Multicultural Teacher Education - ERIC · the literature on multicultural teacher education asserts...

Preview:

Citation preview

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

115

Teacher Education Quarterly, Spring 2010

Multicultural Teacher Education:Examining the Perceptions,

Practices, and Coherencein One Teacher Preparation Program

By Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

Withthenation’sshiftingethnicandculturaltexture,multiculturaleducationhasbecomeimperativeinthe21stcentury.Asanoutcomeoftheshiftingdiversityinourcountry,morethan6.3millionstudentswithEnglishastheirsecondlanguageandasmanyas13millionstudentslivinginpovertyareenrolledinpre-Kthrough12thgradepublicschools(Children’sDefenseFund,2005).IncontrasttostudentdiversityintheU.S.,mostofthecurrentteachingforce,thosecomingintoteaching,andthosewhoteachprospectiveteachersareWhitefemaleswhohavebeenraisedinmiddleclasshomesinruralandsuburbancommunities(http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2007/minori-

Lori Czop Assaf is an associate professor, Rubén Garza is an assistant professor, and Jennifer Battle is a professor, all with the College of Education at Texas State University-San Marcos, San Marcos, Texas.

tytrends/ind_1_1.asp).Withsuchdramaticchangesinournation’sculturallandscape,itisnotsurprisingthatonemajorgoalofmanyteachereducationprogramsistobetterprepareamostlyWhite,femalemonolingualteachingforcetoworkeffectivelywithstudentsfromculturallyandlinguisticallydiversebackgrounds.Yet,eventhoughmostteachereducationprogramsreportthattheyhavethoroughlyincorporateddiversityperspectivesandmulticulturalcontentintothecurriculum,externalexaminationsoftenprovethecontrary(Bartolomé,2004;Darling-Hammond,Hammerness,Grossman,Rust,&Shulman,2005).

Multicultural Teacher Education

116

Manyteacherpreparationprogramsattempttoinfusemulticulturalperspectivesbysimplyaddingoneortwocoursesinmulticulturaleducationand/orrequiringteachercandidatestocompleteassignmentsthatexploresurfaceleveldifferencesincultureandlanguagesuchassamplingdifferent“cultural”foodsorlearningtosayhelloinseverallanguages.Suchpracticescanbesuperficialandpartialratherthaninfusedintoacoherentmulticulturalcurriculum(Irvine,2003;Ladson-Bill-ings,1999;Villegas&Lucas,2002;Zeichner&Hoeft,1996)andcanreinforcetheideathatonlyafewindividualsareresponsibleforpreparingteachercandidatesforadiversesociety.Evenwhenmulticulturalcoursesarethoroughlyinfusedintothecurriculum,manyteachereducatorsinthesameteacherpreparationprogramtendtohaveverydifferentideasaboutmulticulturalperspectivesonteachingandteachereducationandhowimportanttheyare. AccordingtoDarling-Hammond,Hammerness,Grossman,Rust,andShul-man(2005)onewaytomakelong-lastingchangesinthewayteachercandidatesarepreparedtoworkwithdiversestudentsistocreatecoherentprogramswhereteachereducatorsbuildasharedvisionofgoodteaching,usecommonstandardsofpracticethatguideandassesscourseworkandclinicalwork,anddemonstrateshared knowledge and common beliefs about teaching and learning. ForTatto(1996),havingacoherentprogramdoesnotnecessarilysuggestthatallfacultythinkalike,insteadthecoherenceofaprogramshouldconsiderhowfacultymemberscanreachcommon ground aroundprofessionalnormsandexpectations,aswellasinthewaythatlearningexperiencesareorganizedandconceptualized. Inotherwords,creatingacoherentmulticulturalteachereducationprogramre-quiresfacultymemberstostriveforandidentifyacentralfocusforteacherlearning,tobecollectivelyresponsible,andtohavetheopportunitytoinfluencepoliciesandpractices.Suchprogramcoherenceissustainedbyacollectivepurposeandpromotesfocusedandsustainedprogramdevelopment(King&Newmann,2000).Althoughtheliteratureonmulticulturalteachereducationassertsthatcoherencemaybeoneofthemostcriticalaspectsofteacherpreparationprograms(Nieto,2000;Villegas&Lucas,2002),thereisverylittleresearchonthistopic.AndlikeGayandHoward(2000),webelievethat teachereducationprogramsandthefacultywhoteachintheseprograms“mustbeheldaccountableforimplementingqualitymulticulturaleducationastheyexpecttheirstudentsinK-12classrooms”(p.15). Thepurposeofthisstudywastoexamineteachereducators’perspectivesaboutmulticulturaleducationinanelementaryandmiddleschoolteacherpreparationprogram.Specifically,ourinvestigationexploredhowteachereducators’beliefs,perceptions,andpracticescontributedto thecoherenceor lackthereof, inoneteachereducationprogram.Thisinvestigationisaresponsetothecallformoreresearch on the coherence of teacher education programs (Darling-Hammond,Hammerness,Grossman,Rust,&Shulman,2005).

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

117

Multicultural Teacher Education Conceptual Framework Cochran-Smith(2003)designedaconceptualframeworkthatidentifiesthevariedmeaningsofmulticulturalteachereducation.Sheorganizesthisframeworkaroundsevenkeyquestionsthatrelatetoissuesofdiversity,ideology,knowledge,teacherlearning,teacherpractice,outcomes,andteachercandidateselection.Followingtheexplorationofthesesevenquestions,Cochran-Smith(2003)recommendsthattheanswersfromthepreviousquestionsbeexaminedundertheeighthquestion:Howarethefirstsevenquestionsconnectedtoandcoherentwithoneanotherinparticularpoliciesorprograms(The Coherent Question)?(Seefigureoneforlistoftheothersevenquestions).Cochran-Smith’s(2003)conceptualframeworkcanbeusedtoexplorehowteachereducatorsfeelaboutthevariedaspectsofmulticulturalteachereducationanduncoverhowmultipleperspectivesandpracticesfashionthecoherenceofateachereducationprogram.

Literature Review In thenextsection,wereviewseveral researchstudies thathaveexaminedteachercandidates’andteachereducators’beliefsandattitudesconcerningmulti-

Figure One

MultipleMeaningsofMulticulturalTeacherEducationTheoryandPractice:SevenKeyQuestions(Cochran-Smith,2003)

1.HowshouldtheincreasinglydiversestudentpopulationinAmericanschoolsbeunderstoodasachallengeora“problem”forteachingandteachereducation,andwhatarethedesirable“solutions”tothisproblem(TheDiversityQuestion)?

2.Whatisthepurposeofschooling,whatistheroleofpubliceducationinademocraticsociety,andwhathistoricallyhasbeentheroleofschoolinginmaintainingorchangingtheeconomicandsocialstructureofsociety(TheIdeologyorSocialJusticeQuestion)?

3.Whatknowledge,interpretiveframeworks,beliefs,andattitudesarenecessarytoteachdiversepopulationseffectively,particularlyknowledgeandbeliefsaboutculture,languagediversityandit’sroleinschooling(TheKnowledgeQuestion)?

4.Howdoteacherslearntoteachdiversepopulations,andwhat,inparticular,arethepedago-giesofteacherpreparation(e.g.courseworkassignments,readings,fieldexperiences)thatmakethislearningpossible(TheHowTeachersLearnQuestion)?

5.Whatarethecompetenciesandpedagogicalskillsteachersneedtoteachdiversepopula-tionseffectively(ThePracticeQuestion)?

6.Whatshouldtheconsequencesoroutcomesofteacherpreparationbe,andhow,bywhomandforwhatpurposesshouldtheseoutcomesbeassessed(TheOutcomesQuestion)?

7.What candidates should be recruited and selected forAmerica’s teaching force (TheRecruitment/SelectionQuestion)?

