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Cultural Interview Kristen Roberts EDUF 7235: Multicultural Education Dr. Sabrina Ross July 8, 2013

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Cultural Interview. Kristen Roberts EDUF 7235: Multicultural Education Dr. Sabrina Ross July 8, 2013. Interview Subject. Dr. Moreno immigrated from Colombia to the United States in 1994. Please describe your immigration process. Did you come alone or with your husband? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Cultural Interview

Cultural Interview Kristen RobertsEDUF 7235: Multicultural EducationDr. Sabrina RossJuly 8, 2013

Page 2: Cultural Interview

Interview SubjectDr. Moreno immigrated from Colombia to the United States in 1994.

Please describe your immigration process. Did you come alone or with your husband? “I came with a student visa, during the 5 years of the Doctoral degree. Then I had a year of practical

training, I changed my status to wife of a person with a work visa. I later got my work visa and now I have my residency (green card) Now I am in the process of citizenship.”

Page 3: Cultural Interview

Perception of Cultural Differences

Can you describe any specific family or cultural traditions that you hope to pass on to your children?

"I would like my kids to have strong family traditions and values. Also to be able to value and respect themselves and their elders and value the ability to have a relationship with people of different ages

and be able to learn from them."

What are the biggest differences that you have observed between Colombian culture and the culture of the United States?

"In many ways I feel we are similar but one thing that is different is the family relationships, I feel that in many cases there is lack of respect for elders, and there is not much closeness within the family.“

Do you have Colombian friends/relatives in the area, state, or United States that you keep in regular contact with?

“There are a few Colombian families in the area and they have become our family here. We try to keep the traditions and their kids and ours easily identify with themselves. Our family values and the fact that we are all away from the family nuclei makes it important since the friendships makes us feel

as we have a little of our country here.”

Page 4: Cultural Interview

Educational Background of ParticipantWhat is your educational background?

"Elementary and secondary schools were private schools Inmaculado Corazon de Maria and Liceo Benalcazar respectively. After high school, I did my undergraduate in a public university,

Universidad del Valle, then I did my doctorate degree in Baylor University. After Baylor I did my post-doctorate work at Northwestern University."

Page 5: Cultural Interview

Occupation of Dr. MorenoWhat is your profession? Do you believe that your occupation has certain advantages or disadvantages

in terms of having the ability to attend school functions or meet any other needs your children may

have? “I am a Lecturer, Lab Coordinator, and Instructor at a

university. Many events are easy to attend but there are times that is not that easy to fully participate in school

activities. One advantage is that I can volunteer in school also bringing chemistry demos for the school.”

Page 6: Cultural Interview

Dr. Moreno's ChildrenMaria is 13 and will be beginning the eighth grade in the fall. Valeria

is 9 and will be entering the fourth grade.

Where do they attend school? Is the school private or public? Did you purposely choose the school that they attend? If

so, why that particular one?"Maria attended from preschool to 5th grade in Epiphany School

(private, Catholic), she then transferred to a public Junior High School, but for 8th grade she wants to go back to Epiphany.

Valeria has been enrolled from preschool to 4th grade at Epiphany School... I selected Catholic education because the year that we were looking into the public education, the school she was going

to attend a kid brought a gun to school, but also I figured if everything was going to be different from how I was educated, at

least my kids could have religion as part of the curriculum as I had in Colombia."

Page 7: Cultural Interview

Dr. Moreno's Educational Goals for Children

What do you hope for your children in terms of their education (now and in the future)?

“I want my kids to have a well rounded education specially from their elementary junior and high school. I want them to go to college

and develop in careers that allow them to use their talents. I want my kids to be at least bilinguals and open minded.”

What does it mean to you to be a well-educated student?“A well educated student would be a student that has learned all the

basics not only in math, science, literature but that also has some knowledge of the world, (geography, history and what is

happening in the world right now). It is a student that can go to college and is excited about learning and sharing their knowledge. It is a student that knows how to effectively study to learn not to

pass an exam.”

Page 8: Cultural Interview

Cultural Issue: AssimilationHow do you envision faculty and staff facilitating those hopes? Do

you believe they are already facilitating them? If not, what can or should they be doing?

I think they are doing what they can with their resources, but I think that some of them are not prepared enough to teach some of the things they teach. I also think that they need to challenge them so they are excited

about learning. When a teacher is not motivated or if he or she has to deal with kids that are disruptive that diminishes the quality of the education.

What do you think that teachers and administrators need to know about teaching students from various cultural background?

I think they need to be open minded by allowing their students or their parents to talk about where are they from and how things are different and

the same. There is not only one way to do things and because they are done differently that does not mean it is the wrong way to do it.

Page 9: Cultural Interview

Cultural Issue (continued)Do you think that your Colombian heritage has impacted your daughters' education? In other words, are there any advantages or disadvantages that

they have because they do not belong to the white majority?The advantage my kids have is the ability to understand and speak another language.

They have also traveled more than many of their class mates and I think that will give them the ability to move in two cultures.

Along the lines of teaching your daughters to be bilingual as well as understand the histories of two countries, do they enjoy learning about

Colombia? In our textbook, the authors talk about how some first-generation Americans try to assimilate as much as possible into U.S. culture because they don't want to be different from their peers, and

because they aren't learning about their own culture in school. Do you feel this to be true for your daughters?

