer, & Paas, 1998); and the metacognitive processes that regulate attention and higher cognitive processes (Anderson, 1995; LaBerge & Samuels, 1974; McClelland & Rumelhart, 1986; Pressley, 2002; Schank & Abelson, 1977). Some of the theoretical work in information processing has helped us understand aspects of reading comprehension (Pressley, 2002; Rumelhart, 1980), metacognition in general (Brown, 1987), and how chunking related information helps recall (Miller, 1956). Although human beings from all points on the globe have the same basic mental capacities, people vary in their approaches to such cognitive tasks as remembering and problem solving
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(Cole, 1996). Some differences are due to differences between groups in levels of formal education. When educational levels are equalized, many of those differences disappear (Greeneld & Bruner, 1966; Scribner & Cole, 1974). Other differences are due to what has traditionally worked best within a given environment. Cross-cultural studies on cognition present thorny problems because it is so difcult to devise tasks that are not culture bound or to avoid interpreting outcomes from ones own cultural perspective (Cole, 1996).
BEHAVIORISM
As noted in Figure 1, behaviorism is a theoretical approach to learning that focuses strictly on observable behaviors. Because the mind is not directly observable, it is not a subject of inquiry or speculation. Learning itself is dened as an observable and relatively enduring change in behavior as a result of experience (Eggen & Kauchak, 2004, citing Skinner, 1953). According to Skinner, even the most complex learning can be accounted for in behavioral terms; the learner observes, imitates, and elicits some kind of consequence from his behavior. Positive or negative feedback (reinforcement) helps condition ones behavior. There is no need to invoke an internal mind. Even language, the complex cognitive and social faculty that most distinguishes humans from other animals, was referred to as verbal behavior by Skinner, and according to him was explainable by behaviorist principles (Skinner, 1957). Current educational applications of behaviorism are most commonly found in special education settings where students behaviors interfere with their learning. Applied behavior analysis (formerly called behavior modication) can be used to help students become aware of and change specic behaviors, such as being aggressive or verbally inappropriate (Baldwin & Baldwin, 1998). A behavior is identied, its frequency of occurrence tracked on a chart, and the student is rewarded for a reduction in occurrences. Behavioristic strategies are seen in classrooms in the form of chalkboard lists of students who have misbehaved or bulletin boards exhibiting the best papers. These actions are intended to provide motivation for good behavior or reward excellence. In addition, the latter practice can also be used to show other students good models of writing and the like. Teachers may use praise to build students self esteem (Greeneld, Quiroz, & Raeff, 2000) or shape desirable behaviors (Slavin, 2006). Yet there are cultural differences in how praise is used or received (Greeneld, Quiroz, & Raeff, 2000; Lewis, 1995; Nelson-Barber & Dull, 1998). What constitutes reinforcement is by no means universal. Recent research with immigrant Latino third graders, for example, showed that a star chart to record students achievements in learning multiplication facts was not motivating until the students themselves reorganized it to monitor and recognize group achievement rather than individual achievement (Rothstein-Fisch & Trumbull, 2005). Rather than competing for individual rows of stars, the students volunteered to help each other ll in the whole chart and cheered each others accomplishments along the way. The notion of observational learning developed by Albert Bandura (1977) connects elements of behaviorism with elements of cognitive theory. Bandura theorized, Most human behavior is learned observationally through modeling: from observing others one forms an idea of how new behaviors are performed, and on later occasions this coded information serves as a guide for action (p. 22). Bandura identied four mental processes that are necessary for observational learning: attention, retention, reproduction, and motivation. An observers failure to match a models behavior may result from disruptions in any one of these processes.
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WHAT DO WE KNOW?
Researchers who have observed the surge of brain-based education tend to believe that at this time, the neurosciences do not tell us nearly as much as the elds of cognitive, developmental, educational, and cultural psychology do about teaching and learning (Bransford et al., 2000; Bruer, 1999; Gardner, 1999a). Neurobiologist Paul Grobstein, who conducts a summer institute for teachers on the brain at Bryn Mawr, says, My concern is that people tend to jump on particular research ndings and create great edices of new educational programs on them, whose weight they really cant bear (Gabriel, 2001, p. 1). Bransford et al. (2000) caution that educators need to be careful about adopting faddish concepts that have not been demonstrated to be of value in classroom practice (p. 114). Accordingly, the key ndings from neuroscience that have implications for education are (p. 115): 1. Learning changes the physical structure of the brain. 2. Structural changes alter the functional organization of the brain; in other words, learning organizes and reorganizes the brain. 3. Different parts of the brain may be ready to learn at different times. We also emphasize three other ndings of neuroscience that are discussed by Bransford et al.: 4. Not only do learning opportunities structurally alter the brain, but animal studies also suggest that learning in a social context alters brain structure more than isolated learning.
34 THE EDUCATION ALLIANCE at Brown University
5. Enriched environments in which learners (rats) have the opportunity to engage in different kinds of activities and have control over doing so build connections in the brain an outcome thought to be associated with greater learning (Turner & Greenough, 1985). 6. [T]he brain creates informational experiences through mental activities such as inferencing, category formation, and so forth. These are types of learning activities that can be facilitated (Bransford et al., 2000, p. 127). The last three conclusions are substantiated by psychological research and probably come as no surprise to any teacher. Point (5) actually consists of three propositions: Enriched environments are important, learners need to have the opportunity to engage in different kinds of activities, and learners need some control over their learning activities. Once again, educators will not be surprised at these conclusions. However, these points are wide open to interpretation. What is an enriched environment? What are the nature and number of activities that should be available (for whom, at what age, and in what context)? And nally, what is the right kind and amount of control for a learner to exercise? As readers will see as we discuss these ndings, there are no easy answers to these questions. Cultural and individual differences affect how they may be interpreted. As much as we emphasize the role of learning and development, in part to warn against reductionist conclusions about critical periods, it is equally important to acknowledge point (6) above, which reects a key principle of brain organization and function. According to Grobstein (personal communication, 7/17/05), Brains are not only the result of experience. They have characteristics that vary from person to person that are independent of experience. Moreover, they are capable of creating things independent of experience (emphasis added). Grobstein observes that development and learning are important, but they are far from the entire story. Brains effectively have two modules, the neocortex (where higher level mental activity takes place) and the rest of the nervous system, which manages a vast amount of information processing and adaptive behavior that is not conscious. The neocortex is responsible for our inner experiences, our imagining, thinking, analyzing, and turning our experiences into narrativesactivities that can go on without dependence on external input (Grobstein, 2005). Rich educational experiences, however, can certainly stimulate a students inclination to these kinds of neocortical activity. With regard to having control over ones learning activities, Kurt Fischer (cited in Gabriel, 2001), who is director of the Mind, Brain, and Education program at Harvard Graduate School of Education, states, If the animal is in control of the experience, then there is a much more powerful effect on brain structure than if the animal has no control and the experience just sort of happened to the animal (p. 3). James Zull, a biology professor at Case Western Reserve University, addresses the control issue in talking about how external rewards and punishments work (cited in Ohlson, 2003). Zull hypothesizes that extrinsic rewards like treats, grades, and recognition that are intended to motivate students sometimes have the opposite effect because the brain is hard-wired to maintain control over the bodys actions, and external rewards and punishments can be perceived as threats to the brains control (Zull in Ohlson, 2003, p. 32). Educational psychology research has shown the same reverse effect when the students control or self-determination is missing (Boggiano, Main, & Katz, 1991; Deci, Koestner, & Ryan, 1999, 2001). However, what a student subjectively experiences as control is culturally variable (Iyengar & Lepper, 1999). Neuroscientic research has also contributed to new conceptions of intelligence. It suggests that there are somewhat separable components of intellect (modules) that can be selectively damaged or developed (Bransford et al., 2000; Pinker, 1997). Stroke or injury can cause loss of language,
THE EDUCATION ALLIANCE at Brown University 35
visual-spatial abilities, motor skills, mathematical skills, interpersonal skills, and ability to plan complex acts. One or more of these capacities can be badly damaged while the others are spared. Gardner (1983) uses this fact as evidence in support of the existence of multiple intelligences.
With regard to the rst four assumptions, it is true that infancy and early childhood appear to be periods of rapid growth in synaptic connections in the brain; and basic sensory and motor developments are hampered if children receive little or no stimulation, as we will discuss later on. Brain damage in young children is less likely to cause permanent disability than in older people (the plasticity factor). However, the following facts must be considered as well in relation to these six assumptions (based on Bransford et al., 2000; Bruer, 1999; Elman et al., 1998; Gazzaniga, 1998; Johnson, 2001; Neville, 1995; Pinker, 1994): 1. Different parts of the brain mature at different rates, and some structural and functional brain changes continue into adolescence. 2. Part of brain development consists of selective pruning or inhibition of synaptic connections (adults have fewer connections than 2-year-olds), so sometimes less is more. 3. There is no straightforward relationship between the number of synaptic connections and a childs intelligence, except perhaps at the extremes (many fewer than average or many more than average).
36 THE EDUCATION ALLIANCE at Brown University
4. There is considerable normal variation in humans in the numbers of neurons and connections among them in the brain at different stages of development. 5. The studies on which estimates of brain growth are based are either animal studies or human studies with relatively small numbers of brains at any given age level. 6. Most learning takes place after the brain stabilizes, that is, after age 3 or later, and learning continues to reorganize the brain structurally and functionally.
7. The human brain exhibits plasticity throughout the lifespan, but young brains are more plastic; in other words, areas not normally dedicated to a particular function (such as language processing) can adapt to serve a new function. 8. There is no existing research than can guide parents or teachers as to when or how to train particular parts of the brain.
Critical Periods and Enriched Environments. The notion of critical periods is a contested and complex concept, and it is no wonder that popular misconceptions about it are abundant. A critical period is a span of time in development when a particular type of skill or faculty emerges in interaction with environmental input. If that period is passed without the appropriate input, the faculty either does not develop or develops incompletely. Two good examples of developmental abilities that are linked to a critical period are visual perception (Hubel & Wiesel, 1965) and language (Curtiss, 1977; Lenneberg, 1967; Pinker, 1994). Lack of exposure to various kinds of visual patterns can leave the developing organism incapable of perceiving such patterns throughout life. Temporary blindness in one or both eyes of a human infant can lead to the inability to use the eye(s) with full success, even after the blindness has passed (Bransford et al., 2000; Johnson, 2001). However, in the case of infants with cataracts in the early months of life, removal and exposure to visual patterns do result in rapid improvement in visual perception that compensates in part for the early visual deprivation (Johnson, 2001). Lack of exposure to language (a rst language) before puberty apparently results in the inability to acquire full linguistic prociencyparticularly in the realm of syntax (Pinker, 1994). There are very few cases to go on, but research suggests that it is not safe to assume a child can acquire the full language capacity past age six and a half or seven (Pinker, 1994).4 However, because of the paucity of cases and individual variation, generalizations are very risky. The most famous case is that of Genie (Curtiss, 1977), who was discovered in Los Angeles at the age of thirteen and a half, stunted in growth and speaking only a few words. Genie had been kept a prisoner in a small, sparsely furnished bedroom, tied to a potty seat most of the day, and kept in a virtual straitjacket by night. When she made noise of any kind (including vocalizations), her father would beat her. With the help of linguistic researchers and social service workers, Genie made some improvement physically and linguistically. However, she did not develop the normal syntax of even a four year-old; nor did she learn to use language in all of the ways a normal pre-schooler can, despite years of intervention. Alex, a 9-year-old boy who had never spoken, began to speak after his left hemisphere was removed to treat a rare brain disease (Vargha-Khadem et al., 1997). By age 15, Alex was judged
4
If a rst language has been learned, a person can learn another language, but usually without the ability to sound like a native speaker after the age of 12 or so. Of course, there is great individual variation in second-language learning.
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to have language normal for an 8- to 10-year-old. This case demonstrates the plasticity of the brain. It is important to remember that Alex had been exposed to language and had shown comprehension of single words and simple commands prior to the operation. Unlike Genie, he had been immersed in a normal environment full of language and ordinary daily experiences. Children whose early childhood is spent in an environment like an overcrowded orphanage, where there is little cuddling and holding, may not form secure attachments to their caregivers or develop normally emotionally and intellectually (Ainsworth, 1973; Bowlby, 1989). For instance, infants who had been placed in Romanian orphanages spent most of their day in cribs and received little direct touch or stimulation from caregivers exhibited social withdrawal and repetitive movements (Carlson, 1998). Lack of touch, it seems, is associated with high levels of a stress hormone involved in regulating brain development and behavior. The children with the most abnormal levels of stress hormone also showed the greatest delays in physical, mental, and motor development (Carlson, 1998, p. 12). Also important is the discovery that high-quality caregiving can reverse many of these early effects (Carlson, 1998). Educators and parents should bear in mind that the dramatic decits documented in the medical, neuroscientic, and psycholinguistic literature have occurred as a result of extreme deprivation. There is nothing to suggest that children need exceptional input in order to acquire the full range of sensori-motor and higher order mental abilities. Development is lifelong, and some patterns of localization of brain function in which particular areas are established to handle certain kinds of processing are apparently not fully set until age 15 or 16 (Neville, 1995). With regard to the issue of providing enriched environments to increase neural connections, there is no clear translation from research on rats to humans. Setting aside the issue of how we would actually know when we are increasing connections and neural branching within the brain, how do we dene an enriched environment? Fogarty (1999) suggests that practitioners interpret an enriched environment to include vast amounts of printed posters, writings, mobiles, and student artwork; classrooms overowing with beanbag chairs, rugs and pillows, and print materials; science corners replete with greenery, animals, and rock collections; and listening stations containing an array of musical selections. But this picture is based on a set of culturally based assumptions about what is enriching. Students from different backgrounds would most certainly be stimulated by different environmental input. There is no universal formula for deciding which pictures or posters, music, or other visual, verbal, or tactile input are most desirable to stimulate development. Some would argue that nature itself provides the most complex stimulation, with its variety of ora and fauna, complex visual patterns, changes in weather (stimulating many senses), natural environmental sounds, and opportunities to observe the growth and development of other organisms. We think that teachers would do best to begin with a challenging curriculum, inuenced by students interests and experiences, and design a classroom environment in service to that curriculuman environment that evolves with student input over time. Is enrichment in the home equivalent to electronic toys, a library of childrens books, private music lessons, and trips to museums? Surely this is a culture-bound notion of an enriched environment. Teachers may erroneously believe that students from non-middle-class backgrounds do not get the early stimulation they need to develop complex brain patterns. Suddenly, the decit theory is alive and well, and schools are relieved of the responsibility of ensuring the success of certain segments of the student population or, just as bad, charged with improving parents approaches to child rearing.
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Teaching to and Training the Brain. In general terms, neuroscientic research does suggest that students brains are best tapped and their minds best developed through active engagement in a variety of tasks over which students have some control. Note, however, that it is not only higher order thinking that students need to develop: Repetitive practice builds prociency in many tasks (Bransford et al., 2000.) It also appears that learning in a social context is particularly powerful. However, the neuroscientic literature does not provide explicit guidance for how to train the brain in any way that is currently meaningful for the educational arena. For instance, one cannot train the right or left hemisphere; the hemispheres work together, even though they do have some specialized functions in most people. The two hemispheres communicate via the corpus callosum, a network of white matter bers that ensures constant communication between them (Gazzaniga, 1998). Complex tasks engage many parts of the brain at once, and it would be difcult to selectively activate one hemisphere or the other. Nevertheless, the left/right brain distinction is useful as a metaphor for how schooling is structuredthat is, the left brain as a metaphor for linear/analytical/linguistic/logico-mathematical thinking and the right brain as a metaphor for holistic/visual/artistic thinkingand as such can be used to help teachers ensure that their teaching engages many different kinds of cognition and reaches many different kinds of students.
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F. NOTIONS OF INTELLIGENCE
Intelligence The ability to learn, that is, to problem solve and modify ones mental organization and behavior to adapt to new situations; sometimes characterized as a general learning faculty (designated by g) or a set of multiple learning faculties (MI).
There are several unresolved, troublesome issues related to the construct of intelligence that have implications for educators. Those issues include whether intelligence: can be reliably dened so that the denition applies cross-culturally. (What is it?) tests measure learning capacity or just what has been learned. (What can be measured?) is a general capacity or a set of multiple and distinctly different capacities. (Is it one thing or many?) is heritable, and to what degree? (Is it inborn?) is xed or mutable. (Can it be changed?) is useful as a construct in understanding human development and learning. (Is there a point in measuring it?)