Multicultural Teacher Education

118

culturaleducation.Thesestudiesillustratetheimportanceofspecificinstructionalpracticesandfield-basedexperiencesinmulticulturalsettings.Theyalsohighlightthewaysinwhichteachereducatorsandteachereducationprogramscanimpactfutureteachers’beliefsandattitudesaboutteachinginmulticulturalsettings.

Teachers Candidates’ Beliefs and Attitudes about Diversity Capella-Santana(2003)examined themulticulturalattitudesandbeliefsoffifty-twoteachercandidatesinanundergraduateelementaryeducationprogram.Theteachercandidatescompletedquestionnairesandinterviewsbeforeandaftertakingamulticulturaleducationcourseandbeforestudentteachinginanurbanschool. Results suggest that these novice teachers’ attitudes and beliefs aboutdiversitychangedpositivelyduringtheteacherpreparationprogrambecausepro-graminstructorsallowedtheteacherstofreelydiscussandchallengeissuesthatoccurredintheirurbanschool.AccordingtoCapella-Santana,beingplacedinadiverseschoolsettingandtakingamulticulturalcoursefocusedonsimilarissueshelpedthefutureteacherschangetheirattitudesanddevelopadesiretoworkindiverseschoolsettings. DuarteandReed(2004)foundsimilarresultswhentheyexaminedtwenty,White,femaleteachercandidates’culturalresponsiveness.ThenoviceteachersinDuarteandReed’sstudycompletedasurveypriortoandaftera3-hourfieldbaseexperienceinapublicschoolinordertoexaminetheirbeliefsandattitudesaboutmulticulturaleducation.Aftercompletingthefirstsurvey,theteachercandidatesvolunteeredtohavetheirfieldexperienceinanurbanschool(experimentalgroup)oraruralschool(controlgroup).Theteacherswhovolunteeredfortheurbanschoolparticipatedintwodiversityworkshops.Theteachersintheruralschoolweregivennoadditionaltrainingorsupport.DuarteandReeddiscoveredthatalloftheteachercandidatesheldstereotypicalattitudesregardingminoritychildrenandminorityneighborhoodspriortotheirfieldplacementandhadveryfewstrategiesonhowtoaddresstheneedsofdiverselearners.Attheendofthefield-baseexperience,theexperimentalgroup“offeredclearlydefinedideas,utilizedreal-lifescenariosthatwouldmakelearningexperiencesmoremeaningful;presentedmaterialstoaccommodatedifferentlearningstyles;utilizedmulticulturalanddiverseliteraturetofocusonissuessupportingtheminorityexperience,andfacilitatedlearningthatincludedstudents’culturalback-ground”(pg249).Thecontrolgroupconfusedculturalbackgroundforsocioeconomicstatusandmaintaineddeficitattitudesaboutdiversity.DuarteandReedrecommendteachereducationprogramsrestructure theirfieldexperiences to includespecificstrategiesneededtoworkindiverseschoolsettings. Davis,Crumpler,Stallworth,andCrawford(2005)usedethnographicmethodsasatooltohelpteachercandidatesunderstandtheirstudents’lives.Thirty-fourteachercandidates,enrolledinalargeMidwesternteacherpreparationprogram,observedanddescribedinteractionswithinspecificcommunitysettings,suchaschurchesandeatingestablishments—placeswheretheirstudentsactivelypartici-

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

119

patedoutsideofschool.Ethnographicmethodssuchasobservationsandinterviewswereusedtounderstandstudents’livesoutsideofschoolandtoexplorestudents’culturalidentities.Theauthorsconcludedthatethnographicmethodswereanef-fectivewayforteachercandidatestolearnaboutstudents’culturallivesoutsideofschool,todevelopanin-depthawarenessoftheteacher’sroleindifferentiatingthecurriculum,andtobuildpositiverelationshipswithstudentsandfamiliesofdifferentculturalbackgrounds.Thesestudieshighlighthoweffectiveinstructionalpracticesandfieldexperiencesinteachereducationprogramscanhaveapositiveimpactonfutureteachers’attitudesandbeliefsaboutdiversity.

Teacher Educators’ Beliefs and Attitudes about Diversity Smolen,Colville-Hall,Liang,andMacDonald(2005)surveyed116full-timeteachereducatorsatfourmid-westerncollegesofeducation(eachauthorworkedatoneofthefourcolleges)inordertouncovertheirbeliefsandcommitmenttomulticulturaleducation.Findingsfromthestudysuggestthatwhilemostoftheteachereducatorsacknowledgedthechangingdemographicsofsociety,fewsharedcommonbeliefsandattitudesabouteffectivewaystoaddresstheimpactofdiversityintheirteachereducationprograms.Smolen,Colville-Hall,Liang,andMacDonald(2005)callforteachereducatorstocriticallyexaminetheirownbeliefsandpractices,developapersonalinvestmentandcommitmenttoequitableeducation,andworktochangetheexistingcultureofthelearning/teachingcommunityoftheirindividualprograms.MuchlikeSmolenetal.,BruchandHigbee(2001)surveyedagroupofdevelopmentaleducationfacultyinordertounderstandtheirbeliefsandattitudesaboutmulticulturaleducation.Only10outof67facultymemberscompletedthesurvey.BruchandHigbeefoundthatamongthefewinstructorswhocompletedthesurvey,allbelievedtherewasaneedformulticulturaleducationinordertochangepracticesandassumptions,embraceuniversalhumanityanddignity,andimprovetheirinstruction.Manyfacultymembersexpressedafearthattoomanyuniversityinstructorstakea“laissefaire”stancetowardsmulticulturaleducationandtendtomodeldeficitperspectives.BruchandHigbeebelievethatamodelofmulticulturalismshouldbelocallyproducedandthateducationprofessionalsmustfindwaystodiscusstheseissuesinwaysthatwillhelpthemrebuildtheircoursesandrevitalizetheirprograms. Inanotherstudy,Gordon(2005)exploredherownstruggleswithbeingaWhiteteachereducatorandtalkingaboutracewithherpreserviceteachersandsurveyedfellowteachereducatorsonhowtheyinfuseddiversityintotheircourses.GordonfocusedonhowWhitefacultymembersaddressraceamongthemselvesandwiththeirstudentsintheElementaryEducationProgramatGeorgeMasonUniversityanddiscoveredthattheWhitefacultyinherprogramgrappledwithwaystoaddressracein“politicallycorrectways.”Infact,theyavoidedexaminingraceonsystemiclevels.Broadlydefinednotionsofdiversityandaresistancetohave“unpleasant”discussionswiththeirstudentsprohibitedteachereducatorsfromexplicitly“see-

Multicultural Teacher Education

120

ing”raceoraddressingothermulticulturalissuesintheircourses.Gordonsuggeststhatteachereducatorschallengewaysinwhichtheymaybereproducingsocialinequitiesinschoolsthroughtheirbeliefsystemsandlackofexplicitlyaddressingracismintheircourses. Whilemanyteachercandidatesmaycometoteachereducationprogramswithstereotypicalbeliefsanddeficitattitudesaboutstudentsfromdiversebackgrounds,thestudiesabovesuggestthatteachereducationprogramsandteachereducatorsthemselvescanimpactresponsivepracticesandbeliefsinmulticulturalclassrooms.Yet,teachereducatorsrarelyhavetheopportunitytoexploretheirownbeliefsandattitudesandunderstandhowtheirteachereducationprogramalignswitheffectivemulticulturalteachingandlearning.Inthisself-study,weexploredtheperspec-tives,beliefs,andpracticesofteachereducatorsworkinginonefield-baseteacherpreparationprogramwiththeaimofunderstandinghowbeliefsandattitudesheldbyteachereducatorsshapethepreparationoffutureteacherswhowillpotentiallyworkinmulticulturalschoolsettings.