My kids have the same issues as any kid about identity, I think they hear the history of Colombia as fun stories that could happen in a movie and are not real but I think they still get to learn from those stories. They are excited about us becoming citizens, I think they are proud of us for doing so, embracing their country and culture. I don't

think they feel too different among their peers. They just know that they are american and they have Colombian culture in them.

Page 10: Cultural Interview

My Approach: Multicultural EducationSocietal Goals Promote structural equality and cultural pluralism (the United States as a "tossed

salad")

School Goals Promote equal opportunity in the schools, cultural pluralism and alternative lifestyles, respect for diverse peoples, and support for power equity among groups

Target Students Everyone

PracticesCurriculum Organize concepts around contributions and perspectives of multiple groups;

teach critical thinking, analyze diverse viewpoints, commonalities as well as differences; challenge all students academically; relate to students' experiential backgrounds; build on multiple languages

Instruction Build on students' learning strengths; involve students actively in joint productive intellectual activity

Other Aspects of Classroom Assess learning fairly, using multiple means of assessment and languages students understand; make the classroom reflect and welcome members' pluralism, diverse lifestyles

Other Schoolwide Involve parents and community actively; reach out to low-income parents and parents of color; encourage staffing patterns to include diverse racial, gender, language, and disability groups in nontraditional roles; use decorations, special events, school mnues that reflect and include diverse ethnic and religious groups; include all student groups in extracurricular activities; ensure that discipline procedures do not penalize any group unfairly; ensure that building is accessible to everyone

Page 11: Cultural Interview

Why Multicultural Education?"Multicultural Education seeks to have all young people learn knowledge,

values, and behavioral patterns that support cultural diversity, flexibility, and choice" (page 172)

The Multicultural Education approach is to specifically promote the value of diversity and respect for others, which is something that Dr. Moreno

alluded to in the interview.

Page 12: Cultural Interview

Interventions: Diverse Perspectives

Educators should make an effort to teach students about other cultures so that they can value differences that exist.Provide diverse viewpoints about various events in history,

particularly information about the cultures of minority students in the classroom.

Teach with an open mind so that students do not learn that one way, presumably their way, of thinking is the only way.

Page 13: Cultural Interview

Benefits of Presenting Diverse Perspectives

Dr. Moreno stated that her children often view Colombian history as stories that "happen in a

movie." Although they still learn from those stories, they would benefit more from learning

about their own culture in the classroom, where they are more likely to give that history the same

importance that they give to the history of the United States.

Page 14: Cultural Interview

Interventions: Multilingualism

The world is becoming increasingly globalized. It is not uncommon for workers today to interact with

others across the city, state, country, or even globe.

Students should be taught at least one other language in school, as well as focus on the

culture of the people who speak that language natively to promote a greater understanding and

acceptance of others.

Page 15: Cultural Interview

Benefits of Multilingualism

Teaching students a second language and educating them in that language not only

provides students with the opportunity to learn about and appreciate other cultures, but it also prepares them for interacting with others in the future. Students of the majority culture learn to respect those who speak another language, and

those who natively speak a different language are not made to feel as though they belong in

remedial courses.

Page 16: Cultural Interview

Dr. Moreno's InvolvementPlease describe how involved you are with your daughters' schools.

I volunteer in school in parties, park days, field trips and with chemistry demos, I have also talked to them about immigration and my immigration process and at sport days and lunch hours.

Are your daughters learning anything in school about their heritage? If so, what are they learning?

In their schools they are not learning about their heritage, they learn that from us and our family when we visit or they visit us.

Do you supplement education with cultural education at home? If so, what do you teach them about?

When we travel we visit historical places and we talk about those types of events that are similar or different to the US history. They get to share experiences in the Colombian environment and they

get to see how things are done in Colombia.

Page 17: Cultural Interview

What I LearnedThe educational attainment of a parent plays a significant role

in how comfortable he or she is in approaching educators about problems. Because she has earned her Ph.D., and

has received some of her education in the U.S., she is most likely more comfortable than her counterparts who have not

had as much education.Dr. Moreno mentioned several times throughout the interview

that, despite the cultural differences that do exist, much of the two cultures are the same, and that her children do not feel that they are different from their peers in a significant

way, which was telling to me. While it is important to understand and accept cultural differences, I have learned that it is equally important to remember that even people who seem different in every way still have commonalities,

which can be used to build greater understanding in spite of the differences.

Page 18: Cultural Interview

ReferencesDiversity Awareness Month. (n.d.). Retrieved June 29, 2013, from

http://www.slu.edu/cross-cultural-center/diversity-awareness-monthMap of Colombia. (n.d.). Retrieved June 29, 2013, from

http://www.forcedmigration.org/maps/colombia.gif/viewColombia Country Map. (n.d.). Retrieved June 29, 2013, from

http://www.wordtravels.com/Travelguide/Countries/Colombia/MapSan Agustín Archaeological Park: Mystery Carved in Stone. (n.d.). Retrieved

June 29, 2013, from http://www.colombia.travel/en/international-tourist/sightseeing-what-to-do/history-and-tradition/archaeological-tourism/san-agustin-archaeological-park

Sleeter, C. E. & Grant, C. A. (2009). Making choices for multicultural education: Five approaches to race, class, and gender (6th ed.). New York: John Wiley & Sons.

The Joropo International Tournament: the best excuse for surrendering to the spell of the Eastern Plains. (n.d.). Retrieved June 29, 2013, from http://www.colombia.travel/en/international-tourist/sightseeing-what-to-do/history-and-tradition/fairs-and-festivals/june/the-joropo-international-tournament