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vary from one time of administration to anothereven on the same daybecause of changing factors in the student (including his state of mind or body) or in the setting (e.g., alone in the psychologists ofce or with peers in the classroom). Variability in performance within a student from one time to another or on tests of similar content reects problems in reliability (Salvia & Ysseldyke, 1995).5 Suppose that we want to gauge intelligence by a test that does not directly test the actual criterion: The same sources of potential error still prevail, and we are going to make what is called a second-order inference based on the students performance. Intelligence cannot be assessed directly; rather, it must be assessed through a nite number of tasks administered in a particular way at a particular time that are presumed to tap intelligence. Then, intelligence must be inferred from the resulting performance. Accordingly, a host of problems emerges with coming to agreement on what intelligence is, and another host of problems is involved in measuring it.
Variability in the scores assigned by different raters can also undermine reliability.
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sub-components: metacomponents equivalent to executive functions for planning, monitoring, and evaluating cognitive processes performance components for executing plans and strategies and processing information (e.g., encoding, remembering, retrieving.) knowledge acquisition components involved in acquiring and storing information/ constructing new knowledge
sub-components: novelty skills ability to respond effectively to novel demands in the environment automatization skills ability to engage in automatic information processing in the face of familiar demands
The metacomponents of analytical intelligence are parallel to metacognition, discussed earlier. Metacognitionsuch as knowledge, awareness, and control of cognitionis an outcome of reection (Wilson & Jan, 1999, p. vii). Perkins, a colleague of Gardner in Project Zero at Harvard, has identied three dimensions of intelligence: neural, experiential, and reective. He characterizes these three dimensions as contrasting causal factors that all contribute substantially to intelligent behavior (2002, p. 2). Neural intelligence is the biologically based efciency of the nervous system; experiential intelligence is the expertise in a particular domain (physics, carpentry, or violin playing, for example, to use Perkinss examples); and reective intelligence is composed of mental management, such as problem-solving skills, ability to monitor ones state of knowledge, and ability to use strategies to improve ones thinking.6 These skills are parallel to the metacognition skills mentioned earlier. Perkins (2002) notes that reective intelligence is the most likely target for improvement through education because it is the most learnable. Neural intelligence does not change much, and experiential intelligence in specialized areas takes years to build. Perkins and colleagues
6
Reection involves analyzing and making judgments about what has happened; it is integral to every aspect of learning. It precedes, is a part of, and occurs after learning (Wilson & Jan, 1999, p. vii).
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have devised strategies that can be used by teachers to help students build their thinking skills, in part by making thinking visible (Perkins, Tishman, Ritchhart, Donis & Andrade, 2000; Perkins & Tishman, 2001; Tishman & Perkins, 1997). They suggest that teachers can model and talk about ways of thinking, helping students to understand the differences among terms such as hypothesis, reason, evidence, possibility, imagination, and perspective (Perkins, 2002, p. 2). Gardner is probably the best-known MI theorist to educators, who have found his theory explanatory of the kinds of differences they have observed in their students and who have immediately seen how Gardners multiple intelligence theory can be applied to the classroom. Gardner moves beyond the usual candidates for components of intelligence, such as linguistic, mathematical, and spatial abilities or information processing skills like memory and retrieval, to include faculties that have usually been referred to as talents or personality variables. Originally, Gardner (1983) identied seven intelligences: linguistic, logico-mathematical, spatial, musical, bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal, and intrapersonal. In recent years, he added naturalistic to the list and has considered including both existential (dealing with the big questions of life) and spiritual (exemplied primarily by religious inclination) intelligences. Table 4 below summarizes the meaning of each of the eight intelligences Gardner has proposed.
Musical skill with the performance and appreciation of musical patterns as well as sensitivity to musical pitches, tones, and rhythms
Intrapersonal ability to be aware of ones feelings and motivations and use this awareness to regulate ones life
Multiple intelligence theory suggests that every individual possesses each of the eight intelligences to some degree, but that within any individual some of the intelligences are more highly developed than others. Hence, each person would have his or her own intellectual prole.
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As important as identication of the intelligences are the criteria Gardner has proposed for deciding whether a human capacity counts as an intelligence. Among these are its potential for selective impairment by brain damage (that is, that other abilities are not impaired at the same time), the existence of prodigies within the particular domain of intelligence, a distinctive developmental history, susceptibility to encoding in a symbol system, a core operation or set of operations, and support from testing and research (Gardner, 1983, pp. 62-69). The implications of the multiple intelligences view for education are profound. The notion of multiple intelligences, along with values of equity, constitutes the foundation of schooling designed to provide opportunities for all students to learn and achieve at high levels. When teachers recognize many different ways of being intelligent, they are likely to see more students as being capable. Moreover, [teachers] beliefs about students capability have enormous power. Learning depends on the degree to which classrooms foster students belief in their own competence and willingness to work hard (Oakes & Lipton, 1999, p. 228). Not all forms of intelligence have equal potential to provide students with economic opportunity. Whereas all forms of intelligence should be appreciated and fostered, more jobs rely on welldeveloped linguistic or logical-mathematical intelligence than on musical or bodily-kinesthetic intelligence (A. Kozulin, personal communication, September 18, 2005). As with past theory on learning styles, there is a risk associated with unexamined application of MI theory. If students become labeled kinesthetic learners, some teachers may focus on that aspect of intelligence to the detriment of other forms of intelligence that are essential for life success.
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G. RESOURCES
PRINT RESOURCES
Bransford, J. D., Brown, A. L., & Cocking, R. R. (Eds.). (2000). How people learn: Brain, mind, experience and school. National Research Council. Washington, DC: National Academy Press. These authors have successfully linked research on learning to classroom practice in an authoritative and readable book. The learning of both children and teachers is addressed, along with relationships between mind and brain, the design of learning environments, and effective teaching in different subject areas. Gardner, H. (1999). Intelligence reframed: Multiple intelligences for the 21st century. New York: Basic Books. This is the updated version of Gardners classic Frames of Mind and presents a relatively recent vision of multiple intelligences. Teachers have been inspired by Gardners theory and its implications for practice. Gardners writing is accessible and well organized. Greeneld, P. M., & Cocking, R.R. (Eds.). (1994). Cross-cultural roots of minority child development. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. This seminal volume contains 19 essays written by researchers in the elds of anthropology, sociology, and cultural psychology that address questions regarding the development and socialization of minority children and the interaction between ancestral cultures and dominant cultures in the United States and other countries. This is an excellent resource for educators who wish to explore the complexities of cognitive socialization of students from many different cultures. Hirsch-Pasek, K., & Golinkoff, R. M. (2003). Einstein never used ash cards: How our children really learnand why they need to play more and memorize less. New York: Rodale. Teachers, administrators, parents, child care professionals, and policymakers will all nd this book entertaining as well as enlightening. Written by experts with backgrounds in developmental psychology, linguistics, and education, the volume presents practical suggestions based on scientic ndings on child development in the areas of number, language, literacy, sense of self, and social intelligence. Kozulin, A. (1998). Psychological tools: A sociocultural approach to education. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Kozulin is a Vygotskian scholar who has both written about Vygotskys theory and conducted research on cognitive development, including a case study of the educational trajectory of Ethiopian immigrants to Israel. He explains how human symbol systems serve as psychological tools for solving problems and explores how learners ability to use such tools can be expanded through teaching.
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Rogoff, B. (2003). The cultural nature of human development. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. Rogoffs book takes a Vygotskian perspective on development and uses many examples from her own anthropological research to show how culture and development are intertwined. Rogoff resists categories, yet she shows how patterns appear within groups and are carried across generations. This book is richly illustrated and powerful in the ways it illustrates cultural concepts. Santrock, J. W. (2002). Life-span development (8th ed.). Boston: McGraw Hill. John Santrocks books on life-span development have been a mainstay of college courses for decades because they provide an excellent survey of the topic of human growth and development in all domains. This book is a basic resource that any educator is likely to nd useful over and again. Zull, J. E. (2002). The art of changing the brain: Enriching the practice of teaching by exploring the biology of learning. Sterling, VA: Stylus. Zull is a biology professor who has written a book specically for educators. He contends that a more exible and varied approach to teaching and learning is needed, such as connecting with what learners already know, using the senses in learning, and how feelings are part of the learning process.
WEB SITES
The American Psychological Association http://www.apa.org This Web site provides information about everything from early childhood development, bullying, kids and the media, race, testing issues to autism spectrum disorders and diversity in psychology. Serendip http://serendip.brynmawr.edu Serendip is forum where educators, neurobiologists (such as Dr. Paul Grobstein, who teaches courses on the brain to groups of educators), computer scientists, business people, and others discuss topics such as brain and behavior, science education, biological diversity. Many articles of interest can be downloaded, and readers can write to the site or post comments to different forums. The Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) http://www.srcd.org SRCD is a professional organization focused on all aspects of development, including those related to school-based learning. Visitors to the site can order SRCD publications and download summaries of articles. Topics include parent-child socialization among cultures, enhancing childrens ability to generalize knowledge, and adolescent coping, for example.
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Identity, the sense of who one is, is a complex developmental achievement that can be fostered or squelched by experiences in school. It is a sociocultural construction that has lifelong consequences and is subject to change on the basis of ones experiences in the world. Research suggests that students ethnic/racial/cultural identities interact with factors in public settings, particularly schools, to shape their academic identitythe sense of themselves as learners and students. For these reasons, we devote a major section of this volume to relations among identity, culture, and schooling.
Identity The basic sense of who one is, including ones beliefs and values; it entails a conscious or unconscious sense of afliation with one or more groups, including ethnic, racial, cultural, gender, language, religious, national, regional, and those associated with particular activities (sports, education, the arts, and so forth). Ethnicity Identity with a group on the basis of common culture and some combination of ancestry, geography, history, language, religion, and physical characteristics. Race Identity with a group on the basis of perceived physical characteristics, such as skin color and facial features; race is a socially constructed category, and recent genomic research nds no scientic support for the concept that human populations are discrete, non-overlapping entities (Jorde & Wooding, 2004). Stereotype A xed notion of the characteristics of members of a particular group, without regard for individual differences.
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A. CONTRIBUTORS TO IDENTITY
In this part, we explore contributors to identity development. We focus on a few key aspects, but there are others that are also importantif not equally sosuch as gender, sexual orientation, socioeconomic class, and religion, referred to as microcultures.
Microculture A social group that shares certain common attributes and values, such as religion, gender, or sexual orientation; the concept can apply to any social group, including one based on a common profession (e.g., the culture of medicine).
The elements explored here operate in such dynamic relation to each other that to evaluate the contribution of any one of them as isolated variables does not reect reality (Diamond, Randolph, & Spillane, 2004; Rogoff, 2003). Riger (1995) quotes the poet Audre Lorde as describing herself as a forty-nine-year-old Black lesbian feminist socialist mother of two, including one boy, and a member of an interracial couple (p. 149). To try to understand any one aspect of Lordes identity without regard for the others would be an oversimplication. And Lordes self-description certainly is a reminder that identity is above all multifaceted and personal. Third, we are limited by the linear nature of the written English language, which prevents us from expressing too many ideas in a single sentence without it becoming a run-on. Actually, Sign, the language of the deaf and hard of hearing, would probably be more appropriate because it can represent multiple frames of reference simultaneously through the use of space. Fourth, we have used the term culture very broadly at times (as in the title of the volume and its sub-sections) to encompass culture, race, ethnicity, and groups of people bound together by the language they use.7 In fact, many of the distinctions among peoples experiences can be characterized as cultural, because culture is involved in every part of life and is what guides ones values and beliefs. However, there are times when race, for example, has to be invoked to understand what is occurring in a social context. Finally, there is no simple hierarchical mapping of the elements we do focus on. For example, race subsumes several ethnic and cultural groups.8 But sometimes an ethnic group subsumes several races, languages, and geographic histories. For instance, non-observant Jews often maintain a sense of ethnic identity as Jewish, and they may be of any race and speak virtually any home language. A common native language spoken by peoples from different continents may be a strong factor in identity. Social groups existing within a nation such as the United States may share a common language (English) and aspects of cultural identity but have distinct ethnic identities associated with languages besides English and different histories. A cultural group,
The term cultural competence, when applied to teaching, refers to the ability to recognize differences among students and families, respond to those differences positively, and to interact with others in a range of sociocultural environments (Lindsey, Robins, & Terrell, 2003). Race is a social, not biological, category.
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like the culture of the deaf (Wilcox, 1989), obviously can subsume people from every race, ethnicity, and way of life. Likewise, certain cultural values that are important for understanding students and their families may form a common denominator across many cultural groups; this is the case with value systems like individualism and collectivism, which we discuss later on. Two principles can help guide our exploration of not only identity development but also how culture, microcultures, race, and ethnicity interrelate with each other and education: 1) It is more useful to think of patterns of cultural processes, values, and belief systems located in history and carried forward through institutional practices (Lee, 2003, p. 3) than categories like race, culture, or ethnicity, to understand how students and families relate to schooling, and 2) at the same time, categorical identities such as culture, race, or ethnicity are often associated with peoples experiences in the world, and they may be meaningful to individuals. As social constructs, they have power. So, we are faced with trying to recognize the pitfalls of categorical thinking (stereotyping and oversimplication of peoples lives) and recognizing how those categories (what Rogoff, 2003, calls social addresses) are connected to patterns of experience, including school experiences. As Lee (2004) points out, heterogeneous groups like African Americans do have some commonality and continuity over generations in values, belief systems, and patterns of practice. In addition, much of the relevant research uses these constructs.
B. IDENTITY DEVELOPMENT
Who am I? Who am I like? Where do I belong? These are questions about identity, and they begin long before a child can consciously pose them. In fact, children begin to develop a sense of identity as individuals and as members of groups from their earliest interactions with others (McAdoo, 1993; Santrock, 2002; Sheets, 1999a). Although adolescence is a dening period of identity consolidation, identity can continue to change throughout life, based on ones emotional and cognitive development in interaction with external circumstances (Branch, 1999; Linger, 2001; Trueba, 2002). Healthy identity formation is a critical element of human development (Branch, 1999; Erikson, 1968; Maslow, 1987; Root, 1999; Sheets, 1999a), and many believe it to be an important factor in school adjustment and achievement (e.g., Branch, 1999; Gay, 1999; Sheets, 1999b). It is a maxim of professional development on cultural awareness that one must explore ones own culture and other aspects of identity before learning about others (Singleton & Linton, in press).
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INSTRUCTIONS TO PARTICIPANTS
Discuss the questions in Figure 4 with members of your group. This activity may generate a lot of feelings for you and others in your group. Please keep all information condential (within the group) and do not refer to the specics of what others have said without their permission after the activity. It will be useful to appoint someone as the groups facilitator to make sure everyone has an opportunity to share his or her thoughts.
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13. How did other institutions support what happened in schools? 14. What strategies did communities, families, and individuals use to resist discrimination and organize on their own behalf? Reect on how your personal experiences with culture and difference have shaped your conception of yourself as a professional. 15. How might a persons cultural and racial experiences inuence his or her career path? 16. Share some of the ways in which your experiences with culture and difference inuenced your career choice. 17. How have these experiences shaped your views of students who are from racial and cultural groups different from your own?
Students need to feel that they can be themselves and be accepted in the classroom and school. Part of acceptance is, certainly, that their identities are respected. Research shows that when students feel that they belong in the classroom, they are more likely to participate in learning activities (Osterman, 2000). It is not surprising that sense of belonging is also associated with higher academic performance (Barber & Olsen, 1997; Eccles, Early, Frasier, Belansky, & McCarthy, 1997; Solomon, Watson, Battistich, Schaps, & Delucchi, 1996). Conversely, lack of feeling of acceptance is associated with behavioral problems, lower achievement, and dropout status (Osterman, 2000). Not surprising, but very disturbing, is the fact that the incidence of a low sense of belonging in ones school is systematically higher in schools whose populations are predominantly from nondominant racial and ethnic groups (Osterman, 2000). In other words, such students may not even feel a sense of belonging in schools where they constitute most of the population. Figure 5 below is intended to suggest how school support for identity development can trigger a cascade of positive responses within the student. Bear in mind that identity develops in a larger context than just school and family and that this model is vastly oversimplied. Nevertheless, it captures visually some of the proposed relationships we have been talking about.