Purpose of the Study Webelieveteachereducatorswhoworkincollegesofeducationplayapivotalroleinshapingthebeliefsandattitudesoffutureteachers;however,comparedtotheresearchonteachercandidates’beliefs,fewstudieshavefocusedonthebeliefsofteachereducatorswhoworkdirectlywithfutureteachers.Infactstudiesofteachereducators—whattheyarelike,whattheydo,andwhattheythink—aretypicallyoverlookedinteachereducationresearch(Darling-Hammond,1999).InordertoexaminethebeliefsandattitudesofteachereducatorsweadaptedCochran-Smith’s(2003)multiculturalconceptualframeworkusingqualitativeresearchmethodology.Keepinginmindthatalthoughindividualsmaybelongtothesamediscoursecom-munityandtheirperspectivesmayconflictorcontradicteachother,weexploredhowtheirperspectives,beliefs,andpracticesdifferedanddescribewhatthosedifferencesmayindicateaboutthecoherenceofoneteachereducationprogram.Thefollowingquestionsguidedthisstudy:(1)HowdoteachereducatorsworkingintheEarlyChildhood-4thfieldexperienceprogramandtheMiddleSchoolfieldexperienceprogramperceivemulticulturalteachereducation?(2)Howdotheirperceptionsandbeliefsaboutmulticulturalteachereducationinformtheirpractice?(3)Whatarethedifferentperspectivesbetweenandamongteachereducatorsworkinginthefieldexperienceprogram?and(4)Whatdothosedifferencesrevealaboutthecoherenceofoneteacherpreparationprogram?

Methodology

Context and Participants Thisstudytookplaceatalargesouthwesternuniversitywhereallundergradu-

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

121

ateteachercandidates(alsoreferredtoaspreserviceteachersorinterns)seekingan elementary (Early Childhood-4), middle school (5-8), or secondary (9-12)certificationparticipate inafield-basedprogram(block)foronesemester.This60-hourfieldexperiencerequirementtakesplacepriortostudentteaching.TeachercandidatesintheEarlyChildhood-FourthGrade(EC-4)Programtaketworeadingcoursesandonecurriculumandinstructioncourseatalocalelementaryschoolsite.Whiletakingcoursesattheschoolsite,teachercandidatesinterninaclassroomwithamentorteacherforonesemester.MiddleSchoolteachercandidatestaketworeadingcoursesandonelearningtheorycourseontheirschoolsiteandalsointernwithamentorteacherforonesemester.Theteachercandidatesinthefield-basedprogramscompletecourses in reading,writing,assessment,curriculumdesign,andclassroommanagement. ThirteenteachereducatorsworkintheEC-4Programincollaborationwithnineelementaryschools.TwoteachereducatorsworkwiththeMiddleSchoolPro-gramincollaborationwithtwomiddleschools.Oneteachereducatorservesastheadministratorandoccasionalinstructorforallfield-basedcourses.Thedemograph-icsacrossallschoolsvary,howeverapproximately40%ofstudentswhoattendelementaryandmiddlelevelschoolsintheregioncomefromLatino/abackgroundsandasmanyas30%speakEnglishastheirsecondlanguage(http://www.tea.state.tx.us/research/).Aspartofthefield-baserequirements,teachereducatorsspendapproximately16hoursaweekontheschoolsiteteachingcoursesandsupervisingteachercandidates.Inall,theteachereducatorsinstructover320teachercandidates,workincollaborationwithapproximately231mentorteachers,andpartnerwith6differentschooldistrictsinthearea. Fourteen teacher educators participated in this study. Nine of the teachereducatorsarefull-timetenuretrackortenuredfacultyandhavetaughtcoursesinthefieldforanaverageoffouryears.Theotherfiveteachereducatorsarefull-timeadjunctfacultyandhavetaughtinthefieldforanaverageofsevenyears.ElevenoftheteachereducatorsareWhite,middleclassfemalesbetweentheagesof30-55years.TwoareMexican-Americanfemalesand twoareWhite,middleclassmalesbetweentheagesof40-55yearsold.ThreeofthefourteenteachereducatorsspeakSpanishfluently.Becausethefield-basedprogramsarespreadoutinvaryingschoolsthroughouttheregion,teachereducatorsgatherapproximatelyonceayeartodiscusstheircourses. Thefirstandthirdauthorsofthisstudyhavetaughtintheelementaryfield-experienceprogramandthesecondauthorcurrentlyteachesinthesecondaryfieldexperienceprogram.Asinsiderstothedifferentprograms,wewereawarethateachteachereducatortaughttheircoursesdifferentlyandseemedtoholddifferentbeliefsandattitudesaboutdiversity.Wepursuedthisstudyinordertobetterunderstandhowvariedperspectivesanddifferentinstructionalpracticesrelatedtoeachotherandtheoverarchinggoalsofcollegeofeducation.

Multicultural Teacher Education

122

Data Collection and Analysis Weusedqualitativemethodologies(Merriam,2001)toexaminetheperspectivesandinstructionalpracticesofthefourteenteachereducatorswhowereresponsibleforinstructingteachercandidatesintheelementaryandmiddleschoolfield-basedclasses.Participantswereinterviewedaskeyinformants.Interviewswereaudiotapedandtranscribedverbatimandservedastheprimarysourceofdata.Otherdatasourcesincludedfollow-upinterviews,afocusgroupinterviewwithselectedvolunteers,andacollectionofcourseartifactssuchascoursesyllabi,schedulesoftopics,quizzes,examsorotherassessments.Followupinterviewsandthefocusgroupwereusedtoclarifymisunderstandingsandtomember-checkparticipants’espousedviews.Todocumentongoingdiscoveriesasweexaminedthedatasources,werecordedourreflections inaresearch journal(Erlandson,Harris,Skinner,&Allen,1993)anddiscussedongoingfindingswithateamofnon-participatingresearchers. Dataanalysiswasconductedbyusingconstantcomparativeanalysis(Strauss&Corbin,1998).Alldatasourceswereexaminedindependentlyusingqualitativedatareductionstrategies.Wereadandrereadalldataandcodedunitsofwordsthatstoodaloneinmeaning(Erlandson,etal.,1993).Opencodinginvolvedreadingthetranscriptsofeachteachereducatorandfromthefocusgroupinterview,linebylineandnamingandlabelingimportantwordsandphrases(e.g.,“It’sgreat,”“Ibelieve,”“quitedifficult”).Eachcodewasthenreexamined,redefined,andcombinedwithothersimilarcodes.Afterthecodeswereidentified,theyweredefined,andcategorizedintoemergingthemes(Lincoln&Guba,1985).Usingaxialcoding(Charmaz,2006),thethemesweresorted,andplacedintosubcategories.“Axialcodingrelatescategoriestosubcategories,specifiesthepropertiesanddimensionsofacategory,andreassemblesthedatatogivecoherencetotheemerginganalysis”(Charmaz,2006,p.60). Asinitialthemesemerged,weindividuallywrotesummariesdescribingeachthemeandthendiscussedthemtoensureinter-coderreliability(Charmaz,2006).Thewrittensummarieswereorganizedaccordingto“bigtentativethemes”thatemergedfromthedata.Forexample,oneemergingthemewastitled“Insider/OutsiderInformation.”Asaresearchteam,wewroteadetailedsummaryofthethemeandmadeindividualcommentsandchangesbasedonourinterpretationsofthedata.Finally,themeswereconfirmedandotherresearchwasusedtosupportitsbroadersignificance.

Findings and Discussion Data analysis revealed four themes: Balancing Optimistic Perspectives of Diversity While Facing Challenges,Authentic Experiences with Diverse Students,Universal Methods or Ideological Understandings,andEthnic and Linguistic Dif-ferences: Outsider or Insider Stances.Inthefollowingsection,wedescribethesefourthemesandexpandonhowtheparticipants’perspectives,beliefs,andpracticescontributetothecoherenceofoneteacherpreparationprogram.

