your neighbors speak really good english!

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TRANSFORMING TEACHER PREP INSTITUTIONS TO DEVELOP CULTURALLY LITERATE EDUCATORS Jennifer L. Fong EDLS 7010 BGSU “Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!”

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Page 1: Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!

TRANSFORMING TEACHER PREP INSTITUTIONS TO DEVELOP CULTURALLY

LITERATE EDUCATORS

Jennifer L. FongEDLS 7010

BGSU

“Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!”

Page 2: Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!

“Frames” of Individuality

On each of the five cards, write one characteristic that you use in identifying yourself to others.

Mom

White-Female

Teacher

Non-Conformist

Irish-American

Page 3: Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!

What do you think? Which is the boy, which is the girl?

Page 4: Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!

How Do Our Individual “frames” Contribute To Our Perceptions?

Which of your five “frames” influenced your decision?

How could you eliminate using these “frames” in making decisions?

Page 5: Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!

Statement of the

Problem

Equitable Education or Not?

Equality in education has long been a topic of controversy, ethical debate and political activism.

Schools are more segregated today than at any other time since Brown (Nieto, 2006).

This is especially true in light of today’s rapidly changing demographics.

further obstacles: rapid attrition rate of new teachers, especially in urban public schools; an escalating achievement gap between majority and minority student populations; increasing “standardization” of schools (Nieto, 2006, p. 459).

educators and leaders entering these diverse classrooms must be prepared to teach and lead culturally-responsive schools (Villegas & Lucas, 2002).

Page 6: Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!

How do Teach Prep Institutions Prepare Culturally Literate Teachers?

Infusing the curriculum with opportunities to engage in self-analysis of biases, values and beliefs about diversity issues is critical (Nieto, 2006).

Provide numerous field experiences in diverse school settings and recruiting a more diverse faculty, and student body (Nieto, 2006).

Guided critical self-reflection is necessary to challenge prevailing sociopolitical views, beliefs and values that many teachers hold and schools promote (Terwilliger, 2003).

Educating pre-service teachers in constructivist views of (Villegas & Lucas, 2002). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FInP1BV_BsI&feature=channel

Page 7: Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!

Why Is This So Difficult?

For most schools, a reform entailing multicultural education is not just a change in curriculum or operations, but a paradigm shift in thinking and in the culture of the school (Cooper, 2009).

One reason that transformative change is difficult is because it threatens the power of the dominant group who then resist the changes (Jay, 2003).

An organization is predisposed to resist change efforts that do not align with an organization’s set of norms or culture (Connor, Lake and Stackman ,2003) .

It is only when leaders understand the culture of an organization including both the implicit and explicit culture, that they can be successful in their efforts to implement change processes (Schlechty,2005).

Page 8: Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!

ALICIA KEYS, 2010

“ And the day came when the risk it took to remain tight and closed in the bud was more

painful than the risk it took to bloom. This is the element of freedom.”

Page 9: Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!

References

Cooper, C.W. (2009). Performing cultural work in demographically changing schools: Implications for expanding transformative leadership frameworks. Educational Administration Quarterly, 45(5), 694-724. doi: 10.1177/0013161X09341639.

Connor, P.E., Lake, L.K., & Stackman, R.W. (2003). Managing organizational change (3rd ed.). Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers.

Jay, M. (2003). Critical race theory, multicultural education and the hidden curriculum of hegemony. Multicultural Perspectives, 5(4), 3-9.

Katsarou, E. (2009). Reading African-American literature to understand the world: critical race praxis in teacher preparation. Race, Ethnicity and Education, 12(2), 253-266. doi: 10.1080/13613320902995517.

Kouzes, J.M., & Posner, B.Z. (2007). The leadership challenge (4th ed.). SanFrancisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

Nieto, S. (2006). Solidarity, courage and heart: What teacher educators can learn from a new generation of teachers. Intercultural Education. 17(5), 457-473. doi:10.1080/14675980601060443.

Page 10: Your Neighbors Speak Really Good English!

References

Schlechty, P.C. (2005). Creating great schools: Six critical systems at the heart of educational innovation. SanFrancisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

Terwilliger, C. (2010). Mapping stories: Taking detours to challenge whiteness. Retrieved from: http://organizations.bloomu.edu/connect/spring2010/3%20Mapping%20Stories.pdf

http://www.tolerance.org/activity/my-multicultural-self

Villegas, A.M., & Lucas, T. (2002). Preparing culturally responsive teachers: Rethinking the curriculum. Journal of Teacher Education. 53(1), 20-32. doi:10.1177/0022487102053001003.