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Identity is shaped from within and without, that is, it is both self-given and other-ascribed (Sheets, 1999a, p. 94). A person may identify as Indio (Indian) in one setting, such as the Dominican Republic, only to nd that the outside world identies her as Black or African American when she moves to New York City (Navarro, 2003). With changes in social circumstances, such as emigration from one country to another, tensions between internal and external identities can ensue. The new society into which immigrants emerge may colorize them, as with Mestizos (of mixed European and Indigenous ancestry) from Latin America who have previously perceived themselves as White (Arriaza, 2004). Or, it may lump them in with other cultural and ethnic groups whom they perceive to be quite different, as when Japanese-, Chinese-, Vietnamese-, Hmong-, and Thai-Americans are classied on census forms as Asian (Lee, 1999). Sometimes Asian students are seen through a foreign or other non-western lens (Adler, 2004, p. 73). Such a stance is far from accepting and can only contribute to an environment in which such students feel as though they are the other and do not belong.
In the rst section of this volume, we focused on culture as a source of variation in approaches to child rearing, development, and learning. Our emphasis was on the values underlying peoples cognitive and symbolic orientation to the world. Ongoing participation in the practices of a cultural community9 from early childhood as part of a family is, arguably, the foundation for ones identity. It is in this group that one rst notices others whom one perceives to be similar, wishes
9
Rogoff (2003) denes a community as a group of people who have some common and continuing organization, values, understanding, history, and practices (p. 80).
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to be like, or wishes to impress (Goodnow, 1987, p. 18, cited in Litowitz, 1997, p. 475). In other words, it is within this group that the child rst forms ideas of who he is in relation to others. Depending upon whether there is talk within the family and community about culture, race, or ethnicity, a child in primary school may know about group traditions and language styles but not necessarily label herself as Chinese or African American (Lee, 1999). One cultural resource that plays a key role in identity is the language or dialect of a group. According to linguist Teresa McCarty (2002), an overriding concern among Native North American communities is maintaining their languages. For groups such as the Pueblo nations and others, who have very few young speakers to perpetuate their languages, language loss sums up the struggle to protect Indigenous identities, lifeways, and rights (p. 15). In fact, we have discussed linguistic identity in the Language volume and stressed its meaning for individuals and groups. Linguistic identity is tied to ethnic and racial identity. For example, many African Americans embrace what is variously referred to as Ebonics, Black Language, or African American Vernacular Dialect because it is part of their culturethe language they have learned in the bosom of family and through which they are most able to express their deepest thoughts and feelings. Speakers of the dominant dialect of English may at the same time cast aspersions on what they take to be an inferior form of English, though linguists do not agree with this assessment (see, e.g., Wolfram, Adger, & Christian, 1999). Such judgments, coupled with expectations to learn and speak the dominant dialect of English, assail the healthy identity development of African American children and youth as much as demands to act White in other ways. What is race? Geneticists have traditionally said there is no biological justication for the classication. There are no discrete biological racial groups; rather, there is a continuum of characteristics that are manifested to greater or lesser degree in people (Lewontin, Rose, & Kamin, 1984). Where one draws the line between one race and the next is arbitrary, not scientic. In fact, race is a social category, dened by society (Mukhopadhyay & Henze, 2003). At the same time, it must be acknowledged that recent gene research has shown that there are a small number of genetic families that are linked to major geographic regions (Africa, Europe, Asia, Oceania, and the Americas) and correspond to the traditionally dened major racial groups (Rosenberg et al., 2002). Nevertheless, grouping people according to race is a major oversimplication of both social and biological reality (Bamshad & Olson, 2003; Jorde & Wooding, 2004). The social (versus genetic) identication of a persons race is commonly based on phenotypic characteristics, that is, physical features, whereas ethnicity is more associated with common historical and cultural heritage (Branch, 1999). Some use the term racenicity to signify the ways in which these aspects of identity can be enmeshed (Leistyna, 1998). Whites can be ethnically Italian, Armenian, or Serbian, for example. Blacks can identify as West Indian, Cuban, Haitian, or African American. Others (e.g., Wallace, 2004) use the term ethno-racial as a more general term to refer to both racial and ethnic groups. Researchers and theorists believe it is important to recognize race as a separate construct contributing to identity and peoples experiences within social context (e.g., Branch, 1999; Sheets, 1999a). Racial experience is shaped by the history of the Unites States, not only vis--vis African Americans and European Americans (Blacks and Whites, to use the racial terms), but also Mexican Americans, others who have been called Hispanic or Latino, and Portuguese-speaking
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Brazilians (Browns); American Indians (Reds); and Asians (Yellows). These terms may sound offensive, but the fact is that U.S. society does racialize people, largely on the basis of color. It makes race a salient characteristic that is often associated with differential treatment. Individuals may tire of being racialized. Not all Black people place race and Black culture at the center of their identity (Cross & Fhagen-Smith, 1999, p.29), but others may see them primarily in those terms. Lee (2003) believes that racial categorization by the government or others serves no purpose. She argues that ethnic or cultural group afliation is more important because it is through routine sociocultural practices that one comes to dene oneself. McLoyd (2004) makes the same point. Ethnic identity entails an awareness of ones membership in a social group that has a common culture and often a shared language, history, geography, religion, and physical characteristics (Fishman, 1989; Sheets, 1999a). Not all of these aspects need to be shared, however, for people to psychologically identify with a particular ethnic group. As noted, Jews can be of any race and have widely divergent languages and national afliations. Some Jews are not religious, but due in part to the Holocaust, their Jewish identity is still seared in their hearts (Takaki, 1993, p. 310). White Americans of European ancestry may not have a strong conscious cultural, ethnic, or racial identity (Richardson & Silvestri, 1999; Tatum, 1997). By virtue of being among the dominant group, they are not forced to become culturally aware and evaluate their own thought and behavior. Western European culture is the basis of the dominant U.S. culture, and this group has the ability to display their ethnic identity as the norm in school settings. Conversely, students from ethnic groups of color have had to construct, maintain, and develop their ethnic identities in situational contexts [like school] that often require them to restrict or suppress the natural display of internal ethnic behaviors (Sheets, 1999a, p. 97). According to Tatum (1992) and others (Derman-Sparks & Phillips, 1997; Singleton & Linton, in press), White educators and students can benet from exploring their own racial experience and coming to see that they, too, are racial beings. Only then can they take a constructive role in preventing racism in schools and society. With all of the pressures to conform to a set of dominant culture norms, students from non-dominant cultural, ethnic, and racial groups respond in a range of ways. Some students accommodate the demands of the dominant culture environment and do well in school, but in the process they may feel they are forced to become raceless (Fordham, 1988) or act White, denying their true identity (Oakes, Wells, Jones, & Datnow, 1997). Some African American students have been said to form an oppositional identity (Fordham & Ogbu, 1986), meaning that they refuse to embrace values and behaviors associated with Whites in order to do well in school. They may simply reject the goal of academic achievement.10 Hilliard (2003) points out that this purported oppositional identity development does not take place in all settings and that how a school approaches African students (Hilliards term) has a huge inuence over students participation. Even in suburban settings where African Americans are middle class, some do disengage from the learning process to a degree and do less well than they might (Ogbu, 2003). Steele and Aronson (1995) suggest on the basis of their observations of students at Stanford University that many African Americans have internalized the low expectations that abound in the society at large and achieve less than they are really capable of. They may say, Well, I got a B+, and thats pretty good, considering
10
The research also showed, however, that males and females had different patterns of behavior; females did not apparently feel so conicted about high academic aspirations.
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11
Phinney and Devich-Navarro seem to collapse the constructs of race, ethnicity, and culture.
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(1992) writes that the origins of Asians sense of panethnicity were not cultural but, rather, political: Asian Americans came together because they recognized that pan-Asian alliance was important, even essential, for the protection and advancement of their interests (p. 164). Wallace (2004) has studied the experiences and identity development of mixed heritage students, who are increasing in number, according to Census statistics (Lopez, 2003). Students interviewed by Wallace, who identied themselves as from a wide range of ethnic and racial backgrounds, often explained that they were invisible in both their racialized communities (that is, those that the society at large identies as ethnic or non-White) and within the mainstream community. In other words, they were recognized as neither Iranian nor European American, neither Mexican American nor Italian, neither Black nor white, and so on. Because of the tacit one-drop rule within the dominant culture, those who were of mixed heritage were not regarded as White. By the same token, some students were rejected by their non-dominant peers because they were too White-looking or were not readily identiable as Chinese or Latina. A student who identied as both Black and White might feel unnatural pressure to talk Black to t in with her Black friends, yet the same student might also be relegated initially to outsider status within the mainstream because of the restrictive standards governing Whiteness (Wallace, 2004, p. 204). When mixed heritage students parents provide opportunities at home to participate in sociocultural practices from one or more cultures, they can help their children develop a healthy identity. Wallace cautions that heritage does not automatically translate to identity. For example, Yvonne Garcia whose father was Mexican American and mother Japanese American, came to identify more strongly with the Mexican American part of her ancestry because her mother really took on the Mexican culture more so than even her culture that she grew up with (Wallace, 2004, p. 207). However, it is clear that the messages students receive from outside the home can affect the process; it is often through the stares, questions, and comments of outsiders that children discover that their families are considered unusual. One nding of Wallaces study (2004) was that no matter what the degree of ethnic identication with their heritage communities was, there was a universal, unwavering pride expressed by all in their mixed or biracial and biethnic parentage (p. 208). This was the case across the board, despite great differences in how families oriented their children to their different heritages.
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Discussion
Did anything surprise you about Youngs experience? If so, what? If not, why not? Is there anything in your own experience or in the experience of a student you know that parallels Youngs experience? How might Youngs identity struggles affect her classroom behavior? What can a teacher or other school personnel do to inuence the experiences of students like Young?
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Involuntary minority groups have had lower status within the society, have no homeland to return to, compare themselves with White European Americansand are consequently more disaffected and alienated from the larger society (see Perry, 2003, for a clear and brief explanation of Ogbus theory, as well as a critique). Surez-Orozco describes such groups as having found themselves in a subordinate position of power vis--vis a dominant Euro-American majority that not only exploited them economically but disparaged them psychologically and culturally as inferior, violent, and lazy (1998, p. 415). This is strong language, but it is difcult to argue with. It is this relationship between the dominant group and involuntary minority groups that ostensibly leads to an oppositional identity among some students: They distrust the dominant culture and do not want to be like its members, even if that is necessary to succeed in school (Fordham, 1988). However, as Hilliard (2003) and Perry (2003) point out, oppositional identity does not seem to appear in school settings where students are respected and challenged. Surez-Orozco (1998) writes about the experiences of Mexican immigrants for whom the U.S. states that border Mexico were historically part of their own country. The psychological disparagement (p. 415) he mentions (crediting the term to De Vos, 1997) entails not only negative judgments about Mexicans but also pressures to Americanize, placing them in a double bind. They are expected to give up important aspects of their cultural identity, yet they are not respected within the society they are expected to join. One example of public attitudes toward Mexican immigrants is the spate of laws passed in California over the past 10 years, ranging from one limiting social services available to undocumented families to another dismantling bilingual education, which was largely Spanish-English. All current theories of development, learning, and education acknowledge that the historical dimension must be recognized as having an impact on the present. Not only are values and practices carried across generations, but contemporary human relations are also affected by the histories of different groups of people. As much as some people take the position, This [whatever form of oppression] is all in the past. We need to get beyond it, the past exerts an inuence over the present. We are all the culmination of past events, whether biological, social, political, or cultural. The memories of past injustices are communicated across generations. There are living Americans whose great-grandparents were slaves and others whose parents (or they themselves) were removed from their home communities to attend boarding schools where they would be Americanized and denied use of their native languages.
Agency The ability to exert power. Resistance Actively opposing something, such as attempts by one group to control or dominate another. Resilience The internal strength, supported by external supports, to respond exibly and adaptively to life stresses.
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One risk of buying into the voluntary/involuntary minority framework is overlooking the agency, resistance, and resilience of members of disparaged groups (Kanaiaupuni, 2005). These terms refer to the internal and cultural strengths people and groups have drawn upon to maintain their dignity, persevere in the face of social adversity, and gain rights and access to societys benets. American Indians, whose population was decimated during the colonial period, have maintained identities, cultures, andin some caseseven their languages, which they were forbidden to speak by U.S. policy for long periods of time (McCarty, 2002; Reyhner, Cantoni, St. Clair, & Yazzie, 1999; Reyhner & Eder, 1992; Suina & Smolkin, 1994). In addition, a great many persevered through the process of Anglo schooling that did violence to their bodies and psyches. Navajo elder Fred Bia says of his school experience, [Though it was] not the proper way to educate anybody, [it] made me strong to a lot of things (McCarty, 2002, p. 46). Perry (2003) and Hilliard (2003) point to the tenacity of African Americans in seeking educational opportunities and cite a history of academic tradition among African Americans that has, no doubt, allowed them to do as well as they have. Perry says, [It] is the operative philosophy of schooling that has historically, over timesupported the development and sustenance of effort optimism among African Americans as a historically oppressed group: education for freedom, racial uplift, citizenship and leadership (Perry, 2003, p. 63). Of course, to seek literacy in the time of slavery was a powerful act of resistance on the part of African Americans, for whom it was forbidden. This philosophy is captured in the Autobiography of Malcolm X, in the slave narratives, in the graduation scene in Maya Angelous I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, in the African American narrative tradition, and in the history of Black education (Perry, 2003, p. 63). Both Perry and Hilliard cite numerous instances in which African American students in inner city or poor rural settings have achieved to very high standards, not always with the benet of teachers from their own cultural group. Perry observes that both sociopolitical (power) issues and cultural issues have affected school outcomes for African American students. African American culture tends to be denigrated rather than appreciated and capitalized on in schools.
ACADEMIC IDENTITY
It has been shown that an aspect of identity that inuences students school success is how they see themselves in relation to the academic disciplines, their academic identity (Nasir & Saxe, 2003). For example, according to Cobb (2004), mathematics serves as a powerful lter in the classroom. Most likely because of the way it is taught, many students do not continue to study mathematics because they experience a conict between who they view themselves to be and who they want to become on the one hand, and who they are expected to become in their mathematics classes on the other (p. 333). Studies conducted in various cultural settings have shown that students may have considerable mathematical skill in one context (e.g., their own communities) and not in another (the classroom) (Carraher, Carraher, & Schliemann, 1987; Saxe, 1988). Considerable research has shown that students from nondominant racial and ethnic groups (as well as females) often nd it difcult to maintain their personal identities and buy into the kind of identity demanded for being a successful mathematics student or pursuing a career that depends on high-level mathematics (American Association of University Women Educational Foundation, 1992; Brody et al., 2000). Students may say to themselves, I just cant picture
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myself acting like that, or, If thats what it takes to do well in math, I dont need it. One problem identied by American Indian educators is that when mathematics and science are taught without regard for their social and environmental meaning, they are less meaningful to Indian students (Trumbull, Nelson-Barber, & Mitchell, 2003). One can see the links between academic identity and an environment that allows students to be themselves and not have to become like their dominant culture peers. In addition, an absolutely critical factor in a healthy academic identity is the expectations the school and their teachers hold for students. In the face of a larger society that still holds beliefs about the intellectual inferiority of certain ethnic and racial groups, this is a clear challenge. We address the topic further in the section on high expectations.
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Activity 6: Supporting Students Ethnic and Academic Identity in School INSTRUCTIONS TO PARTICIPANTS
Read the vignette in Figure 7. Think about the discussion questions and be prepared to discuss your thoughts in the group.
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Discussion
What are your rst thoughts about this scenario? Why do you think students success in Dr. Sheetss class did not transfer to their other classes? Consider how student identity affects educational success. What might this say about the usual attribution of school failure to low basic skills, home problems, and poverty? How can teachers make room in classrooms for students to engage in this kind of personal identity construction? Why is it important to understand the development and impact of student identity in order to be a good teacher? How will does it affect your teaching?