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

123

Balancing Optimistic Perspectives of Diversity While Facing Challenges Alloftheteachereducatorssharedthesameoptimisticviewthatdiversityisanopportunityforallpeople,especiallythosewhowillworkwithstudentsfromvaryingethnic,linguistic,economic,andreligiousbackgrounds.Forexample,oneteachereducatornoted,“It’swonderfulifyoucanspeakmorethanonelanguage…it’sexcitingandpositive.”Anotherexplained,“Ithinkitcouldbeaverypositiveandproductivething-particularlywhenourstudentsgettobeinclassroomswithkidsfromothercultures.”Thesecommentsreflecta“happytalk”perspectiveaboutmulticulturalism.Infact,theteachereducators’optimisticperspectivesareinconcertwithfindingsfromwhatHarvardsociologistsBellandHartman(2007)foundinalargenationalstudyonAmericans’viewofdiversitysuggestingthat“Beneathallthehappytalkaboutdiversity,manyAmericansharboradeepambivalenceaboutwherediversitywillleadthemandwhattheirresponsibilityistoit”(p.900). MuchliketheparticipantsinBellandHartmann’sstudy,theteachereduca-torsexpressedagreatdealofuncertaintyabouthowtoaddressdiversityintheirfield-basedcoursesandstruggledwiththechallengesofpreparingteachersfortherealitiesoftheclassroom.Forexample,oneteachereducatorexplained,“Butit[diversity]presentschallengesbecausewe’renotandourinternsarenotknowledge-ableonallofthedifferentculturesandlanguagebackgrounds.”Anothershared,“IfIamanewteacherandIamgoingtohavefivekidswhodon’tspeakEnglishorwhocomefrompoorfamilybackgrounds,andI’mresponsiblefortheirlearning,whatwillhappen?That’swhatismostchallenging.”Theteachereducatorsworriedaboutteachercandidates’misconceptionsaboutdiversity,butespeciallytheiras-sumptionsaboutstudentswhospeakalanguageotherthanEnglishandwhocomefrom low-incomebackgrounds.Onemiddle school teachereducatorexplained,“Myinternscomeinwithmisperceptionsandalackofunderstandingaboutthestudentstheyareworkingwith…thatisthechallengeIthinkwearefacing,gettingbacktomisperceptionsandassumptions.” Findingabalancebetweensustainingoptimisticperspectiveswhilehelpingteachercandidatesrecognize thechallengesofworkingwithculturallyandlin-guisticallydiversestudentsandtheirownmiddleclassmonolingualbackgroundscausedtheteachereducatorsmuchanxiety.Andwhiletheyallbelievedteachercandidatesshouldbecomelessjudgmentalandmoresensitivetostudents’diversebackgrounds,theyrarelymadethetimetoaddresssuchissuesexplicitly.Infact,teachereducatorsfearedthatexplicitlybringingupracialorsocioeconomicissueswouldcreateresistanceandcreatesituationsthattheywouldnotbeabletomanage.Oneteachereducatorexplained,

Ishouldstepupandsaysomething…butIdon’tgointoitwiththeveryresistantkid.Becausetherearealwaysthosecoupleofresistantkidswhojustdon’twanttotalkaboutthisandforme,itisabigsenseofworryingaboutdoingitwrong.Orcreatingmoreresistanceinthosestudents,somehowfeedingtheresistance.

Multicultural Teacher Education

124

Theteachereducatorsalsoworriedaboutthesocialstigmaofaddressingrace.Asoneteachereducatorexplained:

Ithinkitisreallydangerous,consideringtheethnicandeconomicmakeupoftheprofessorsintheblockprograms,forustoapproachthatweactuallyhavethecorrectanswerandthatourstudentsarejustnaïveandthattheydon’tknow.Wedon’twanttotalkabouttheseissuesfromthe‘IamanenlightenedprofessorandIknow’perspective.

Instead,mostembeddedlesssensitivediversityissuessuchasethniccelebrationsandholidaysintotheircoursesbyusingmulticulturalpicturebooks.Theysharedthatusingmulticulturalpicturebooksallowedthemto“useoutsidesources”thatwould allow them to “sneak in” multicultural perspectives without distancingteachercandidates. Itisimportanttonotethatmanyoftheteachereducatorsworriedthatfocusingonthechallengesofteachingwoulddampertheoptimisticattitudestheywantedtheteachercandidatestocultivateaboutculturalandlinguisticdiversity.Asoneteachereducatorexplained,“Idon’tthinkit’snecessarilyhelpfulforstudentstohavecynicaloutlooksbeforetheygetstartedteaching.”Anotheradded,“Iftheyknewhowmanyteachersburnout,likeIdid,theymightnotgointoteaching.”

Authentic Experiences with Diverse Students Thevalueoffield-basedexperiencesisacomplexyetacceptedbeliefamongmanymulticulturalteachereducationresearchers(Capella-Santana,2003;Duarte&Reed,2004;Irvine,2003;Ladson-Billings,2001)andtheteachereducatorsinthis studyshared thisperspective. In fact,allof the teachereducatorsbelievedthat field-based learning experiences offer important opportunities for teachercandidatestogainvaluableknowledgeaboutmulticulturalteachingandlearning,toconnecttheorywithpractice,tobecomeintegratedintotheschoolcommunity,andtobecomemoreawareofandresponsivetodiversity.Forexampleoneteachereducatorexplained,“Ithinkthebestwayistohavethem[teachercandidates]atschools-complementingtheorywiththefield-basesothattheyseefirsthandwhatlanguagelearnerslooklike,talklike,etc.”Anotheragreed,

InternsdefinitelyneedtobeatschoolsliketheoneIam.ThisisabilingualViet-nameseschool,41languagesarespokenhereandeverydaytheywalkintotheclassroomandaredealingwithEnglishlanguagelearnersandthechallengesandthegreatthingsthathappen.

Alloftheteachereducatorsagreedthatthebenefitsofworkingatfield-basedschoolsoutweighedtheirownabilitiestoteachfordiversepopulationsandofferedauthenticopportunitiesformulticulturaleducation.Thisteachereducatorexplained,“Igivethempracticalwaystoapproachlearning…andwetalkaboutalltheirideasbutiftheydon’thavethecontextortheexposuretoschoolsandstudents,thentheyjustwon’tgetit.”

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

125

Teachereducatorsplannedtheirinstructionaroundtheneedsoftheirfield-baseschoolanddirectcontactwithstudents.Theyrequiredteachercandidatestowriteandteachthreedifferentlessonsintheirassignedclassroomandconductatleastonecasestudyonastudentintheirschool.Whiletheseassignmentsvariedinfocusandscope,alloftheassignmentsrequiredteachercandidatestoworkdirectlywithlearnersintheirschools.Forinstance,oneteachereducatorexplainedhowcomplet-ingareadaloudlessonusingaMexicanAmericanpicturebookhelpedoneofhisteachercandidatesgainvaluableknowledgeaboutherstudents’backgrounds:

…she recognized that her students, not entirely, but most of her students areMexican.Sheisinabilingualclassandtheylivehereinthestatesandthey’redealingwiththoseissuesandbydoingherreadaloudwiththisbooksheprobablywasabletospeaktothemonsomelevel.

At thesametime,someteachereducatorsworriedthatpressurestopasshighstakestestsinsomefield-basedschoolssentwrongmessagesabouteffectiveinstructionfordiversepopulations.Oneteachereducatorshared,

They[teachercandidates]getoutthere,especiallyinschoolsthathavethelowersocioeconomicethnicgroups,andweseesomuchstresson(state-mandatedtest)preparation…weknowiftheygaveinstructiononstrategies,becauseweknowallkidsdon’tlearnthesame,andthey’renotgoingtogetthoseteststhesame,theymayneedmoretimeandmorerepetition.Butourinternstheyareseeingthisandtheyaregettingthewrongideasaboutteaching.Iworryaboutthis.

Anotherteachereducator,alsoconcernedabouttestingpressuresandthenegativeattitudesthatcanbeplayedoutinschools,stressedtheimportanceofsupervis-ingteachercandidateswhileinclassrooms:“Weasprofessorsneedtohelpourinternsbeabletomakesenseoftheirexperiences.Theyhavetohavethetoolstoanalyzewhat’sgoingonandunderstandhowitrelatestodiversity…tothinkinahistoricalkindofway.”

