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Ch13 1 Diversity and Equity Diversity and Equity Today: Today: Meeting the Challenge Meeting the Challenge Chapter Thirteen

Ch131 Diversity and Equity Today: Meeting the Challenge Chapter Thirteen

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Page 1: Ch131 Diversity and Equity Today: Meeting the Challenge Chapter Thirteen

Ch13 1

Diversity and Equity Today:Diversity and Equity Today:Meeting the ChallengeMeeting the Challenge

Chapter Thirteen

Page 2: Ch131 Diversity and Equity Today: Meeting the Challenge Chapter Thirteen

Ch13 2

Society in the ClassroomSociety in the Classroom

• Wider society influences what goes on in the classroom, for better or for worse

• Racism and sexism present and often unchallenged in the structures of schooling

• Jane Elliott’s Discrimination Day exercises– Members of a group identified as “superior”

literally tend to act and feel superior; those identified as “inferior” also react accordingly

Page 3: Ch131 Diversity and Equity Today: Meeting the Challenge Chapter Thirteen

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Theories of Social InequalityTheories of Social Inequality Genetic Inferiority Theory

– argues that biologically some groups of people are inferior intellectually and socially

– interpretations of IQ testing to support this theory continued to be offered and continue to be discredited (Jensen, Schockley, Herrnstein)

Cultural Deficit Theory– inferior home environments explained low achievement rates of minority

children– 1960s, 1970s compensatory education movement– beginning of Head Start– does not take children’s unfamiliarity with the dominant culture into

account Critical theory

– questions the whole social order and its power relations– looks at the relationship between the child and the school, rather than

the child or school in isolation

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Cultural Difference TheoryCultural Difference Theory

• Respects the variety of different cultures and assesses the relationships among various cultural groups

• Addresses “cultural mismatch”—differing ways of learning, demonstrating knowledge, behaviors and socialization patterns among students

• Confronts the traditional role of schools as instruments of social policy that maintain the dominant culture

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Cultural Subordination TheoryCultural Subordination Theory

• Examines social processes that lead to lower status for minority groups and structured inequalities in the system

• Anyon’s study of elementary schools

• Testing, tracking, and ability grouping

• Schools, curriculum, and setting reflect white middle-class worldview

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Resistance TheoryResistance Theory

• Students experiencing discrimination retreat– Adolescent girls submerge their intelligence– African American students caught between

cultures – Other students give the impression they “don’t

care” about schooling, and teachers can give up on them

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The Impact of LanguageThe Impact of Language • What linguists agree on:

– all languages can support complex cognitive processes and express whatever needs to be expressed

– language prestige is attached to economic/military power of group using it

– children learn better through use of native language– not all non-standard speakers have same language

development– the way a child's primary language is valued affects self-

concept – every language has variety of linguistic styles– reading failure is frequently caused by conflict between

English-speaking teachers and non-English-speaking children

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Bilingual and ESL Instruction as Bilingual and ESL Instruction as Bridges to English ProficiencyBridges to English Proficiency

• 42% of all public school teachers have at least one Limited English Proficiency (LEP) student in their classroom

• Spanish-speaking more likely to receive bilingual instruction; others get ESL programs

• Oakland School District’s controversial Ebonics instruction program

• BEV: Language and cultural subordination

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Pedagogical Approaches to Pedagogical Approaches to PluralismPluralism

• Ignore differences and teach to single standard

• Seek to eliminate differences by forcing compliance to a single standard

• Balance sensitivity to group differences without being biased by group differences– “culturally responsive” pedagogy

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Multicultural Education and Democratic Multicultural Education and Democratic

PluralismPluralism 1. Teaching the exceptional and culturally different

– fitting students into existing structure with ESL, bilingual, remedial, special education programs

– retains status quo2. Human relations

– promotion of unity, tolerance, and acceptance within existing structure among students

– Doesn’t address institutional inequities3. Single-group studies

– singling out groups for study; foster acceptance, work towards social change on behalf of identified group

– Doesn’t alter the main curriculum; more “add on”4. Multicultural education

– promotion of cultural pluralism, equal opportunity and respect in the school– critical thinking, bilingual instruction– debate over whether result is cohesion or fragmentation

5. Education that is multicultural and social reconstructionist– preparation for the “real world”

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Multicultural and Social Multicultural and Social Reconstructionist EducationReconstructionist Education

• Practice of democracy

• Analysis of one’s own life

• Development of social action skills

• Formation of social coalitions across boundaries of race, ethnicity, social class and gender

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Diversity, Equity, and SpecialDiversity, Equity, and SpecialEducationEducation

• Multicultural education is the most equitable way to address educational needs of all students (Banks)

• Special education as a form of tracking (Skrtic)

• Labels may say more about the system than they do about the students

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Concluding RemarksConcluding Remarks

• Jane Elliott’s experiment reminds us of the social construction of what is judged superior or inferior

• Slow progress from culturally deficient to culturally different explanations of differences

• Sensitivity means asking “When is race or class or gender a relevant variable in this student’s performance, and when is it not?”