Wallace says, Schools can be key sites where mixed heritage students have extended opportunities to learn about race, mixed race, and the norms of ethnic group participation (2004, p. 209). Surely, her statement is true of students from all backgrounds. White students may not develop self-awareness without sometimes being in the minority in a group, a situation that can support empathy and understanding of non-White peers. A study by Perry (2002) demonstrated that White students who were in a mixed environment gained greater awareness of what it means to be Black and became more supportive of afrmative action and anti-racist behavior. Whereas conversations about race or explicit study of race are often avoided because of their potentially emotional content, it is only when they take place that there are opportunities to understand the perspectives and experiences of others (Pollock, 2001; Singleton & Linton, in press). The same goes for teachers and administrators.
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The relationships among belonging, motivation, and achievement are especially germane to the topic of meeting the needs of students from non-dominant cultural, ethnic, and racial groups. As mentioned earlier, research has shown a relationship between students sense of belonging in the classroom, their willingness to become engaged in learning and participate in classroom activities (motivation), and their academic achievement. Resnick et al. (1997) found that connectedness to school was the only school protective factor (of factors studied) related to all eight different health risk outcomes identied for their study, such as those related to sexuality, tobacco use, and substance abuse. Motivation can be thought of a students inclination to engage in a particular action, whether because the act of doing so is rewarding in itself (intrinsically motivating) or because one will receive an external reward such as a grade or positive response from others (extrinsically motivating). There is no simple formula for determining whether something will be intrinsically motivating or whether a person is more likely to engage in a task if he is given an extrinsic reward (Cameron & Pierce, 1996; Hidi & Harackiewicz, 2000), however, there is wide agreement that extrinsic rewards that interfere with the individuals sense of autonomy or control tend to backre (Deci, Koestner, & Ryan, 1999). (This conclusion is compatible with observations made earlier in the section on the neurosciences.) One approach to understanding how motivation works is in terms of the goals students are trying to achieve (Covington, 2000). Does the student have a goal of mastering a skill or domain of knowledge (a mastery goal)? Does the student have a goal of doing better than her peers (a performance goal)? Does the student have a goal of being a good member of the group by helping everyone succeed at a task (a prosocial goal)? Only recently have goal theorists begun to examine sociocultural variation in achievement motivation. According to Kaplan and Maehr (1999a), the relative emphasis that the school places on mastery or task goals (focused on learning) versus performance goals (focused on performing) is a characteristic of learning environments that may affect students differently. African American students have been shown to do better when mastery is emphasized over performance (Kaplan & Maehr, 1999b). In addition, because of a communal orientation that runs deeply in African American culture, it makes sense that a less competitive model of education would be more successful (Boykin & Bailey, 2000; Ladson-Billings, 1994; Nelson-LeGall & Resnick, 1998). Another strand of motivation theory and research is concerned with students interests. Interest may be individual, reecting an ongoing disposition to learn about some topic or develop a skill that gives one satisfaction or it may be situationalstimulated by something one is exposed to through school or other circumstances (Hidi & Harackiewicz, 2000). [C]hildren as well as adults who are interested in particular activities or topics pay close attention, persist for longer periods of time, learn more and enjoy their involvement to a greater degree than individuals without such interest (p. 153). It seems that goals and interests interact with each other (as well as other factors) in complex ways to inuence student learning.
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Recently, theorists have begun to explore how racial, cultural and social differences among students might affect their motivation (Cokley, 2003; Graham, 1994; Henderlong & Lepper, 2002; Rothstein-Fisch & Trumbull, 2005; Urdan & Maehr, 1995). Some of the conclusions researchers have reached are: 1. Motivation to achieve in school is inuenced by ones sense of belonging in the classroom (Osterman, 2000; Solomon et al., 1996). Students do best when they feel part of a community. 2. A disproportionate number of students from non-dominant cultural, racial, and ethnic groups do not feel a sense of belonging in the classroom (Osterman, 2000). 3. Many students from non-dominant cultural, racial, and ethnic groups feel pressure to adopt behaviors at odds with their identity. These pressures come from peers as well as the culture of the school (Fordham, 1988; Phinney & Devich-Navarro, 1997; Wallace, 2004) and can jeopardize students sense of belonging. 4. There are ways of making space for students from a mix of backgrounds to develop a healthy identity and sense of belonging in the school (Sheets, 1999b). 5. Not all students have the same achievement goals. Some are more focused on individual achievement; others are more motivated to contribute to the success of the group. Harmonizing instructional practice with students goals can improve achievement (Rothstein-Fisch & Trumbull, 2005; Urdan & Maehr, 1995). 6. Providing opportunities for choice can build on students interests and increase motivation to engage in academic tasks (Sheets, 1999b; Trumbull, Diaz-Meza, & Hasan, in press). 7. There are cultural differences in beliefs about what it takes to achieve. Some emphasize effort, while others emphasize inherent abilities (Henderlong & Lepper, 2002). Understanding students and parents beliefs can help teachers work with students more successfully. 8. Extrinsic motivators such as praise and grades function differently for different students, in part because of the cultural values and beliefs of students. Students from cultures where too much praise is thought to damage character may be very uncomfortable with being praised in the classroom, particularly in front of others (Henderlong & Lepper, 2002; Nelson-Barber & Dull, 1998). 9. Lowered academic self-concept of some students may be due to external and not internal factors; when students have not had access to excellent education, they may feel ill prepared for the next step, for example, moving from secondary to post-secondary education (Cokley, 2003). These observations highlight the complexity of achievement motivation. They also point to the risks of generalizations about why students behave as they do. It is all too easy to come to a logical conclusion that is not the only one that could be justied by the facts. For instance, Cokley (2003) takes issue with the contention that African American students are anti-intellectual and see learning for the sake of learning as acting White (p. 525, in response to McWhorter, 2000, and others). He reviews Grahams (1997) study of 300 African American adolescents in an all-African American school in which she asked students to nominate the students they most admired, respected, and wanted to be like (Cokley, p. 527). Then she asked them to name three students who 1) work hard and get good grades, 2) goof off and dont get good grades, 3) follow
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school rules, and 4) dont follow school rules (Cokley, p. 527). Graham then compared the lists. The girls tended to admire, respect, and want to be like hard-working students who got good grades, while the boys were less likely to do so. Graham interpreted the boys response not as an aversion to acting White but as reecting their taking a cool pose (Majors & Billson, 1992, cited in Cokley, p. 527) in order to protect their self-esteem from academic challenges and perceptions of discrimination (Cokley, p. 527). Cokley (2001) suggests, As Black male students become increasingly disenchanted and disengaged from the educational process, their racial identity becomes detached from academics and increasingly associated with activities where there are more Black role models and perceived opportunities (p. 485). Perhaps the girls see more potential opportunities for themselves. In any case, this example shows how research on motivation may lend itself to multiple interpretations.
C. RESOURCES
PRINT MATERIALS
McCarty, T. L. (2002). A place to be Navajo. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. McCarty recounts the nearly forty-year odyssey of the Navajo community of Rough Rock, Arizona to establish its own pre-K12 school that reects its cultural values and its goals for children. Richly illustrated with photographs by Fred Bia, the book gives a deep feel for how a peoples history and culture are intertwined with their notions of education. For instance, the schools approach to education is described as community-centered, not child-centered. In reading this book, one gets a strong sense of how students and families Navajo identity was reected in the process of designing the school and in its eventual shape. Perry, T., Steele, C., & Hilliard, A. III. (2003). Young, gifted, and Black. Boston: Beacon Press. This book presents a new perspective on the achievement gap and cites many engaging and powerful examples of many strategies and programs that have been successful for African American students. They suggest that African American students should be judged against and educated to high standards, not just compared to the performance of White students, which is in many respects, mediocre itself. Sheets, R. H., & Hollins, E. R. (Eds.). (1999). Racial and ethnic identity in school practices: Aspects of human development. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. The authors in this book describe theories of ethnic and racial identity development and show how school practices intersect with and inuence that development. Sheets chapter on her own dissertation research is detailed, interesting, and inspiring. Trueba, H. T. (2002). Multiple ethnic, racial, and cultural identities in action: From marginality to a new cultural capital in modern society. Journal of Latinos and Education, 1(1), 728. Trueba presents an analysis of the complex process Latino immigrants go through as they adapt to life in the United States. He illustrates how immigrants use their cultural strengths to make this demanding transition.
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Wallace, K. R. (2001). Relative/outsider: The art and politics of identity among mixed heritage students. Westport, CT: Greenwood/Ablex. Wallace explores the ethnoracial identity development in the spheres of home, school, and community of students from mixed backgrounds. She directly quotes students from many different backgrounds, and the reader gains an appreciation of the complexity of identity development for them as well as ideas for how schools can be more responsive.
WEB SITES:
The Pacic Educational Group http://www.paciceducationalgroup.com Founded by Glenn Singleton in 1992, the Pacic Educational Group (PEG) offers a range of professional development options related to addressing institutional racism and understanding the relationships among perceptions and treatment of African American and Latino students and achievement outcomes for those students. The Web site describes the programs and has links to other resources. PEG has developed a Student Leadership Institute whose focus is on addressing relations among race, identity, and academic achievement and developing leadership qualities in African American and Latino students. The National Association for Multicultural Education http://www.nameorg.org/ NAME has as its mission supporting multicultural education throughout the United States and the world. The website offers some resources to non-members, including abstracts of recent articles in the journal Multicultural Perspectives. For a fee, readers can purchase full articles. A review of recent issues reveals many articles on ethnic identity issues in relation to schooling.
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Culture, in the broadest sense, is evidently a major component of the teaching and learning process in the classroom. In this part, we address more specically the role of culture in schooling and provide many suggestions for constructive ways that educators can acknowledge and respond to culture. Examining the cultural assumptions underlying curriculum and instructionwhy we do things the way we doshould be part of any explorations into culture in the classroom. Clearly, one of the most important products of learning about cultures in the classroom is insight into ones own cultural beliefs and practices. First, we set the context by looking at how educational philosophy has changed in response to new theories of learning and changes in our society. We then outline principles of learning that are widely accepted by educators (and that are directly related to research on learning, development, and culture already discussed). We explore culturally responsive pedagogy, citing specic kinds of strategies that have proven successful for engaging students and improving achievement. Closing the achievement gap is a primary goal of much of current educational reform, and we show how new understandings including approaches to racismcan contribute to that goal. Finally, we explore the topic of how to bring about a positive school culture that supports students, teachers, and all of those who work in the school. Culturally responsive pedagogy is, above all, about providing opportunities to support the perpetuation of different cultural ways of engaging with the world, not about the preservation of xed cultures (Kozulin, personal communication, September 18, 2005). As Kozulin (2005) observes, The criterion of such successful perpetuation is that a majority culture starts looking at its own cultural foundations through the lens of a minority culture (p. 2).
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Individual
Collaborative
EDUCATIONAL GOALS
Conceptual grasp for the elite few, basic skills for the many
Conceptual grasp and intentional knowledge building for all; thinking curriculum for every student Transactional, historical (i.e., socially negotiated, changing over time)
NATURE OF DIVERSITY
Selection of elites (ensuring continuing dominant status for dominant social/ethnic/ racial groups), relegation of broad population to basics Factory-modeled workplaces, vertical bureaucracies
ANTICIPATED WORKPLACES
Source: Keating, D. P. (1996). Adapted from Habits of Mind for a Learning Society: Educating for Human Development. In D. R. Olson & N. Torrance (Eds.). The Handbook of Education and Human Development. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishers.
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Discussion
What are the implications of a knowledge-building approach to teaching? What would this mean in your own practice? How could the notions of thinking curriculum for every student and lifelong learning affect how schooling is organized and carried out? Why is it important to understand the development and impact of student identity in order to be a good teacher? How could it affect your teaching? Why is collaboration such a key component of new views of schooling? What vestiges of Industrial Age thinking do you see in your current teaching setting, other settings you have observed, or in the state or national education agenda?
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7. Socializing Intelligence By this, Resnick means that teaching socializes students to the idea that they can be intelligent, that they will use their mental skills to engage in high-level talk and work. 8. Self-Management of Learning This principle refers to students use of metacognitive skills to monitor their learning, use feedback from others to improve their learning, and judge their own progress. 9. Learning as Apprenticeship Teachers and others can model complex thinking for students through project-based learning and presentations; projects can be interdisciplinary and require and develop knowledge and skills that are intellectual, practical, and social.
These principles reect contemporary views of intelligence as malleable and improvable through the efforts of both the learner and others who help her learn. They also delineate the conditions under which intelligence and learning can be developed in the classroom. Resnicks vision is of a classroom where standards and performance expectations are high and clear to everyone, the curriculum is challenging and made accessible to everyone, learning is assessed in fair and valid ways, and everyone understands that effort leads to learning and achievement. The teacher in such a classroom can serve as a model for learning and support students disposition to learn. On the surface, these principles do not appear revolutionary, but they y in the face of past decades of assumptions about what intelligence is (inborn and xed) and who can master a high-level curriculum (a select few). Resnicks principles are based largely in cognitive psychology, without specic mention of taking students cultures or backgrounds into consideration. The apprenticeship model, however, is usually discussed in a cultural context (see, e.g., Lave & Wenger, 1991; Rogoff, 1990; and our discussion below). For example, we know that principle #4 cannot be applied in a universal manner because of cultural variation in how students receive praise or respond to competition (Cokley, 2003; Henderlong & Lepper, 2002; Rothstein-Fisch & Trumbull, 2005; Urdan & Maehr, 1995). Further, Resnicks principles fail to address the social nature of learning and the benets of collaboration in the classroom, except in the mention of apprenticeship. They are not incompatible with other principles and inferences about learning to which we have alluded but are useful in combination with what we now know about the interrelationships among culture, race, ethnicity, and other microcultural aspects of identity, human development, learning, and schooling.
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Cultural Organizer One who understands how culture operates in the classroom, creates learning environments that reect cultural and ethnic diversity, and facilitates high performance for all students. Cultural Mediator One who facilitates opportunities for students to have critical conversations about cultural conicts, analyze mainstream cultural ideals and realities and compare them to other cultural ideals and realities, clarify ethnic identities, honor other cultures, develop strong cross-cultural relationships, and combat prejudices of all kinds. Orchestrator of Social Contexts One who makes teaching compatible with the sociocultural contexts of students from ethnically diverse populations and helps students adapt their cultural competencies to school learning resources.
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Below we consider each standard, its potential contribution to creating a culturally responsive classroom, and some classroom indicators of the standard. 1. Joint Productive Activity: Facilitate learning through joint productive activity among teachers and students. (See Table 6). The sociocultural view of learning espoused by Vygotsky (1978) and elaborated upon by Chaiklin (2003), Rogoff (2003), Tharp and Gallimore (1988), and others posits that learning occurs when an adult or expert peer assists a learner through his or her ZPD. Learning happens most effectively when the novice and the expert are working together towards a common goal or product that connects schooled or scientic ideas with practical problems. When joint productive activity occurs, teachers and students create a common context of experience within school, even when they do not share the same home culture. For instance, in the process of making a class book about a eld trip to The Desert Zoo, teacher and students can discuss their shared experience, talk about how it may relate to past experience with family in a desert or zoo setting, brainstorm what they think should go in the book, and distribute tasks within small groups. The teacher can help orchestrate completion of the task, engaging students in new language related to the desert ecology and what they observed and helping them monitor their writing. After components of the book are completed, the group can discuss how to integrate them and how to share the book within the class and with other students or their families. Conversation in relation to the shared experience can help students learn relevant communicative and academic language, such as accurate vocabulary, linguistic structures for sequencing events, or simply the language related to making a book.
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2. Language Development: Develop students competence in the language and literacy of instruction throughout all instructional activities (see Table 7). Everyday social language, formal academic language, and subject matter lexicons (e.g., the vocabulary of mathematics) must all receive explicit attention through purposeful instructional conversations and reading and writing across the curriculum. The language of school is often unfamiliar to English language learners and other students from non-dominant cultural groups (Garca, 1991; Hart & Risley, 1995; Wong-Fillmore, 1989). Linking students ways of speaking with classroom instruction and providing explicit instruction in new forms of discourse will support the development of new ways of speaking. For example, a teacher can do a chalkboard or overhead activity that records student language on one side of a chart and scientic language for the same topic on the other side (Trumbull, Diaz-Meza, & Hasan, in press). This example is presented in full in the second volume of this guide.
Responds to students talk and questions, making in-ight changes during conversation that directly relate to students comments. Assists written and oral language development through modeling, eliciting, probing, restating, clarifying, questioning, praising, and so forth, in purposeful conversation and writing. Interacts with students in ways that respect communication styles that differ from the teachers, such as wait time, eye contact, turn taking, or spotlighting. Connects student language with literacy and content-area knowledge through speaking, listening, reading, and writing activities. Encourages students to use content vocabulary to express their understanding. Provides frequent opportunity for students to interact with each other and the teacher during instructional activities. Encourages students use of rst and second languages in instructional activities.