Universal Methods or Ideological Understandings Manyoftheteachereducatorsvacillatedbetweenfocusingoneffectiveteach-ingmethodsandhelpingteachercandidatesconsiderpersonalandsocioculturalideologiesrelatedtomulticulturaleducation.Somesharedthatteachercandidatesshouldmasterrecommendedpracticesandusethesewithallstudents.Forinstance,oneteachereducatorexplained,“Ithinkthey[teachercandidates]needtoknowspecificstrategiestohelpthosechildrendevelopEnglishortounderstandhowwedothingshereinAmerica.”Likewise,anotherteachereducatornoted,“Ourkids[teachercandidates]reallyliketohaveateachertoolboxofthingstodo.Infact,Ithinkitshouldbeateachertoolboxof‘thisiswhatyoudo’followcarefully.” Althoughhalfoftheteachereducatorsnotedmethods-basedinstructionasapositivesolutiontoworkingwithdiverselearners,noneofthemwereabletogivespecificexamplesoridentifywhichstrategieswheremosteffective.Onestated,

Multicultural Teacher Education

126

TheyneedtoknowactualstrategiesbutIdon’tknowwhatthosearebecauseIdon’tteachthat.Imean,Idon’tknowexactstrategiestouse.Iprobablyneedtoknowmoreaboutmulticulturaleducationtohelpchildren’sinstruction.

Otherssharedthatteachercandidatesneededtohaveasolidresearchbasetobestworkwithdiversestudents.Oneteachereducatoracknowledged,

Ithinkthey[teachercandidates]needtoknowsomefoundationaltypesofinforma-tion…ageneralunderstandingoftheresearchthatsuggestsparticularteachingstrategiesormotivationalapproachesbutIamgoingbacktothefactthatIdon’tcurrentlyusethoseinmyblock.

Embeddedwithin themethodsperspective is theunderlyingbelief that in-structionfordiversestudentsshouldmirrorinstructionthatworksforallstudents.Anotherteacherexplained,“Goodteachingisgoodteachingandlearninghowtomanagestudentbehaviorandstudentlearning—thatisallyouhavetodo.”ThisperspectiveresemblesacommonorientationinU.S.teachereducationandacurrentdebateamongmanymulticulturaleducators(Bartolomé,1994;Delpit,1995)onwhetherteachereducationprogramsshouldfocussolelyoninstructionalmethodsbasedon“bestpractices”thataredeemedeffectiveformainstream,monolingualstudentsortohelpfutureteacherstakeintoconsiderationthesocio-historicalandpoliticaldimensionsofeducation. Thisdebatewasevidentamongotherteachereducatorsinthisstudy.Forex-ample,severalteachereducatorsbelievedthatteachercandidatesshouldcriticallyreflect on socio-political and sociocultural ideologies of education.While thisbeliefdidnotreplacetheimportanceofcertainmethods,itwasmoreofacentralfocusforasmallnumberofteachereducatorsandisreflectedintheirpracticeasdescribedbelow.Issuesdeemedimportantincludedlanguagehegemony,identity,homeandschoolconnections,andhowsocio-economicdifferencesimpactteachingandlearning.Forexample,whilesharingastoryaboutateacherwhotaughtinanurbanschoolsettinganddroppedoutafterherfirstyearofteaching,thisteachereducatorexplainedtheimportanceoflearningaboutsocialinequities,racism,andlanguagelearning:

Ifshehadafirmerunderstandingofthehistoryofinequitiesandracisminthecountryandamorecriticalperspectiveonlanguagelearning,shewouldn’thavegoneintothatclassroomandthenbeensoquicktofeelwrongedbytheparents.Shemayhaveevenbeenabletodialoguewiththem…theseproblemsarebiggerthanherbutifsheknewshemighthaveatleastbeenabletonavigatethosewatersratherthanfeellikeavictiminthatsituation…ItellthisstorybecauseIthinkitrepresentsastorythatIhaveheardmanytimesbefore.Itshowsalackofthesortofcriticalreflexivepositionthatactuallyneedstobetakenbyteachers,notjustWhiteteachersbutallteachers,especiallyWhite,monolingualteachers.

Reflectingonsocial inequitieswasimportantforanother teachereducatorwhoexpressedthatteachercandidatesmustbeawareofhowschoolsandteacherscan

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

127

sociallyconstructlearningdisabilitiesbyhowtheydefinestrugglingreadersandEnglishlearners.Sheexplained,

Inmyschool,teacherswillrecommendkidsfortutoringwhoteachersperceiveasstrugglingbutaftertheyareassessedandwhengivenopportunitiestoperformthey are not necessarily struggling.They are struggling within the particularboundariesoftheclassroom…Ibelieveininstructionaldisabilitythatwecreatedisabilitiesthroughpoorinstruction.Forinstance,wehadayoungfourthgradestudentwhowasanon-nativespeakerofEnglishbuthadbeenintheschoolforthreeyearsandidentifiedasastrugglingreaderanditwasinfourthgradethattheydiscoveredthatshewasreadingonapre-primerlevel.Thatisinstructionaldisabilitiesanddiscrimination.

AnotherteachereducatorexplainedtheimportanceofhelpingteachercandidatesconceptualizethatStandardEnglishisthelanguageofpowerintheU.S.andthatallchildrenshouldhaveaccesstoit.Liketheotherteachereducatorswhoexpressedsocio-culturalperspectives,shesharedastoryaboutherownteachinginanurbanschoolinTennessee:

Itwasmypracticeinmiddleschooltopointouttomystudentsthattheirabilitytocreaterapswasaverycomplexformofverbalart.Andiftheywereabletodothat,theycouldmasterStandardEnglishinnotime.ItoldthemthatbecauseStandardEnglishiswhattheycanusetohavepowerandhavemoneytheywouldneedtocodeswitchandknowwhenandwheretousetheirlanguageaspower.

Theteachereducatorswhomaintainedthissocio-politicalandsocioculturalperspectivealsoexpressedtheimportanceforteachercandidatestoreflectontheirownWhite,monolingualbackgroundsaswellastheconsequencesofnotinterrogat-ingone’sassumptionsaboutschoolsandlanguage.Thecommentbelowillustratesthisarticulatedbelief:

Insteadofwhiteblindness,they[teachercandidates]havealackofcriticalper-spectiveondiversityingeneral.Theyneedtointerrogatetheirownbeliefsandknowhowmuchlanguageistiedtoidentity…Withoutinterrogatingourbeliefs,I think thatwecanoftenpassivelysendmessages,whichare inappropriateorproblematicforstudents.

Insteadofsupplyingteachercandidateswithatoolboxofbestpracticesormethodstoteachallstudents,thisgroupofteachereducatorsused‘accidentaldiscussions’toaddresscriticalissueswiththeirstudents.Theseaccidentaldiscussionswererarelyplannedbutalwaysattemptedtoaddressrealsituationsinthefield-basedschoolswhereteachercandidatesinterned.Thisperspectiveissimilar totransformativeeducationassuggestedbyGirouxandMcLaren(1987,p.271):“Teachereducationoughttopromoteasituationwherefutureteacherscandealcriticallywithwhatexistsinordertoimproveit.”Thistransformativeviewwouldrequirea“commit-menttothecritiquing,challengingandchangingofthestatusquo…groundedinanexaminationofpowerrelationsandachallengingofsocialstructureswhichproduce

Multicultural Teacher Education

128

orperpetuateunequalsocialrelations”(Grundy&Hatton,1994).Ladson-BillingsadvocatessimilartransformativeideasinherbookCrossing Over to Canaan.Sheasksteachereducatorstocreateavisionofteachereducationwitha“transforma-tiveagenda”modelingasocialconsciousnessandidentifyingthetoolstoeffectrealsocialchangeinthelivesofchildren(2001,p.xiii-xiv).