(Adapted from Center for Research on Excellence, Diversity, and Education, 2002)
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3. Contextualization: Contextualize teaching and curriculum using the experiences and skills of home and community (see Table 8). Teachers must show students how abstract concepts (or schooled concepts) are derived from and can be applied to the everyday world. In order for teachers to fully understand students experiences and skills, it is necessary to collaborate with students families and communities. In that way, teachers can learn about family patterns of participation in activities, ways of communicating, family-based knowledge, and interests. Some theorists believe that experience should be drawn upon rst and then linked to schooled concepts (Trumbull, Nelson-Barber, & Mitchell, 2002). For example, some teachers in Fairbanks, Alaska have worked with their students to build racks for drying salmon during shing season (Lipka & Adams, 2004). This is a traditional activity of the Yupik culture to which many students have been exposed. Mathematics concepts and procedures are embedded in the activity and then linked to school-based mathematics. This is, of course, also an example of a rich, joint productive activity.
(Adapted from Center for Research on Excellence, Diversity, and Education, 2002)
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4. Challenging Activities: Challenge students towards cognitive complexity (see Table 9). According to this standard, all students must be provided with cognitively demanding curriculum and with meaningful assessment that allows feedback and responsive assistance. Instruction must be provided that requires higher order thinking. It is often assumed that English language learners and students from non-dominant cultures need to learn the basics before they can tackle big ideas. Not only is this assumption wrong but it is the opposite of what students who are behind actually need (Resnick, 1999). Educational and cognitive psychologists following standard IV have designed enriched and accelerated programs rather than remedial programs for low-performing students and schools (Feuerstein, 1980; Hopfenberg & Levin, 1990). One simple example of providing high-level content for readers who are below grade level in their skills is to read to them from texts that challenge their thinking or to provide audiotapes that do the same. A student who has decoding difculty should not be relegated to reading matter below his intellectual capacity.
(Adapted from Center for Research on Excellence, Diversity, and Education, 2002)
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5. Instructional Conversation: Engage students through dialogue (see Table 10). The instructional conversation between teachers and students is based on the idea that students have something to say beyond a presupposed answer that the teacher has in mind. Therefore, it is the teachers role to listen carefully, make guesses about the intended meaning of the student, and adjust responses to assist the students efforts. At least as important, in the instructional conversation format the teacher facilitates students responses to each other. Not all conversation is mediated through the teacher. This strategy results in much more student talk than the usual teacher-moderated discussion, giving students opportunities to practice academic language and use appropriate evidence to support their opinions or inferences. So, if the class were discussing the results of a science experiment conducted by small groups, the teacher might start the discussion off with a key question, such as, What did you think might happen? and allow students to respond to each other, rather than just to her. She could then selectively probe a response to move the conversation in a desired direction (Why did you expect that, Anita?). When many students have contributed, she might ask another question, such as, What actually happened? In the Language volume, we give a more thorough explanation of the instructional conversation, along with examples of how it can be carried out.
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Culturally Responsive Pedagogy Instructional practice that is designed with learners cultural values, knowledge, and ways of learning taken into account and that empowers students to succeed in school and beyond. Cultural Competence The ability to recognize differences among students and families, respond to those differences positively, and to interact with others in a range of sociocultural environments (Lindsey, Robins, & Terrell, 2003).
Many terms have been used to signify the process of taking students cultural backgrounds into account when designing curriculum, instruction, and assessment: culturally relevant, culturally appropriate, culturally congruent, and culturally responsive, to mention a few. We choose the term culturally responsive because it seems to communicate process and action better than other terms. Making education connect with students lives is a dynamic action process. According to Villegas (1991): A culturally responsive pedagogy builds on the premise that how people are expected to go about learning may differ across culturesCultural differences present both challenges and opportunities for teachers. To maximize learning opportunities, teachers must gain knowledge of the cultures represented in their classrooms, then translate this knowledge into instructional practice. (p. 13.) Bartolom (1995) proposes that culturally responsive pedagogy alone is not enough to moderate the effect of historical inequity on involuntary minorities. Bartolom emphasizes that methods by themselves do not sufce to advance their learning. She advocates what she calls humanizing pedagogy, in which a teacher values the students background knowledge, culture, and life experiences and creates contexts in which power is shared by students and teachers (p. 55). This power sharing and valuing of students lives and cultures may provide a positive counterforce to the negative sociocultural experiences of students; it can enable them to see themselves as empowered within the context of school and allow them to retain pride in their cultural heritages. Ladson-Billings (1995) also addresses the need for pedagogy to promote the empowerment of students. Speaking of culturally-relevant pedagogy, Ladson-Billings says, A next step for positing effective pedagogical practice is a theoretical model that not only addresses student achievement but also helps students to accept and afrm their cultural identity while developing critical perspectives that challenge inequities that schools (and other institutions) perpetuate. I term this pedagogy culturally relevant pedagogy (p. 469).
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Ladson-Billings (1995) outlines three criteria for teacher prociency in culturally relevant teaching: An ability to develop students academically. This means effectively helping students read, write, speak, compute, pose and solve higher order problems, and engage in peer review of problem solutions. A willingness to nurture and support cultural competence in both home and school cultures. The key is for teachers to value and build on skills that students bring from the home culture. For example, teachers of African American students can use the lyrics of rap songs to teach elements of poetry before they proceed to a study of more conventional poetry. The development of a sociopolitical or critical consciousness. Teachers help students recognize, understand, and critique current social inequities.
These conceptualizations of pedagogy appropriate for a multicultural, multiethnic, multiracial society are much more powerful and inclusive than older approaches that focus on relatively supercial or visible aspects of culture and identity. This is not to say that the three Fs approach to culture (foods, fairs, and festivals) does not exist in some places. For example, a recent study in a Midwestern elementary school with more than 50% Southeast Asian students (mainly Hmong) showed that Hmong ethnic differences were dealt with in terms of exotic traditions such as shamans, bride kidnapping, coining, and strict gender role separationCurricular focus was on teaching a foreign culture through the festivals and food fairs, but not in regard to culturally relevant pedagogy (Adler, 2004, p. 73).
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Discussion
How does Ladson-Billingss vignette demonstrate the rst criterion for culturally relevant teachingdeveloping students academicallyand the third criteriondeveloping a sociopolitical or critical consciousness? How might the teacher in the vignette have drawn on students cultural competence in order to accomplish the project? How could students have turned their research into action? What kinds of projects can you envision in your own setting that could capitalize on one or more of Ladson-Billingss criteria?
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13
Not only are there variations based on factors such as socioeconomic differences, regional experiences, and personal histories, but African immigrants who came to the U.S. in the 20th and 21st centuries are also likely to vary in many ways from those whose families in the U.S. go back to the time of slavery. The population Boykin and Bailey have studied is low income.
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Project-based and thematic approaches to instruction are natural conduits for student collaboration. They allow for what has been called differentiated instruction, or providing many different ways for students to engage in learning related to the same standards (Hall, 2002). The community project described by Ladson-Billings (Figure 10) provides an excellent opportunity for whole-class and small-group collaboration and is based on content meaningful to students. With regard to movement and verve, a multiple intelligences orientation to teaching and learning could naturally capitalize on these aspects of African American culture. Well-known African American teacher, Carrie Secret, uses music of all kinds in her primary classroom in Oakland, California. She uses Black popular and classical music and European classical musicto help her students center and calm themselves, and to help them focus (Perry, 2003, p. 57). Secrets classes are full of movement and action, much of it collective. The children sing and dance to serious themes. They do art and write stories and essays. They play games. All of these things are for a purpose (Hilliard, 2003, p. 153). Capitalizing on great African American and African oratory and literature, Ms. Secret supports her young students to interpret poetry and speeches orallysometimes in public performances. In Philadelphia, high school teachers have found that African American students are remarkable competitors at an intellectual sport called Mock Trials, in which students take the role of attorneys and argue cases that are based on actual law (Hilliard, 2003). Inner-city schools have beaten elite suburban schools several years running, and judges have noted that involvement of these schools has raised the level and pace of argumentation. Observers seem to be amazed that these students who should be having trouble with the law, not enjoying it are sharper, more nimble on their feet, more in command of rules and strategy and presentation than past participants (Hilliard, 2003, p. 145146). Actually, there should be no surprise, given the welldocumented tradition in African American culture of creative verbal games like The Dozens, in which ritual insults are traded in rapid-re fashion (Smitherman, 1998). These students must have been waiting for an opportunity to show their verbal skills in an educational context. Researcher Carol Lee has shown how the oral and literate traditions are expressed in the 20thand 21st-century ction of African American writers. She has used such writing as a springboard for African American high school students to connect with their own linguistic and cultural knowledge (Lee, 1995, 2000). At rst, students did not appreciate the African American dialect
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used in the writings of Zora Neale Hurston or Alice Walker. They had absorbed the message that it was not correct or literate. But they gradually came to see how powerful these writings were, in part because they did incorporate natural dialect and oral rhetorical strategies. In addition, Lees students were better able to identify and reconstruct the ironic, metaphoric, and symbolic meanings in both oral signifying and literature, and their reading skills improved markedly in comparison to those of students in other classes. A component of culturally responsive pedagogy is, of course, respect for students cultural selves. Yet, it is difcult to achieve real respect without understanding what is below the surface of students behaviors. For example, students who have learned at home to help their peers (a communalistic behavior) may nd themselves accused of cheating when they try to help their classmates (NelsonLeGall & Resnick, 1998; Rothstein-Fisch, Trumbull, Isaac, Daley, & Prez, 2003). In fact, there are many fascinating accounts of cross-cultural misunderstandings about what constitutes cheating. Among some cultures, anything short of actually taking another students paper and completing it is not considered cheating (Fleck, 2000). Students physicality and movement may be judged inappropriate or even willful misbehavior, when at home it is not only tolerated but appreciated. This short foray into issues of culturally responsive pedagogy for African American students is not exhaustive in any sense, but it does illustrate how connections can be made to some dimensions of students cultures. Gardner (1983) notes: The aim should be to design educational environments that are respectful of diversity rather than to construct specialized schools for different ethnic groups.Indeed many of the criticisms about traditional schooling [as it affects African American students]that it is passive, individualist, impersonal, and irrelevant in naturehave also been voiced by educators and researchers in reference to students generally[T]eachers should become familiar with and incorporate into their learning activities cultural knowledge that is meaningful to students lives. It is additionally important to establish warm, personal, and supportive relationships between teachers and students. Such relationships depend on the creation of exible participation structures that legitimize different styles of interaction and use a variety of tasks that value and require the use of different competencies. (Gardner, 1983, p. 28)
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The term communalism used by Boykin and Bailey (2000) is equivalent to collectivism.
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Discussion
What values may have been behind the mothers decision to stay at school and eat breakfast with their children? What values, beyond a need to follow federal regulations, might have guided the administrators actions? Why might the sign have incensed the mothers? Why did they come to the school as a group? How did the school personnel and the parents judge each other? How might the situation have been dealt with differently by school personnel, taking cultural value orientations into account?
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No culture is 100% collectivistic or individualistic, and individuals within a culture vary as to how collectivistic or individualistic their own values and behaviors areboth generally and in terms of specic situations (Markus & Kitayama, 1991). There are noticeable variations within the U.S., depending in part on region (Vandello & Cohen, 1999). In addition, each culture within those mentioned above as collectivistic has its own ways of being collectivistic (Markus & Kitayama, 2003). However, understanding these two cultural models can be extremely useful to educators because many of the kinds of cultural conicts students face at school can be explained with reference to them (Greeneld, Quiroz, & Raeff, 2000; Trumbull, Rothstein-Fisch, Greeneld, & Quiroz, 2001). Parents who want their children to be modest and cooperative may be dismayed to hear their teachers heap praise on them and encourage them to be competitive. Teachers who want students to be autonomous learners and speak out during class discussions may express disapproval or disappointment when students always want to help each other and sit quietly during discussions. These kinds of differences in expectations can be attributed to more or less individualistic or collectivistic cultural models. Parents may be trying to raise a human being who will be interdependent, while the school is trying to foster a student who is independent. The vignette below illustrates a collision of values that might have been predicted if the participants understood each others cultures better. Trumbull et al. (2001) contrast individualism and collectivism as they may play out in school settings. The following table draws from their work with immigrant Latino families. Keep in mind that cultures and individuals within cultures will vary in terms of where they fall on the collectivist-individualist continuum, so their perspectives on schooling will vary as well. The tensions illustrated in the table could be summarized as a difference in focus on the following: 1. Individual vs. group success 2. Independent vs. cooperative learning 3. Praise for self-esteem vs. feedback for improvement 4. Cognitive skills as separate vs. cognitive and social skills as integrated 5. Oral expression vs. listening to authority 6. Individual property vs. communal property 7. Self-control vs. group control of behavior 8. Parents role includes academics vs. parents role is to socialize The numbers on the list above refer to the numbers in the table on the following page.
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2. Student should work independently and get his own work done. Giving help to others may be considered cheating.
Student should be helpful and cooperate with his peers, giving assistance when needed. Helping is not considered cheating.
3. Student should be praised frequently to build self-esteem. The positive should be emphasized whenever possible.
Student should be given feedback for improvement. Praise should be stated in terms of students ability to help family or community.
Student should learn appropriate social behaviors and skills as well as intellectual skills; education as upbringing.
5. Student should engage in discussion and argument in order to learn to think critically (constructivist model).
Student should be quiet and respectful in class because he will learn more this way (transmission model).
6. Property belongs to individuals, and others must ask to borrow or share it. 7. Teacher manages behavior indirectly or emphasizes student self-control.
Much property is communal and not considered the domain of an individual. Teacher has primary authority for managing behavior but also expects peers to guide each others behavior.
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As useful as cultural models like that of individualism and collectivism can be for highlighting cultural differences, they can lead to the common error of stereotyping. Sub-groups and individuals within a culture exhibit extreme variation. As McLoyd (2004) says, One of the core criticismsagainst characterizations of culture that rely on general orientations is their failure to capture disagreements in cultural meanings among those occupying different positions in a groups social hierarchy (p. 186). One need only think of differences in the ways women versus men, or poor versus rich, within a cultural group construct meaning within the same broad cultural setting. Moreover, even within the heavily individualistic U.S., there are regional variations in the degree of individualism or collectivism, based on the histories and current realities of those regions (Vandello & Cohen, 1999). For example, the Northwest has been described as very individualistic, with its frontier mentality and sparse population, whereas the Southwest is far more collectivistic, at least in part because of the inuence of a sizeable Mexican American population. McLoyd asserts, Social conict and opposition are as much a part of culture as are shared meanings, understanding, and cohesion (p. 186). Sometimes, the same values are held but to a different degree. Research shows, for example, that members of different generations (adolescents versus parents) may endorse the same values, but parents may adhere to them more strongly (Cooper et al., 1994). At the same time, there are cultural patterns that are meaningful. Learning about other patterns can open ones mind to understanding that ways of thinking and behaving that look deviant or disorganized according to ones own view of the world are quite normal and organized according to anothers.
conicts or other matters that students or teacher want to address in the group; whole-school projects that may also involve the outside community, such as gathering relief supplies for ood victims in Central America; and many collaborative group investigations. Caring, academically challenging teachers who take the role of intellectual and moral authorities (while promoting student autonomy) are at the heart of the community-building process. Schaps and Lewis (1999) note that for the process to be effective it must involve the whole school. What gets in the way of community building? CDPs research has shown that emphasis on extrinsic rewards and teacher authority for resolving conicts undermine a sense of community. And, most recently, emphasis on increasing scores on standardized tests has taken time away from the kinds of activities that promote a sense of community.
FOSTERING COLLABORATION
Substantial research supports the belief that allowing students to help each other learn is good, not just for social development but also for academic development. Those who receive information perform better, and those who give it may clarify their own understanding (Gillies, 1999). Cooperative learning has been shown to be an effective instructional approach with students from many backgrounds (Caldern, Hertz-Lazarowitz, & Slavin, 1998). Members of cooperative learning groups usually have assigned roles that contribute to the completion of a task. Cooperative groups are intended to foster positive interdependence among students, that is, to promote each others success by helping, assisting, supporting, encouraging, and praising each others efforts to achieve, (Johnson & Johnson, 1999, p. 124). True collaboration involves students active participation in group learning, problem solving, and investigation (Jones, Valdez, Nowakowski, & Rasmussen, 1995). It is different from cooperative learning as commonly conceived in that the teacher does not assign roles, and students are more involved in setting goals and monitoring their own progress vis--vis those goals. Groups are usually heterogeneous, representing students from different backgrounds with different kinds of skills and knowledge (Cohen, 1994; Cohen & Lotan, 1994). The tasks are less pre-structured, and the focus is on exible, learning-centered investigations (Jones et al., 1995, web document with many sections, no page number). Students may also work with members of the community, as the students would do in completing the activity Ladson-Billings described above.
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Discussion
What did you remember or discover about your own learning path in the process of answering the questions? Did the process of reection stimulate any thoughts about your own students or teaching situation (real or anticipated)? What was your aha! moment?
Multiple intelligence (MI) theory and practice has produced positive changes in the ways teachers look at their students. A study conducted by Campbell and Campbell (1999) of the success of six schools that claim to have implemented Gardners MI theory concluded: Perhaps the most surprising nding from our study of MI schools is that restructuring is not necessarily achieved through external programs, resources, facilities, or district or state mandates. Indeed, meaningful restructuring rst takes place within the minds of teachers and their beliefs about the nature and possibilities of their students. From there, all else follows. (p. 97)
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Below, in Table 12, we list possible activities, materials, and strategies linked to each form of intelligence. This is not, of course, an exhaustive list. It is intended to stimulate teachers thinking about what might be appropriate in their own settings with the students they teach.
LINGUISTIC
oral presentations (by teacher or students), word games, discussions, storytelling, choral reading, journal writing, drama, independent reading and writing in many genres problem solving, science experimentation, mental calculation, number games, critical thinking, brain teasers, debating and other activities that require logical evidence visual presentations, use of metaphor, art activities, mapping activities, imagination games, mind visualization, problem solving and planning involving use of space hands-on learning, drama, dance, sports, tactile activities, relaxation exercises
books, tape recorders, stamp sets, typewriters, books on tape, copies of speeches and other orations, journals
LOGICAL MATHEMATICAL
SPATIAL
graphs, maps, videos, LEGO sets, building blocks, art materials, cameras, picture library, graph paper, tangrams, pattern blocks, 2-D and 3-D models
see it, draw it, build it, color it, mind-map it visually
BODILY KINESTHETIC
build it, act it out, touch it, get a gut feeling about it, dance it
MUSICAL
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INTERPERSONAL
cooperative learning, peer tutoring, community involvement, social gatherings, simulations self-management of ones learning, independent study, self-evaluation of learning progress; selfawareness of ones internal cognitive and emotional states outdoor explorations, observations, experiments, tours of particular environments, cataloguing of plants and animals
board games, party supplies, props for role plays, any materials for shared activities
teach it, collaborate on it, interact with respect to it, help solve conicts
INTRAPERSONAL
connect it to your personal life and cognitive and emotional strengths, make choices with regard to it
NATURALISTIC
notebooks, binoculars, magnifying glasses, microscopes, tape recorders, books about nature and environments, photographs and lms
observe it, explore it, listen to it, describe it, gather and organize data or impressions about it
(Adapted from Armstrong, T. [1994]. Multiple Intelligence in the Classroom. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.)
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LOGICAL MATHEMATICAL
SPATIAL
BODILY KINESTHETIC
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MUSICAL
INTERPERSONAL
INTRAPERSONAL
NATURALISTIC
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Discussion
Please describe your activity and explain (a) what intelligences and (b) which CREDE standards it addresses. What did you nd easy or difculty about this exercise? What advice can you offer each other about enhancing the power of the activities discussed?
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Discussion
What is Kai James asking teachers to do? What do you think James experiences as an African American student have been like in school? Why do you think changing the power structure of schools is important to him? After reading this letter, what new thoughts do you have about cultural identity, development, and learning? How might James proposal for teacher-student equality be viewed by students who have been brought up to look up to and respect teachers? How about their parents? How might it be viewed by teachers and administrators?
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This section owes a great deal to Valencia and Solrzano, 1997, in a chapter in R. R. Valencia (Ed.). (1997). The evolution of decit thinking: Educational thought and practice. London: Falmer.
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Discussion
How do you think Mr. Stivales cultural decit approach affects students? What kind of information do you think Mr. Stivale needs in order to change his approach? Why do you think no one challenged Mr. Stivales statements at the faculty meeting? As a colleague of Mr. Stivales, how might you have responded? How has your culture been valued or devalued in your own school experience? At work?
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INSTRUCTIONS TO PARTICIPANTS
In a small group, examine a curriculum guide or a textbook. Use the questions in Figure 15 to determine the appropriateness of its content for students from a variety of cultures and languages.
Discussion
What did you nd in your investigation? What do you conclude from what you found out? What recommendations do you have for the curriculum and textbook publishers?
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way of thinking also blames the poor for their predicament, overlooking the role of economic change (including a decrease in factory and skilled labor jobs to which one could aspire and with which one could support a family) and structural inequalities related to access to education; housing; healthcare; and basic nutrition. Research on generational poverty (as distinguished from temporary situational poverty experienced by educated people) reveals that it is both these inequities in access to the most essential resources and also the debilitating social, physical, and emotional effects of such deprivation that keep people in poverty (Beegle, 2000, 2003). Racism should not be overlooked for its role in maintaining an underclass in U.S. society. One effect of racism has been housing discrimination, which produces racial segregation and concentrations of poverty in certain areas. According to one analyst, concentrating income deprivation in a small area causes conditions of intense disadvantage[that] are mutually reinforcing and cumulative, leading directly to the creation of underclass communities. (Massey, 1990, p. 350, cited in Valencia & Solrzano, 1997, p. 187.)
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As usual, teachers are the bottom line in effective and equitable educational practice. However, administrators have a responsibility to support opportunities for teachers to renew themselves and share their strategies for maintaining high expectations and standards. Diamond et al. (2003) mention particular organizational structures in the Chicago schools that promote teacher exchange and mutual support. At one school, they heard about the Breakfast Club, a regularly scheduled teacher meeting for which administrators provided breakfast. Teachers discussed articles they had read and shared ideas for instruction. Another school had a regular meeting called Teacher Talk, which was similar to the Breakfast Club. In those schools, administrators held teachers collectively responsible for student learning, but they also recognized the challenges teachers faced and the need to support them.
Assigning students to vocational, college preparatory, or general course paths (tracking) is generally a high school practice, though it begins in some districts by middle school (LeTendre, Hofer, & Shimizu, 2003). Tracking results in granting access to challenging academic opportunities to some while denying it to others (Callahan, 2005, p. 307). Even when ofcial tracking does not take place before middle school or high school, it begins unofcially for students of whom little is expected and who do not have opportunities to learn and achieve at high levels in elementary school. It is not surprising that low-income and minority students [are] more likely to be in low ability classes for the non-college-bound (Oakes & Guiton, 1995, p. 3). After students are assigned to a lower track, they rarely move up to a higher one (Oakes & Guiton, 1995). The low tracking of students dened as low income and minority is not only a function of teacher preparation, expectations, and grades. Velasco, Maples, Mickelson, and Greene (2002) note, Strong evidence indicates that middle-class white parents aggressively pursue higher tracks for their children who, in turn, often push to be placed in higher tracks (p. 3). Such parental pressure, not surprisingly, leads to higher placements for White students with the same qualications (Velasco et al., 2002). One interpretation of such ndings is that White parents and their children feel entitled to placement in higher tracks (McIntosh, 1988, regarding White privilege). Another is that such parents, whose cultural knowledge is more in sync with that of schools and who have had access to greater educational advantages themselves, have the inside knowledge on how to work the system.
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Velasco et al. (2002) examined tracking practices and parental advocacy with academically able White and Black students and found that middle-class parentsboth Black and Whitewho had greater educational advantages used similar strategies to advocate for their children and were more successful advocates for their children. In contrast, parents with children in low-level classes often appeared to lack information about the advantages of the higher tracks and the ability to access them (p. 12). One difference between Black and White middle-class parents was their level of trust in the school system. They often feared that the school would not recognize their level of concern for their children because of stereotypingfor example, that Black parents dont careor their childrens ability and worth. English language learners are often effectively tracked early on in programs that provide lowlevel academics, on the basis of the belief that English must be developed before academics (Callahan, 2005; Katz, 1999; Valds, 1998). They are frequently relegated to low tracks in high school because of confusion regarding the need for English development with low academic ability, even though research suggests that placing them in low tracks is a greater determinant of academic outcome than is language prociency (Callahan, 2005). In other words, a high-level class is more likely to result in higher achievement for these students, even though they still have language development needs. [T]racking exposes students to different levels of academic content, academic discourse, and teacher quality (Callahan, 2005, p. 307), and it is often justied on the grounds that it is appropriate because students are matched to different tracks on the basis of their ability (Oakes & Guiton, 1995) or their prior level of performance (Callahan, 2005). This stance has been called a meritocratic one because it presumes that students are tracked on the basis of merit, that is, on the basis of their ability and performance. However, it fails to take into account the malleability of intelligence and how opportunities to learn and expectations shape performance. It is clear from the above-mentioned literature that the system is based more on privilege and perceptions than merit. For all of the reasons cited above, many educators concerned with equity have called for the detracking of schools (Mehan, 1997; Oakes & Wells, 1998; Oakes et al., 1997). There are many alternatives to tracking that can result in the provision of high-level and challenging education for all students while grouping them heterogeneously. Lloyd (1999) presents an exhaustive review of research on mixed age and non-graded grouping and concludes that they are two promising ways to provide differentiated instruction that meets the needs of a wide range of students within a single class. Oakes and Wells (1998) describe an exciting array of detracking practices they have documented in schools around the country, such as providing honors activities within heterogeneous classes, allowing almost any student to participate in an honors program, providing a support class in math for students who need review, and use of a marine science curriculum that relies more on small-group projects and eld trips than textbooks. The problem with implementation of virtually all of the innovations that schools have designed is not that students have not achieved but that parents of high-track students opposed such innovations. What upset the parents most was not the quality of the curriculum. It was that their children were no longer being singled out and treated differently.At risk for the families of high-track students is the entire system of meritocracy on which they base their privileged posi-
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tions in society. As this system begins to crack, these parents often employ tactics that make reform politically impossible. Given that detracking is basic to standards-based reform, policymakers and educators stand forewarned (Oakes & Wells, 1998, p. 41).
Racism, like any ideology of power (e.g., classism and sexism), is a destructive social force, and it damages everyone by undermining the fundamental values of democracy: equality, fairness, freedom, and justice. It taints personal relationships and diminishes everyone touched by it. Whereas the tendency in the United States is to think of racism in Black/White terms, racism can be experienced by people from any ethnically, linguistically, or culturally non-dominant group. It is difcult to imagine that any educator intends to be racist or to support racist policies or practices. That is probably the one thing that makes facing racism most difcult: Because none of us espouses racism, we nd it hard to believe that our own actions could promote it. Yet our inaction may well do so. However, educators are in a prime position to identify and intervene with racism in schools, particularly if they are open to becoming allies of groups and individuals who have been targets of discrimination (Tatum, 1997).
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Institutional racism in schools can take the form of basing decisions about who has access to gifted or other special programs on tests that are culturally racist, that is, tests that rely heavily on knowledge of dominant culture experience, language, and ways of thinking. It is also inherent in assumptions that a certain racial pattern of achievement is to be expected (Pollock, 2001). An example of institutional racism comes from the study by Velasco et al. (2002), cited above. In the course of their research, these researchers heard from parents about three cases in which high school students (two Black and one White) had medical problems that caused them to miss a considerable amount of school time. The White student, Arthur (who had a heart problem), was offered the opportunity to drop a class and make it up later through independent study. He was also provided with tutoring at home. Chris, a Black student who had to have several eye surgeries, was offered nothing by the school. His mother, by dint of having a sister who was a principal in a neighboring state, learned that he might be entitled to services and pressed for them. But they were slow in coming, and Chris had to re-take several courses. Phil, another Black student, suffered a head injury. His mother was in constant contact with the school, but it did not offer any services for him, and she didnt know to ask for them. Rather, school ofcials suggested Phil transfer out of the challenging program in which he was enrolled. We recount these stories because they put a human face on the kinds of inequities that students from nondominant cultural, ethnic, and racial groups often suffer. Cultural racism can be seen in curricula that represent the perspective of only the dominant cultural group, instructional practices that privilege one dialect over another, and libraries that do not reect the diversity of cultures of a school. Individual racism may be a matter of simply accepting things the way they are and not questioning the fact that some students cannot be expected to do as well as others or that some parents simply do not know how to rear their children, and thus, comply with institutional policies that systematically exclude certain students from opportunities. The common denominator across all three forms of racism is power.
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to devising ways to involve Asian parents in the schools, given that many are working more than one job and that language barriers and lack of knowledge about schools may keep them away (Gewertz, 2004). Whereas ethnic stereotyping is a negative phenomenon, it should be distinguished from racism in the sense that it does not always entail the power differential that racism does. For example, when U.S. visitors to Germany expect efciency and cleanliness, it may mean that they do not see the complexity and variation in German life. However, it is not likely to have the same negative impact that overt, racist beliefs and actions do. Stereotypes are an unfortunate extension of useful generalizations that may help people begin to understand other cultures.
DIFFERENT PERCEPTIONS
It is not unusual for teachers and students from different racial and ethnic backgrounds to have different perceptions of equity and inter-racial and inter-ethnic relations in schools. Because the majority of teachers and administrators are White and native English speakers, and because their views tend to dominate, non-dominant views may not be heard or appreciateda situation that can be extremely frustrating for those in the non-dominant groups (Tatum, 1992). A recent national poll illustrated a discrepancy in the perceptions of White teachers and students as compared to their non-dominant culture peers (Reid, 2004). The poll was conducted with a representative sample of 2,591 public school teachers and 1,102 students in grades 712 on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka decision outlawing school segregation. Whereas 69% of White teachers and 60% of Hispanic teachers17 believed that integrated schooling has been achieved, only 31% of Black teachers did.18 Whereas 63% of White teachers thought that all students had access to equal academic opportunities, 52% of Hispanic and only 27% of Black teachers believed that proposition.19 When asked to rank factors contributing to the achievement gap between White and Asian students on the one hand and African American and Hispanic students on the other, teachers tended to blame student and home factors. When they were asked how the gap could be closed, 85% of teachers chose increased parent involvement. Black and Hispanic teachers were more likely to identify low teacher expectations and discrimination as sources of the gap.
We use the racial and ethnic terms used in the poll. Actually, schools are still highly segregated along racial/ethnic lines (Crosnoe, 2005, p. 272). According to studies, minority students not only attend different schools from their White peers, they attend worse schools (Crosnoe, 2005, p. 272).
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Certainly, high-quality professional development experiences are important to building cultural competency. However, there are other steps teachers and administrators can take to routinely reduce the incidence of racism in any school environment. Below are some specic suggestions from those who have been engaged in anti-racist education: Support your district to gather data in ways that will allow disaggregating by race and ethnicity (as well as other aspects of identity such as gender and socioeconomic class) for examination of patterns of privilege and differential access to programs and courses. Hold high expectations for all students, and be willing to speak out when you see that low expectations of certain groups are accepted. Oppose tracking systems that group high achievers and low achievers separately. Advocate for equitable allocation of resources within the district and school. Ensure that all families are aware of their and their childrens rights and help them get the best possible services for their children. Immigrant and less educated families may not be privy to the meaning and implications of grades, the nuances of course selection, and the like. Include parents in discussions about what is best for their children academically, orienting them to how programs and courses are chosen. Design culturally responsive curriculum, instruction, and assessment, taking into account the students you are teaching. Observe how different students participate in classroom activities to determine what strategies reach which students, and involve students in choices about their work. Group students with the purpose of fostering interactions among students from different backgrounds; also allow students to group themselves at times. Collaborate with other teachers to nd out what has worked for students from different backgrounds with different skills and interests and to evaluate the adequacy and cultural representativeness of the school library. Do not allow racial or ethnic slurs to go uncorrected. Use them as an opportunity to educate students about their impact and the fact that they will not be tolerated in the school. A school policy should be in place. Collaborate with other teachers, administrators, and parents to establish a conict resolution plan that is culturally appropriate. Be willing to engage in courageous conversations about race with colleagues and community members (Singleton & Linton, in press). Listen to what others have to say, and work hard to recognize other perspectives. Cultivate opportunities to learn from people unlike yourself. Examine your own values, and evaluate whether your behaviors are in line with them.