Ethnic and Linguistic Differences: Outsider or Insider Stance Alloftheteachereducatorsnotedthatmulticulturaleducationshouldbuildonstudents’ethnicandlinguisticdifferences.However,theapproachteachereducatorsusedtoaddressanddiscussdifferencesintheircoursesvaried.Manyfocusedondifferencesintermsofethnicgroupidentifierssuchas“BlackkidsneedtofocusonStandardEnglish”or socioeconomicdifferences suchas “poorkids are theonesthatreallyhavetrouble.”Forexample,whenaskedwhatteachercandidatesneedtoknowaboutteachingnon-standardformsofEnglish,thisteachereducatorexplained:

IbelievethatitgoesbacktounderstandingthecultureoftheBlackfamilyandtheirdialectsandwhytheyhavethosedialects,howtheycommunicatewitheachotherinadifferentdialect.Ifwedon’tunderstandtheBlackculture,howarewegoingtoknowaboutthelanguagebecausethelanguageissomuchpartofthebigpicture?

Besidesfocusingonethnicdifferences,manyexpressedtheimportanceofcom-paringindividuallearningabilitieswithtraditional,statemandatedobjectives.Forexample,thisteachereducatornoted,“Eachchildcomingintotheclassroomwillbedifferent,mostareHispanic,someareBlackandteachercandidatesneedtohavealistofdifferencessotheywillknowhoweachkidwillmeasureuptogradelevelstandards.” Atthesametime,manyworriedabouttheethnicdifferencesbetweenteachercandidatesandthestudentstheywillteachinschools.Inorderberesponsivetoethnicuniqueness,someoftheteachereducatorsbelievedthatteachercandidatesshouldlearnabouttheirstudents’ethnicbackgroundsandthisrequiredoutsideresearch.Oneteachereducatornoted,“Ifwegetastudentandwe’renotsureabouttheirculture,insteadofjudgingthemrightaway,Ithinkweneedtodoalittleresearchorlooksomethingsup.”Anothersuggestedrequestinganexperttocometalktotheteachercandidates:“Maybebringinsomeexpertsthathavetaughtpeopleoftheseculturesandhavethemsharewithushowtheylearnintheircountryorwhataresomeoftheimportantthings…youknowtheycanadviseus.” Insteadofusinganoutsidestancetolearnaboutculturaldifferences,severalotherteachereducatorsbelievedteachercandidatesmustdeveloppersonalrelationshipswithstudentsinordertogainaninsightintostudents’uniquewaysofthinkingandunderstandingtheworld.Studentinsightgoeshandinhandwithpersonalinsightintoone’sownwaysofbeing.Forexample,oneteachereducatorexplained“when

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

129

they[teachercandidates]beginworkingwithastudentwhoisdifferentfromthem,eitherlinguisticallyorfromasocialclass,orfromraceorethnicity,that’sneatbecausetheylearnsomethingaboutthatchildbuttheyalsobegintolearnaboutthemselvesandIencouragethemtosharethatwiththeirstudent.”Learningaboutastudents’culturalorlinguisticbackgrounddoesnotrequireoutsideresearch,butbuildinganinsiderperspectiveonstudents,theircommunity,andthecultureoftheirclassroom.Oneteachereducatorexplained,“Iencouragethemtoeatlunchwiththemorfollowthechildtospecials,outtorecessandtalktohim.Seehowthechilddoesindifferentclassroomssotheyunderstandthewholechildanddifferentperspectives.” Teachercandidatesareencouragedtobeethnographersofstudentsandmakeinformed teachingdecisionsbasedon their interactionswithstudentsand theirfamilies.Oneteachereducatorexplained,

Idoachildstudywheretheinternsbasicallyareassignedtogettoknowakid.Imeangettoknowakidandthenshowmethatyouknowthekidandbuildabridgetotheirlanguageandliteracyinstruction.

Another teacher educator described a project he does every semester with histeacher candidates and agroupof seventhgraders. “This onevery specializedseriesofprojectsishelpinginternsgettoknowthenatureandcharacteristicsofkidsfromdifferentbackgroundsandlanguages.Myresponsibilityistobethereto help themdevelop interpersonal relationships.”This perspective alignswithculturallyresponsiveteachingandlearning(Irvine,2003;Ladson-Billings,1995)as well as constructivist perspectives (Garcia, 2004) prevalent in multiculturalteacherresearch.Thesetheoriesadvocatethatteachersshouldbecome“culturalbrokers”whodevelopculturalcompetencetoworkeffectivelywithparentsandfamilies,drawoncommunityandfamilyresources,andknowhowtolearnabouttheculturesoftheirstudents(Bartolomé,2002).

Discussion and Implications Thefourteenteachereducatorswhoparticipatedinthisstudyexpressedvary-ingbeliefsandpracticesaboutmulticulturalteachereducation.Similarly,theyallidentifiedtheimportanceofpreparingteachersforthegrowingculturalandlinguisticdiversityinU.S.schools(Smolen,Colville-Hall,Liang,&MacDonald,2005)andagreedthatlearningthroughauthenticfieldexperiencescangiveteachercandidatestheopportunitytoexperiencetheuncertain,dynamic,complex,andmultifacetednatureofdiversityintoday’sschoolsandinfluencewhatteachercandidatesbelieveandcometoknowabouttheirstudents’experiencesandabilities(Capella-Santana,200;Duarte&Reed,2004).And,whiletheysharedanoptimisticperspectiveaboutdiversity,muchlikeGordon’sresearch(2005)theygrappledwithwaystoaddressraceandthetensionsassociatedwithmulticulturaleducation.Somebelievedthatmasteringparticularmethodsor“bestpractices”wouldimprovetheachievementofdiversestudentswhileothersusedaccidentaldiscussionstohelpfutureteachers

Multicultural Teacher Education

130

critiquesocioculturalrealitiesandinterrogatetheirownlivedexperiences.Thesebeliefsandpracticesresembleacurrentdebateamongmanyeducators(Bartolomé,2004;Delpit,1995)onwhetherteachereducationprogramsshouldfocussolelyoninstructionalmethodsbasedon“bestpractices”thataredeemedeffectiveformainstream,monolingualstudents,ortohelpfutureteacherstakeintoconsiderationthesocio-historicalandpoliticaldimensionsofeducation. Theseresultscanhavedifferentimplicationsforateacherpreparationpro-gram.Forinstance,somewarnthatbynotexplicitlyaddressingrace,acolorblindperspectiveamongteachereducatorscanperpetuatenegativeperspectivesaboutminoritystudentsandcanaddtothemismatchbetweenaWhiteteachingforceandadiversestudentpopulation(Irvine,2003).Likewise,ifteachercandidatesassumethattheuseofafew“good”strategiesormasteryofparticularteachingmethodsinandofthemselveswillguaranteesuccessfulstudentlearning,theymaybelievethatsimplisticsolutionswilldecreasetheachievementgap.Thisassumptioncouldreproducethebeliefthatschoolsarejustandfairplaceswhereallstudentshaveequalopportunities.Atthesametime,teachercandidatesmayconsiderlearningtoteachasmasteringtechnicalskillsinsteadofacomplexinteractionofknowledge,experience, and personal beliefs about diversity.These practices can promotesimplisticandsurfacelevelknowledgeaboutmulticulturalteachingandlearning(Villegas&Lucas,2002). These findings suggest that the teacher educators’ varied perspectives andpracticesmaynotillustrateacoherentteachereducationprograminwhichfacultymembers have a collective purpose and central focus formulticultural teacherlearning.Yet,webelieve this studyhas important implicationsnotonly forus,butallteachereducationprogramsthatprepareteachersformulticulturalschoolsettings.Havingcoherencewithinaprogramdoesnotnecessarilysuggestthatallteachereducatorsthinkthesame.Instead,coherenceshouldconsiderhowteachereducatorsaligntheirbeliefsandpracticesandworktogethertoconceptualizeandorganizehowlearningexperiencesforourdiversestudentpopulationarecarriedout(Tatto,1996).AccordingtoHammerness(2006),coherenceinateacherprepa-rationprogramshouldnotbeviewedasafinaloutcometoachieve,butrather,acontinuousreflectiveprocessthatinvolvesassessmentandself-reflectiontoscaffoldaprogram’scoherence. Ifteachereducatorshopetopositivelyinfluencethesuccessofculturallyandlinguisticallydiversestudents,thenwemustcontinuouslyassessourthinkingandclassroompracticetoimprovethewayweeducatefutureteachers.AsCochran-Smith,Davis,andFries(2004)suggest,“teachereducatorsthemselvesmustengageinunflinchingself-examinationaboutunderlyingideologyinmuchthesamewaythattheyurgeforteachercandidates”(p.956).Teachereducatorsmustcriticallyconsider theirvaluesandbeliefsaboutdiversityandunderstandhow theirper-ceptionsfiltertheirinstructionandtheaimsofateachereducationprogram.Asinsidersandgatekeeperstotheprofession,teachereducatorsplayapivotalrole

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

131

ininfluencingthepolicyandpracticesrelatedtomulticulturalissuesinteachereducation(Bartolomé,2004)andtheirinfluenceonteacherpreparationprogramsmustnotbeoverlooked(MacDonald,Colville-Hall,&Smolen,2003). Developing a coherent program can be challenging, but teacher educatorscanworktowardsasharedvisionofteachingandlearningiftheyarecommittedtoexploringtheirindividualandsharedbeliefsandpractices.Inordertodothis,teacher educatorsmustmake the time and create the space to reconsider theirbeliefs, practices, and goals as educators.They need to establish personal andprogrammaticgoalsyearly,coupledwithindividualandcollectiveprogramself-assessment.ConductingprogramresearchsuchasBruchandHigbee’s(2002)selfstudycanhelpteachereducatorsdevelopamodelofmulticulturalismthatislocallyproducedandunderstoodaswellasuncoverthetensionsandconflictsneededtochangecurrentpracticesandassumptions.Teachereducatorsmayconsideraddingaperformance-basedassessmenttotheirfield-basedcoursessuchasanendoftheprogramportfolioandpresentation.Asfacultyconstructnewwaystoassessnoviceteachers’knowledgeandbeliefsaboutmulticulturalism,theywillbeforcedtofleshoutimportantprinciplesandpracticesneededtooccurinallcourses. Thisprocesswillprovideopportunitiestodiscusstoughbutimportantissuesrelatedtoworkingindiverseschoolsettings.Moreimportantly,teachereduca-torsmustbecommittedtoadvancingtheirownlearningaswellasthelearningofthefutureteacherswhowalkthroughtheirprogram.Theteachereducatorsinthisstudyhavelargecourseloadsandmanyprofessionalresponsibilities.Theyarerarelygivenopportunitiestoreflectontheirownbeliefsandpracticesregard-ingmulticulturalteachingandlearning.Thisstudywasthefirstopportunityformanyoftheteachereducatorstotalkabouttheirbeliefsandpracticesaroundmulticulturaleducation.Moreprofessionaldevelopmentsuchasbookclubsormulticulturalinstitutesthatgiveteachereducatorsthetimeandspacetocriticallyreflectontheirexperiencesmaybe thefirststep inchanginghowwepreparefutureteachersfortheshiftingculturalandlinguisticlandscapesofourschools.EventhoughIrvine(2003)viewscriticalreflectionasasignificantaspectintheprofessionaldevelopmentshenotes,“Facultymemberscannotbeexpectedtodevelopcommitmentandcompetenceontheirown”(p.43). Thisworkmustbeseenasalong-termandongoingundertakingthatrequiresadministrative support” (Gordon,2005,p.150).Thereforewestrongly suggestthatdeansofcollegesofeducationandchairsofteachereducationprogramsvaluetheworkthatittakestodevelopacoherentprogrambygivingteachereducators’thetimeandprofessionalsupporttodothisimportantwork.Suchacommitmentwouldhighlighttheinstitutionalsupportnecessarytodevelopprogramcoherenceandgrowth.Andsince teacherpreparationprogramsworkcollaborativelywithschool districts and community groups, a cohesive teacher education programshouldconsiderthegoalsandneedsofthelocalcommunity.Teachereducatorsshould consider volunteering in community-based field experiences outside of

Multicultural Teacher Education

132

theircourserequirements inorder togainvaluableresourcesforunderstandingstudents, forunderstandingcontextual factors significant to learning indiverseschoolsettings,andforprovidingopportunities for linkingcommunity,school,anduniversitygoals.

Limitations UsingCochran-Smith’sconceptualframeworkallowedustouncoverofthecomplexityofteachereducators’beliefsandattitudesaboutdiversityaswellasuncoverthevariedpracticesinoneteachereducationprogram.Fewstudieshavecloselyexaminedteachereducators’perspectivesandattitudesinrelationtoprogramcoherence.Yetitisimportanttoidentifyafewlimitationsofthisstudy.First,theteachereducatorsexpressedvaryingdegreesofexperienceandknowledgerelatedtomulticulturaleducation.Suchdifferencescanbetracedtoinstitutionalranks(adjunct,lecturer,andtenure-track)andtheeducationalbackgroundofthefaculty.Atthesametime,professionaldevelopmentsupportorlackofsupportmayalsobeafactorintheparticipants’variedattitudesandbeliefsaboutdiversity.Wedidnotexplorehowtheteachereducators’educationalandprofessionaldevelopmentexperiencesand/orprofessionalranksshapedtheirbeliefsandattitudes. Futureresearchshouldtaketheseissuesintoconsiderationinordertofleshouthowsuchdifferencesmayimpactthecentralfocusandsharedresponsibilityofaprogram.Additionally,theparticipantsconductedtheirfield-basedprogramsatdifferentschoolsintheregion.Someschoolsweremoreculturallyandlinguisti-callydiversethanothers.Localschooldiversitymayhaveplayedalargerpartinhowtheteachereducatorsviewedmulticulturaleducationandit’simportanceintheprogram.

A Final Comment Cochran-SmithandZeichner(2005)suggestthatteachereducationprogramsstudythemselvesandthecommunitiesinwhichtheyareapartofasanimportantandongoingeffort.Theycontendthat“Preserviceandin-serviceteachereduca-tionprogramsneedprocessesthatpromptteachersandteachereducatorstoraisequestionsaboutrace,class,andethnicityandtodevelopcoursesofactionthatarevalidforparticularcommunities”(p.104).MuchlikeCochran-SmithandZeichnersuggest,ourresearchservedbothasanindirectself-studyofoneteacherpreparationprogramaswellasapersonallookatourownbeliefsandinstructionalpractices.Ithasallowedustobecriticallyreflectiveandquestionourperspectiveswhilecloselystudyingthoseofourfellowcolleagues. Intheend,thisstudyhashelpedustoexaminehowourracial,multilingual,variedworldviewsandinstructionalpracticeshavecontributedtosimplisticnotionsofdiversity.Throughourstudywehavebecomemorecognizantoftheimportanceoftalkingaboutracisminrelationtomulticulturalteachingandlearning,and

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

133

howcolorblindperspectives,oftenunintentional,cannegativelyimpactstudentlearning.

ReferencesBartolomé,L.I.(1994).Beyondthemethodsfetish:Towardahumanizingpedagogy.Harvard

Educational Review,64(2),173-194.Bartolomé,L. I. (2002).Creating an equal playingfield:Teachers as advocates, border

crossers,andculturalbrokers.InZ.F.Beykont(Ed.).The power of culture: Teach-ing across language differences(pp.167-192).Cambridge,MA:HarvardEducationPublishingGroup.

Bartolomé,L.I.(2004).Criticalpedagogyandteachereducation:Radicalizingprospectiveteachers.Teacher Education Quarterly,31(1),97-122.