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Competent leadership that buffers teachers from outside stressors and fosters their professional life, including ongoing professional development Inclusion of parents in the school community
(Benard, 2003; Diamond, Randolph, & Spillane, 2004; Fullan, 1991; Nieto, 1999; Noddings, 1984; Peterson, 1994; Rosenholtz, 1989; Schaps & Lewis, 1999; Valenzuela, 1999.) A successful school culture also incorporates a sociocultural perspective on learning and development. Educators, students, and parents alike are able to examine and discuss the values and beliefs underlying schooling and child-rearing practices and engage in ongoing dialogue about how to help all members of the school community feel as though they belong and can be productive participants (Collignon, Men, & Tan, 2001; Delgado-Gaitan, 1994; Mehan, Villanueva, Hubbard, & Lintz, 1996; Trumbull, Greeneld, & Quiroz, 2003). For both teachers and students, a collaborative approach to learning and problem solving is a key element to a positive school culture. A collaborative adult culture within a school allows all of those who care for and serve students to be supported, achieve greater success and satisfaction, environment (Peterson, 1994). In such a culture, adminisand survive a very demanding policy trators support groups of teachers to meet to share ideas, address professional issues, and jointly solve problems. In this way, teachers become a profession of learners who engage in inquiry, reective practice and continuous problem solving and, at the same time, build leadership capacity (Fullan, 1995, cited in Silins, 2000, p. 5). A parallel process in the classroom promotes a student community of learners, a sense of social afliation, and a rich learning experience (Resnick & Klopfer, 1989; Solomon et al., 2000). This kind of classroom, because it engages students actively and can accommodate their interests and questions, can be responsive to a multicultural, multiethnic, multiracial group of students.
E. RESOURCES
PRINT MATERIALS
Delpit, L. (1995). Other peoples children: Cultural conict in the classroom. New York: New Press. Delpits book, which has become a classic in the arena of multicultural and cross-cultural education, presents Delpits own experiences as an educator but casts them in theoretical perspectives that can be applied broadly. She addresses language and literacy and how, in a world of unequal valuing of different ways of using language, all students need to learn the power codes of society. Her research in Papua, New Guinea, is both interesting and informative, as one sees the same kinds of social issues surrounding language difference replicated in a very different environment. Lee, S. J. (1996). Unraveling the model-minority stereotype: Listening to Asian American youth. New York: Teachers College Press. Asian students have wrongly been lumped together without regard for their individual and individual cultural group differences. This book provides insights into specics of Asian Americans educational needs.
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Nieto, S. (1999). The light in their eye: Creating multicultural learning communities. Multicultural Education Series, J. A. Banks (Series Ed.). New York: Teachers College Press. Long known for her research on Puerto Rican American communities, Nieto gives a vision of how educators and policy makers can promote positive learning experiences for students from nondominant backgrounds. Rothstein-Fisch, C. (2003). Bridging Cultures teacher education module. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. For professional developers or teacher educators who want to introduce the framework of individualism-collectivism, the Module provides a three-hour presentation, complete with overheads and a script that can be adapted for different audiences. Teacher educators have found the Module most successful when spread over two three-hour class sessions. Rothstein-Fisch, C. (Ed.). (2003). Readings for Bridging Cultures. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. Six readings, ranging from short articles published in Educational Leadership to research articles published in journals, are reproduced here. The authors are primarily Bridging Cultures Project researchers, including one of the teacher-researchers involved in Project. The short volume can be used as background preparation for presenting the Module, described above. Schaps, E., & Lewis, C. (1999). Perils on an essential journey: Building school community. Phi Delta Kappan, 81(3), 215-218. This short article talks about the promises and pitfalls of trying to build school communities in the context of national pressures to focus on test scores. Sheets, R. H., & Hollins, E. R. (Eds.). (1999). Racial and ethnic identity in school practices: Aspects of human development. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Singleton, G. E., & Linton, C. (in press). Courageous conversations about race: A eld guide for achieving equity in schools. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Singleton and Lintons book is based on longstanding professional development and research of the Pacic Educational Group, based in San Francisco. Singleton is a well-known and effective anti-racist educator who has helped thousands of teachers to approach the topics of race and racism positively and constructively. Spindler, G., & Spindler, L. with Trueba, H., & Williams, M. D. (1990). The American cultural dialogue and its transmission. London: The Falmer Press. This may be foundational reading for those who want to learn about American culture. Swisher, K., & Deyle, D. (1992). Adapting instruction to culture. In J. Reyhner (Ed.), Teaching American Indian students (pp. 81103). Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. The authors discuss the failure of schooling to respond to cultural differences and what is known about creating culturally responsive pedagogy for American Indian students. Although the chapter is not new, it is still appropriate for helping educators understand the importance of culture and context in the schooling of American Indian students.
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Trumbull, E., Rothstein-Fisch, C., Greeneld, P. M., & Quiroz, B. (2001). Bridging Cultures between home and school: A guide for teachers. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. This book, written for teachers and those who give professional support to teachers, is based on an action research project conducted by teachers and professional researchers. It recounts the innovations of seven Los Angeles area teachers, as they successfully sought to improve instruction for their immigrant Latino students and to work more closely and effectively with parents.
WEB SITES
African Voices http://www.mnh.si.edu/africanvoices This Web site, organized by the Smithsonian Institutes National Museum of Natural History, allows viewers to learn about the history and culture of Africa through a variety of media. The Bridging Cultures Project http://www.wested.org/cs/we/view/pj/26 Started at WestEd in 1996 and ongoing in the form of workshops and publications, the Web site has links to documents and resources related to the Project. The Center for Research on Education, Diversity, and Excellence http://www.crede.org CREDE, based at the University of California, Santa Cruz, conducts research and develops publications related to improving the achievement of underserved students. Many useful short articles on successful educational approaches and programs can be downloaded from this site. The Chche Konnen Center http://projects.terc.edu/cheche_konnen The Chche Konnen Center is engaged in a national reform initiative to improve elementary and middle school science teaching and learning for language minority students. The Center utilizes a research-based approach to teacher professional development that integrates inquiry and reection in three areas: science and mathematics, teaching and learning, and culture and language. Educators interested in constructivist science teaching with English language learners can access an array of information and resources on the site. The Educators Reference Desk http://www.eduref.org The Educators Reference Desk has replaced the AskERIC service. Educators can nd articles on virtually every educational topic, included those related to culture, language, and race. The site also offers sample lesson plans in a range of subject areas.
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The Knowledge Loom http://www.knowledgeloom.org/crt/index.shtml The Education Alliance at Brown University operates this professional development Web site. It addresses a wide variety of topics regarding what works in teaching and learning. The Culturally Relevant Teaching spotlight highlights success stories from exemplary classrooms and points practitioners to additional resources and research. The Learning Research and Development Center http://www.lrdc.pitt.edu Located at the University of Pittsburgh, the LRDC has conducted research on learning and teaching for more than four decades. The Web site provides links to seminal and recent publications about the Centers research. Dr. Lauren Resnick is the Director of LRDC. The National Institute for Community Innovations http://nccrest.edreform.net Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education, The National Institute for Community Innovations has organized national Education Reform Networks. These networksgroups of people and organizations that are leaders in school reformhave identied high-quality professional development materials on a wide range of topics in education. Two links of interest to educators concerned with equity and excellence for diverse populations are http://nccrest (The National Center for Culturally Responsive Educational Systems) and http://equity.edreform.net (The Equity Network). New Horizons for Learning http://www.newhorizons.org This organization is dedicated to transforming education to prevent students from falling through the cracks. Thus, it has a broad agenda, addressing the needs of all kinds of students and of teachers and schools. New Horizons philosophy of learning and teaching is based on the theories of Howard Gardner and Reuven Feuerstein, hence compatible with the notion that intelligence and cognitive ability are modiable through good teaching. Its quarterly online journal has articles on topics ranging from stepping stones to literacy, to student leadership, arts education, and special technology options. North Central Regional Educational Laboratory http://www.ncrel.org/sdrs/areas/issues/educatrs/presrvce/pe3lk1.htm This site provides an overview of issues relating to multicultural education and educating teachers who will work with culturally and linguistically diverse students. Additional readings are available online through the links provided.
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Tolerance.org http://www.tolerance.org/index.jsp This Web site is devoted to promoting tolerance and social justice. Part of the Southern Poverty Law Center, the Teaching Tolerance organization provides many useful resources for teachers, parents, and children free of charge, including a biannual journal and curriculum kits. The site also addresses current events and news topics related to tolerance. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum http://www.ushmm.org/ The site offers a wealth of information about the Holocaust and has articles that can be downloaded and used by both teachers and students. Note: The Web sites of all of the regional educational laboratories provide useful information and printable documents related to successful education of diverse populations. Their Web addresses are as follows: The Regional Educational Laboratory at AEL www.ael.org The Laboratory for Student Success (LSS) www.temple.edu/lss Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning (McREL) www.mcrel.org North Central Regional Educational Laboratory (NCREL) www.ncrel.org The Northeast and Islands Regional Educational Laboratory at Brown University (LAB) www.lab.brown.edu Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory (NWREL) www.nwrel.org Pacic Resources for Education and Learning (PREL) www.prel.org The Regional Educational Laboratory at SERVE www.serve.org Southwest Educational Development Laboratory (SEDL) www.sedl.org WestEd www.wested.org
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Family A primary social group, often organized in part for the rearing of children, that can take many forms: one or more parents plus one or more children; parent(s), children, and others such as grandparents or aunts and uncles; a primary caregiver (related or not) and a child. Community A group of people who have some common and continuing organization, values, understanding, history, and practices (Rogoff, 2003, p. 80). School A place organized for teaching and learning; a formalized institution for educating people.
Families and communities can be valuable resources for schools and teachers in that they provide knowledge about the culture and language of their students. Tapping these resources requires changing how schools perceive the parents and communities values and beliefs. These changes include building a school culture that will accept values, beliefs, and ways of viewing the world that are often quite different from those of the mainstream population. As diverse populations come into the community, changes such as these will have to take place to ensure excellent and equitable education for all students. In this way and by collaborating with communities, schools also become valuable resources for families.
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Activity 15: Challenging Cultural Assumptions About Parental Involvement INSTRUCTIONS TO PARTICIPANTS
In a small group or in pairs, read the following teacher comment and answer the questions in Figure 16. I feel so bad for these kids. The parents dont come to parent-teacher conferences. Ive never seen any at open house either. I dont think they really try to help the kids with school. I wonder, maybe in their culture, education isnt as important.Third-grade teacher
Discussion
What ideas did your group have for understanding why some parents may not be overtly involved in their childrens schooling? What constructive actions can teachers take?
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Accepted wisdom, backed up by increasing research, is that parents (families) involvement in their childrens schooling promotes school adjustment and academic achievement (Boethel, 2003; Henderson & Mapp, 2002; Hoover-Dempsey & Sandler, 1997; Mattingly, Prislin, McKenzie, Rodriguez, & Kayzar, 2002)20. Categorical funding programs, such as Title 1, require parent advisory groups as a condition of funding. It is probable that the majority of schools engage in explicit efforts to engage parents in school site events such as parent-teacher conferences as well as activities at home, such as assistance with homework (Boethel, 2003). Some theorists make the distinction between parent participation and parent involvement, suggesting that the former takes place at the school and the latter at home. We use the term parent involvement to refer to both, recognizing that it can refer to a very large range of activities. Research has shown that although a large proportion of parent involvement efforts are directed toward minority families, schools experience greater difculty engaging such families in schoolrelated activities, particularly at the school site (see review in Trumbull, Rothstein-Fisch, & Hernandez, 2003). However, research continues to show that parents from all cultural, racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups have high educational aspirations for their children and want to be involved in their childrens education (Dauber & Epstein, 1993; Goldenberg & Gallimore, 1995; Goldenberg, Gallimore, Reese, & Garnier, 2001; Mapp, 2003). When parents do not participate, it is almost certainly in part because of the ways in which schools attempt to involve them and their families (Boethel, 2003; Delgado-Gaitan, 1991; Trumbull & Hernandez, 2003). Families from non-dominant communities often share a sense of alienation from or frustration with mainstream institutions, but there is vast variety in the particulars of their experiences. Immigrants and native-born peoples have very different social and cultural histories. Weinstein-Shr (1995) maintains that in order to help refugee and immigrant families, schools need to develop an understanding of the linguistic, religious, and geographic differences (including differences between rural and urban settings) among their diverse student populations. For example, the rst wave of adult refugees from Vietnam, Cambodia, and Cuba had university educations. In contrast, most of those arriving later were farmers with little or no education. Weinstein-Shr (1995) notes that the following three issues need to be understood when working with a refugee population: survival, communication, and power. Many refugees ed from their home country and have survived despite some very difcult experiences. After arrival in the United States, these groups count on their traditional kinship bonds and community organizations to provide them with resources for solving some of their immediate problems. With such support, they may survive; however, they typically face many challenges as they learn a new and very different language (and U.S. communication styles). Attaining the social power that would allow them to be heard in the context of dealing with U.S. institutions such as schools is a long processif it happens at all (Collignon et al., 2001).
20
Much more research of a rigorous nature is needed to draw rm conclusions about what kinds of strategies and processes work best within different contexts. Mattingly et al. (2002) stress the limitations of existing research.
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21
Mexican children are not routinely taught to recite the alphabet; instead, they learn syllable patterns (ba/be/bi/bo/bu; ma/me/mi/mo/mu) early on because that helps them more in learning to read, given the syllabic regularity of Spanish.
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different sets of expectations or scripts for how the activity should be conducted (Gallimore & Goldenberg, 1993; Reese & Gallimore, 2000). For instance, they may focus more on word identication or correct penmanship than higher level comprehension processes (Gallimore & Goldenberg, 1993). Family members may be quite involved in helping their children at home but not participate as much in school-level involvement activities (Henderson & Mapp, 2002; Lopez, Scribner, & Mahitivanichcha, 2001). Scribner, Young, & Pedroza (1999) found that teachers were more likely to think of parent involvement as entailing school-site activities, whereas parents thought of it as entailing at-home activities.
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School-to-home communication Newsletters Letters Notices Report cards Conferences Signs posted
Volunteer opportunities
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Parent-teacher conferences
Consider holding small-group conferences and extending the time frame for each conference. Let parents take the lead rst by asking them what their concerns are. Some parents will participate more when the topic is, How can we help our children improve in reading? rather than, Heres what your child needs to do. Encourage family participation in designing such events as parent night or open house. Allow families to bring pre-school-age children. Some will be comfortable with a child-care arrangement; some will not want to leave their children with a stranger unless they know the person. Find out from parent volunteers how to reach others who may not attend such events often.
School-wide events
Epsteins parent involvement components are those that are generally initiated by the school. Delgado-Gaitan (1991) offers three different possible categories: 1) school-initiated activities controlled largely by the school; 2) activities in which power is shared between schools and parents; and 3) activities established by parents to respond to their own agenda, on which school staff are invited to collaborate.
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Discussion
State the barrier your group addressed and share the ideas you had for addressing it. What additional barriers and solutions did your group identify?
There are some general steps school staff can take to lower barriers to parent and family involvement, some of which are mentioned in Table 14 above. Figure 18 outlines some general guidelines, which should make sense in light of what we have discussed throughout this volume.