Bell,J.L.&Hartman,D.(2007).Diversityineverydaydiscourse:Theculturalambiguitiesandconsequencesof“HappyTalk.”American Sociological Review, 72, 895-914.

Bruch,P.L.,&Higbee,J.L.(2002,Fall).Reflectionsonmulticulturalismindevelopmentaleducation.Journal of College Reading and Learning, 33(1),77-90.

Capella-Santana,N.(2003).Voicesofteachercandidates:Positivechangesinmulticulturalattitudesandknowledge. Journal of Educational Research, 96(3),182-190.

Davis,L.S.,Crumpler,T.P.,Stallworth,C.,&Crawford,K.M.(2005).Beyondawareness:Preparing culturally responsive pre-service teachers.Teacher Education Quarterly,32(2),85-100.

Duarte,V.,&Reed,T.(2004).Learningtoteachinurbansettings. Childhood Education, 80(5),245.

Charmaz,K.(2006).Constructing grounded theory.ThousandOaks,CA:Sage.Children’sDefenseFund.(2005).ThestateofAmerica’schildren.RetrievedonDecember12,

2007athttp://www.childrensdefense.org/site/PageServer?pagename=publicationsCochran-Smith,M.(2003).Themultiplemeaningsofmulticulturalteachereducation:A

conceptualframework.Teacher Education Quarterly.30(2).7-26.Cochran-Smith,M.,&Zeichner,K.M.(2005).Executivesummary.InM.Cochran-Smith

&K.M.Zeichner(Eds.),Studying teacher education: The report of the AERA panel on research and teacher education.Washington,DC:LawrenceErlbaum.

Cochran-Smith,M.,Davis,D.,&Fries,K. (1995).Multicultural teachereducation:Re-search,practice,andpolicy.InJ.Banks&C.Banks(Eds.),Handbook of research on multicultural education.NewYork:MacMillan.

Darling-Hammond,L.(1999).Educatingteachersforthenextcentury:Rethinkingpracticeandpolicy.InG.A.Griffin(Ed.),The education of teachers(pp.221-256).Chicago:UniversityofChicagoPress.

Darling-Hammond,L.,Hammerness,K.,Grossman,P.,Rust,F.,&Shulman,L.(2005).Thedesignofteachereducationprograms.InL.Darling-Hammond&J.Bransford(Eds.).Preparing teachers for a changing world: What teachers should learn and be able to do (pp.390-441).SanFrancisco:Jossey-Bass.

Delpit,L.(1995).Other people’s children: Cultural conflict in the classroom.NewYork:TheNewPress.

Erlandson,D.A.,Harris,E.L.,Skipper,B.L.,&Allen,S.D.(1993).Doing naturalistic inquiry.NewburyPark:Sage.

Garcia,E.(2004).EducatingMexicanAmericanstudents.InJ.A.Banks&C.A.McGee

Multicultural Teacher Education

134

Banks(Eds.),Handbook of research on multicultural education, 2nd Edition(pp.491-514).SanFrancisco:Jossey-Bass.

Gay,G.,&Howard,T.C.(2000).Multiculturalteachereducationforthe21stcentury.TheTeacher Educator,36(1),1-16.

Giroux,H.,&McLaren,P. (1987).Teachereducationasacounterpublic sphere:notestowardsaredefinition.InT.Popkewitz(Ed.),Critical studies in teacher education: Its folklore, theory, and practice(pp.226-297).London,UK:FalmerPress.

Gollnick,D.(1995).Nationalandstateinitiativesforamulticulturaleducation.InJ.Banks(Ed.),Handbook of research on multicultural education.NewYork:Macmillan.

Gordon,J.(2005).Inadvertentcomplicity:Colorblindnessinteachereducation.Educational Studies, 38(2),135-153.

Grundy,S.,&Hatton,E.J.(1995).Teachereducators’ ideologicaldiscourses.Journal of Education for Teaching,21(1),7-23.

Hammerness,K.(2006).Fromcoherenceintheorytocoherenceinpractice.Teachers Col-lege Record,108(7),1241-1265.

King,B.M.,&Newmann,F.M.(2000).Willteacherlearningadvanceschoolgoals?Phi Delta Kappan, 81(8),576-82.

Koppich, J. (2000).TrinityUniversity:Preparing teachers for tomorrow’sschools. InL.Darling-Hammond(Ed.),Studies of excellence in teacher education: Preparation in a five-year program(pp.1-48).Washington,DC:AmericanAssociationofCollegesforTeacherEducation.

Irvine,J.J.(2003).Educating teachers for diversity: Seeing with a cultural eye.NewYork:TeachersCollegePress.

Ladson-Billings,G.(1994).The dreamkeepers: Successful teachers of African American children.SanFrancisco:Jossey-Bass.

Ladson-Billings,G.(1999).Multiculturalteachereducation:Research,practice,andpolicy.InJ.A.Banks&C.A.Banks(Eds.),Handbook of research on multicultural education(pp.747-761).NewYork:Macmillan.

Ladson-Billings,G.(2001).Crossing over to Canaan: The journey of new teachers in diverse classrooms.SanFrancisco:Jossey-Bass.

Lincoln,Y.,&Guba,E.(1985).Naturalistic inquiry.London,UK:SagePublications.Liston,D.,Whitcomb,J.,&Borko,H.(2006).Toolittleortoomuch:Teacherpreparation

andthefirstyearsofteaching.Journal of Teacher Education,57(4),351-358.MacDonald,S.,Colville-Hall,S.,&Smolen,L.(2003).Programownershipandthe“Trans-

formativeAgenda”incollegesofeducation:Teachersofteachersworkingtowardsamoreequitablesociety.Multicultural Education,10(4),7-14.

Merriam,S.B.(2001).Qualitative research and case study applications in education.SanFrancisco:Jossey-Bass.

Merseth,K.K.,&Koppich,J.(2000).TeachereducationattheUniversityofVirginia:AstudyofEnglishandmathematicspreparation.InL.Darling-Hammond(Ed.),Studies of excellence in teacher education: Preparation in a five-year program(pp.49-81).Washington,DC:AmericanAssociationofCollegesforTeacherEducation.

NationalCenterforEducationStatistics.(2007).Status and trends in the education of racial and ethnic minorities.RetrievedonDecember14,2007athttp://nces.ed.gov/pubs2007/minoritytrends/ind_1_1.asp

Nieto,S.(2000).Placingequityfrontandcenter:Somethoughtsontransformingteacher

Lori Czop Assaf, Rubén Garza, & Jennifer Battle

135

educationforanewcentury.Journal of Teacher Education, 51(3),180-187.Smolen,L.A.,Colville-Hall,S.,Liang,X.,&MacDonald,S.(2005).Anempiricalstudyof

collegeofeducationfaculty’sperceptions,beliefs,andcommitmenttotheteachingofdiversityinteachereducationprogramsatfoururbanuniversities.The Urban Review, 31(1),45-61.

Strauss,C.,&Corbin,J.(1998).Basics of qualitative research-techniques and procedures for developing grounded theory(2nded.).ThousandOaks,CA:SagePublications.

Tatto,M.T. (1996).Examiningvaluesandbeliefsabout teachingdiverse students:Un-derstandingthechallengesforteachereducation.Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis,18(2),155-180.

Villegas,A.,&Lucas,T.(2002).Educating culturally responsive teachers: A cohesive ap-proach.Albany,NY:StateUniversityofNewYorkPress.

Zeichner,K.M.(2000).Ability-basedteachereducation:ElementaryteachereducationatAlvernoCollege.InL.Darling-Hammond(Ed.),Studies of excellence in teacher educa-tion: Preparation in the undergraduate years(pp.1-66).Washington,DC:AmericanAssociationofCollegesforTeacherEducation.

Zeichner,K.M.,&Hoeft,K.(1996).Teachersocializationforculturaldiversity.InJ.Sikula,T.Buttery,&E.Guyton(Eds.),Handbook of research on teacher education(2nded.,pp.525-547).NewYork:Macmillan.

Recommended