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COMMUNICATION
The language barrier is not strictly a matter of school personnels and parents understanding the vocabulary and syntax of each others language. Often communication problems lie below the surface, at the level of invisible cultural expectations. Teachers and parents values are expressed in the topics they introduce in conversations with each other, in the priorities they assign to these topics, and in their approaches to setting goals for children (Greeneld, Quiroz, & Raeff, 2000).22 Cross-cultural communication problems have been shown to affect schools relationships with families from non-dominant cultural groups (Greeneld, Quiroz, & Raeff, 2000; McCaleb, 1997; Valds, 1996). In many cultures, personal communication is valued over impersonal communication, such as written notices or letters, and families want personal interchanges that are not always formal (Diaz, 2000; Finders & Lewis, 1994; Levine & Trickett, 2000; McCaleb, 1997; Morris, 2002; Trumbull et al., 2001; Trumbull, Rothstein-Fisch, & Hernandez, 2003). Schools, however, rely on written communication to convey many important messages to parents, a mode of communication that oral cultures may not be used to or nd appropriate. Personal, impromptu interactions that may be the norm in some groups are not favored in schools: In many schools parents need an appointment to visit a classroom or talk with a teacher or principal. In Valdss 1996 ethnographic study of 10 Mexican American families in Southern California, she recounts several instances of communication breakdown between parents (mainly mothers) and schools. In one case, a mother relayed a message to her younger sons teacher via his 8-yearold brother to the effect that the younger son was not to eat the sh whenever it was provided at lunchtime because he was allergic to it. It is not clear whether the teacher discounted the message because it was verbal and from another child or whether the message was not properly delivered. However, the upshot was that the child continued to eat meals that made him miss days of school from time to time because he was sick. Not realizing that a message from a child might not be taken seriously in the way that a note from a parent would, the mother concluded that the school did not care about her son. Other communication issues arise when the sociolinguistic norms of the dominant culture and those of a non-dominant culture conict. This topic is dealt with in the language volume, largely in relation to difculties students may encounter when the communication expectations of school differ from those of home. However, adult-adult communication can, obviously, suffer from similar discrepancies in rules of conversation and other forms of communication. Dominant-culture communication tends to be direct but not confrontational, whereas the communication of many cultures (e.g., Latinos and Asians of many ethnicities) tends to be indirect (Azuma, Hess, Kashigawa, & Conroy, 1980, cited in Clancy, 1986; Trumbull et al., 2001). In some cultures, such as Japanese and Arab, saying no to any question is avoided (Clancy, 1986; Moosa, Karabenick, & Adams, 2001). Needless to say, this conversational rule can be extremely disconcerting to a cultural outsider. Expressions of emotion are considered by many African Americans a natural part of argumentation, and they may feel that European Americans are being disingenuous when they contain their emotions during an argument (Kochman, 1990). European Americans may be put off by
22
This observation is not intended to minimize the value of teachers learning a language other than English in order to communicate with families. In addition, second-language learning can be a source of cultural learning as well.
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the emotional elements of argumentation, believing that they interfere with logic and reason. These are just a few of the many cultural differences in communication style, differences that are rooted in the values and beliefs of cultures andlike most deep cultural patternsinvisible to people except in a sense of discomfort they may feel when their patterns are not observed by those with whom they are speaking. With some awareness of possible sources of communication breakdowns, teachers can contribute to more successful cross-cultural communication with parents. Although it is impossible to be an expert on every cultures style (and, of course, people within cultures vary considerably), being attuned to how parents and families seem to prefer to communicate can alert teachers to ways they can make communication more successful.
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school programs. These various interventions complement each other; hence, they recommend a continuum of integrated family, school, and comprehensive community services (p. 4). These ideas are not revolutionary, but they may be overlooked in the pressure schools endure to simply respond to federal, state, and local mandates and make it from day to day. Warren (2005) observes that schools and CBOs have a great deal to offer each other, particularly in poor, urban areas. CBOs address the need for improved housing, health care, nutrition, safe environments, and better employment opportunitiesso-called structural factors. When these factors are not dealt with, school reforms are hampered. Underfed and overstressed children cannot be expected to learn to their potential, nor can their parents be expected to have the wherewithal to engage with schools optimally. At the same time, community development efforts depend on improved educational opportunities and an informed populace (both of which schools address). One role that CBOs can play with regard to schools is as mediators, helping schools understand families better and helping families understand schools better (Warren, 2005). They can also bring the cultural and social assets of communities into schools and foster meaningful partnerships between schools and families (p. 135). This kind of activity can diminish the power differential between families and school personnel and affect the culture of schools because parents have a foundation from which to enter collaborations on a more equal footing (p. 165). Ideally, such collaborations can also contribute to the political and social efcacy of neighborhoods. The whole process can build social capital (see denition below) among educators, families, and community members and result in greater family support within the school and at home, improving teachers on the basis of new understandings about families, and coordinating efforts to improve both the school and community (pp. 166167).
Cultural Capital The human, social, and material resources that families can use to reach desired goals; sometimes the term social capital is used to refer to the social networks and institutional supports available in a given community (Coleman, 1988, cited in Diamond, 2000). Funds of Knowledge The skills, knowledge, and practices that members of a family or community have acquired
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The recommendations of Scribner, Young, and Pedroza (1999), who studied eight high-performing schools in Texas, could be useful to many schools. Their recommendations are: 1. Build on the cultural values of the community. 2. Emphasize personal contact with parents. 3. Foster communication with parents. 4. Create a warm school environment for families. 5. Make structural accommodations for families (e.g., in scheduling and in ways of participating in school activities). After conducting research in districts that have been successful in involving migrant families in the school, Lopez, Scribner, and Mahitivanichcha (2001) observe, Our ndings suggest that the main criterion for successful parental involvement programs is an unwavering commitment to meet the multiple needs of migrant families above all other involvement considerations (p. 261). Above, all, identifying parents and families perspectives and understandings is critical to understanding their behaviors. If parents do not see education as something that is connected to activities outside of school (Diamond, 2000), their lack of home attention to academics is understandable. If a parent has only a basic grasp of a schools grading system, she cannot be blamed for failing to recognize when her child is at risk for retention and failing to seek appropriate remedies (Valds, 1996).
RESILIENCE/RESILIENCY
Resilience The internal strength, supported by external resources, to respond exibly and adaptively to life stresses Resiliency The process of using ones internal strengths to respond exibly and adaptively to life stresses
The concept of resilience has proven increasingly useful to understanding why some children and youth transcend social conditions such as poverty and racism. As Benard (2004) mentions, in the past decade there has been an increase in research on resilience and, consequently, a much greater recognition of its existence and importance in affecting life outcomes for children and adults. This research extends our understanding of the role and inuence of sociocultural environments (in and out of school) on the development and relationships among self-concept, motivation, and learning (Greeno, Collins, & Resnick, 1996; Werner & Smith, 1992). Rutter and Rutter (1992) state:
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If we want to help vulnerable youngsters, we need to focus on the protective processes that bring about changes in life trajectories from risk to adaptationamong them (1) those that reduce the risk impact, (2) those that reduce the likelihood of negative chain reactions, (3) those that promote self-esteem and self-efcacy, and (4) those that open up opportunities. We have seen these processes at work among the resilient children in our study and among those youths who recovered from serious coping problems in young adulthood. They represent the essence of any effective intervention program, whether by professionals or volunteers. (p. 204) Understanding historical social trends helps us to grasp why poor communities struggle to change their circumstances. A major underlying cause of social problems in poor communities is the gradual destruction of naturally occurring social networks. Social, economic, and technological changes since the late 1940s have contributed to a fragmentation of community life, resulting in breaks in the networks between individuals, families, schools, and the likein other words, disruption of the social systems that are necessary for healthy human development. For example, it is well documented that children in high-income households with highly educated parents tend to score higher on tests. Other predictors of achievement scores are smaller family size, age of mother at time of birth of children, and school and community characteristics (Neisser, 1998). These correlations reveal how various social factors can inuence human development, learning, and achievement patterns. Berman et al. (1997) report: Nearly all LEP [limited English-procient] and other language-minority students are members of ethnic and racial minority groups, and most are poor. Their neighborhoods are likely to be segregated and beset with multiple problemsinadequate health, social, cultural services; insufcient employment opportunities; crime; drugs; and gang activity. Their families are likely to suffer the stresses of poverty and to worry about their childrens safety and about their future (p. 1). Of course, these correlations are not absolute determinants of student outcomes in school. Schools can and have succeeded in educating students from backgrounds like these. However, for schools and districts, awareness of social inuences on student learning can be a starting point for addressing inequitable educational outcomes. Benard (1996) identies four traits demonstrated by resilient individuals: 1. Social competence, which consists of the ability to establish positive relationships and the exibility to successfully function within and between the primary and dominant cultures 2. Problem-solving skills, which include the ability to plan and think critically, creatively, and reectively about solutions to cognitive and social problems 3. Autonomy, or the sense of ones own identity and independence 4. A sense of purpose and future, including having goals, educational aspirations, achievement motivation, persistence, optimism, and spiritual connectedness
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The major tenet of this approach is that all individuals have the capacity to develop these resilience strengths and that resilience is a capacity for healthy development and successful learning innate to all people. It is an inborn developmental wisdom that naturally motivates individuals to meet their human needs for love, belonging, respect, identity, power, mastery, challenge, and meaning. When young people experience home, school, and community environments rich in the developmental supports (also called external assets or protective factors) of caring relationships, high expectations, and opportunities for meaningful participation and contribution, they meet these developmental needs. In turn, youth naturally develop the individual characteristics (internal assets, or resilience strengths) that dene healthy development and successful learning. The characteristics mentioned above include social competence, problem solving, autonomy and identity, and sense of purpose and future. Such individual strengths are the natural developmental outcomes for youth who experience homes, schools, communities, and peer groups rich in the three basic developmental supports and opportunities. Moreover, these individual characteristics promote successful learning and protect against involvement in health-risk behaviors such as alcohol, tobacco, other drug abuse, and violence (Resnick et al., 1997). According to Benard, research on human development, brain and cognition, school effectiveness, family and community, and medicine clearly indicates the benets of an environmental approach over an individual, skill-building approach, commonly referred to as a decit or x-the-kid model. Education and prevention practices that do not pay attention to external assetsthe quality of relationships, messages, and opportunities for participationdo not improve learning or behavior in the long term. Such practices are in contrast to environmental change approaches like cooperative learning, small group process, adventure learning, arts experience, peer helping, mentoring, and service learning. These latter approaches create opportunities in the context of relationships for young people; they allow them to achieve academically and learn positive life skills and attitudes through direct and ongoing experiences that meet their developmental needs for love, belonging, respect, identity, power, mastery, challenge, and meaning. Figure 19 presents Benards model of resiliency. Figure 20 spells out what is meant by the four resilience strengths she identies. The following denitions relevant to Figures 19 and 20 below are based on Benard (2004, pp. 2233).
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R E S I L I E N C E
YOUTH NEEDS
EXTERNAL ASSETS
INTERNAL ASSETS
PROTECTIVE FACTORS Caring relationship High expectations Opportunities to participate and contribute
RESILIENCE TRAITS Social competence Problem solving Autonomy and sense of self Sense of purpose and future
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Discussion
What are existing ways the schools or communities with which you are familiar support youth resilience? What new ways did you identify for supporting resilience?
Internal Locus of Control/Initiative The belief that one has personal power, the ability to inuence performance on a task or a life outcome, for example; initiative is the ability to act on this belief to seek a challenging goal (see also agency). Adaptive Distancing/Resistance Detaching oneself emotionally from dysfunction in the family, school, or community and imagining a different future for oneself from what one sees in the dysfunctional setting; resistance is a form of adaptive distancing; the refusal to accept negative characterizations or expectations of oneself based on ones racial, cultural, ethnic, gender identity or socioeconomic status. Self Awareness/Mindfulness Consciousness of ones inner states and ability to put them in perspective; ability to tap inner strengths and accept ones mistakes and limits. Faith/Spirituality/Sense of Meaning Ability to attribute meaning to life or create meaning and through that process nd a sense of purpose in life.
Rutter (1987) reminds us that for students coping with situations that place them at risk of school failure, effective intervention promotes positive self-concepts by providing caring and supportive environments, communicating high expectations, and connecting learning to future opportunities. Prevention efforts need to focus on building networks and intersystem linkages. Educators must build social bonds within families, schools, and communities by providing and identifying resources (e.g., with agencies and community organizations) to ensure that all individuals experience caring and support. Educators can further strengthen social bonds by relating to students and families with respect and high expectations and by giving them opportunities to be active participants in their family, school, and community life (Wang, Haertel, & Walberg, 1998). Again, knowledge of students cultures will allow educators to interact more knowledgeably with parents and students.
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C. RESOURCES
PRINT MATERIALS
The School Community Journal Published twice yearly, this journal is focused on topics related to the community of the school, including how the school relates to the wider community it serves. The journal presents research, essays, and reports from the eld (including descriptions of programs). Benard, B. (2003). Turnaround teachers and schools. In B. Williams (Ed.), Closing the achievement gap: A vision for changing beliefs and practices, 2nd Edition (pp. 115137). Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. Benard talks explicitly about school practices that promote high achievement of students from non-dominant communities. Two checklists are included that can be useful to schools who want to self-evaluate their level of expectations and caring. Benard, B. (2004). Resiliency: What we have learned. San Francisco: WestEd. Benard discusses recent ndings of resiliency research and presents many examples to illustrate each important point. The book is well-referenced, readable, and highly appropriate for educators. Boethel, M. (2003). Diversity: School, family, & community connections. Annual Synthesis 2003. Austin, TX: National Center for Family & Community Connections with Schools. Southwest Educational Development Laboratory. This is a scholarly synthesis of research that can be used to guide educators to the most promising avenues for connecting school, family, and community. The book is organized so that a reader can nd any topic of interest easily and quickly get a handle on the most important ndings of research that meets high standards. Casebook: Preparing educators to involve families: From theory to practice. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Family Research Project. This new (2005) book has been prepared by the Harvard Family Research Project (HFRP) and is designed to help educators to partner with families of children in elementary school, particularly those for whom poverty and cultural differences are salient. Moll, L. C. (Ed.). (1990). Vygotsky and education: Instructional implications and applications of sociohistorical psychology. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. This edited volume devoted to Vygotskian theory and applications is divided into three major sections: Historical and Theoretical Issues, Educational Implications, and Educational Applications. It offers a thorough grounding in sociohistorical psychology balanced with research related to classroom applications of Vygotskian principles. This is a valuable resource for educators who wish to explore sociohistorical psychology on both a theoretical and a practical level.
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Valds, G. (1996). Con respeto. New York: Teachers College Press. Valds has written a thorough and engaging ethnography of 10 immigrant Mexican families in Carpinteria, California, and their experiences with the local public schools. Her vivid documentation highlights communication issues and how immigrant families from a particular background negotiate life in a new setting.
WEB SITES
The Harvard Family Research Project http://www.gse.harvard.edu/hfrp HFRP has a network that anyone can subscribe to called Family Involvement Network in Education (FINE). FINE disseminates summaries of research studies related to families and schooling conducted at the HFRP. These are reader-friendly and very useful to teachers, researchers, and others involved with education who want research-based ideas for working with families and communities to improve schooling. FINE focuses primarily on underserved students and families. The National Center for Family & Community Connections with Schools http://www.sedl.org/connections Based at Southwest Educational Development Laboratory in Austin, TX, the Center bridges research and practicelinking people with researched-based information and information that they can use to connect schools, families, and communities. Project Zero http://pzweb.harvard.edu/Default.htm Project Zero, a research group at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, investigates the development of learning processes in children, adults, and organizations. Project Zero builds on this research to initiate communities of reective, independent learners; to contribute to deep understanding within academic disciplines; and to promote critical and creative thinking. Project Zeros mission is to understand and enhance learning, thinking, and creativity in the arts and other disciplines for individuals and institutions. Of particular interest to educators are the current and recent research projects conducted by Project Zero staff, including the seminal work on multiple intelligences by Howard Gardner.
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Resiliency in Action http://www.resiliency.com This Web site, founded by Bonnie Benard and Nan Henderson, disseminates resiliency research, offers concrete information about how to facilitate the application and evaluation of the resiliency paradigm, and is engaged in building a network of practitioners in different states. The site includes an interactive forum, training information, product information, and additional resources. The Yale Child Study Center School Development Program http://info.med.yale.edu/comer This Web site features educational reformer James Comers school change model, which is grounded in the idea that healthy child development is the key to academic achievement and life success. Comers framework identies six developmental pathways: physical, cognitive, psychological, language, social, and ethical.
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REFERENCES
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BOARD MEMBERS Rafael Aragunde Torres Alice Carlan Richard H. Cate Charles F. Desmond Edward J. Doherty David Driscoll Michele Forman Susan A. Gendron Noreen Michael Richard P. Mills Elizabeth Neale Peter J. Negroni Basan N. Nembirkow C. Patrick Proctor, Sr. Robin D. Rapaport Betty J. Sternberg Lyonel B. Tracy
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