|
|
- Delivery
Delivery must acknowledge
and address a diversity of learning styles while challenging
dynamics of power and privilege in the classroom.
- Vary instructional
techniques.
- Lecture
- Cooperative
Learning
- Dialogue
- Individual Work
- Student Teaching
- Understand the
dynamics of power in the room so you do not perpetuate privilege
and oppression.
- Who do you call
on?
- Who do you
encourage to work through a problem and to whom do you
provide the answer?
- Challenge the notion
of Teaching as Mastery.
- Ask students what
they already know about a topic.
- Ask students what
they want to learn about a topic.
- Ask students to
participate in the teaching of a topic.
- Content
Content must be complete
and accurate, acknowledging the contributions and perspectives of
ALL groups.
- Ensure that the
content is as complete and accurate as possible.
- “Christopher
Columbus discovered America” is neither complete nor
accurate.
- Avoid tokenism—weave
content about under-represented groups (People of Color, Women,
Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual People, People with Disabilities,
etc.) seamlessly with that about traditionally over-represented
groups.
- Do you present
under-represented groups as “the other”?
- Do you address
these groups only through special units and lesson plans
(“African American Scientists”; “Poetry by Women”) or within
the context of the larger curriculum?
- Do you “celebrate”
difference or study, explore, and acknowledge it as part of
the overall curriculum?
- Study the history of
discrimination in curriculum and ensure that you are not
replicating it.
- Are supporting
stereotypes (learning about Native Americans by making
headdresses and tomahawks) or challenging them (learning
about Native Americans through resources by Native
Americans)?
- Are you supporting
or challenging the assumption that our society is inherently
Eurocentric, male-centric, Christian-centric,
heterosexual-centric, and upper-middle-class centric?
- Teaching and Learning
Materials
Teaching and learning
materials must be diverse and critically examined for bias.
- Vary instructional
materials.
- Texts
- Newspapers
- Videos/Movies
- Games
- Workbooks
- Examine all materials
for bias and oppressive content.
- Does your history
book show stereotypical or inaccurate images of people from
certain groups or eras (ex. railroad workers)?
- Do your science
materials use male-centric language?
- Do your reading or
literature materials have racist language or stereotypical
images (ex. the Huck Finn debate)?
- Does the language
you use and the language your materials use assume
heterosexuality, a 2-biological-parent household, American
citizenship..?
- Diversify images and
content in bulletin boards, posters, and other
constantly-visible materials.
- Do you ALWAYS
diversify, or only during special months or celebrations?
- Perspective
Content must be presented
from a variety of perspectives and angles in order to be accurate
and complete.
- Present content from a
variety of perspectives, not only that of majority groups.
- How do we define
“classic literature” or “great books” or “the classics” and
from whose perspective?
- From whose
perspective do we tell history? When is “westward expansion”
the same as “genocide”? When are champions of “liberty” the
same as slave owners?
- Present content
through a variety of lenses, not just those of a few heroic
characters.
- Slave narratives
to teach about slavery (not Frederick Douglas).
- Slave narratives
to teach about colonial Virginia.
- Native American
texts to teach about westward expansion.
- Critical Inclusivity
Students must be engaged in
the teaching and learning process—transcend the banking method and
facilitate experiences in which students learn from each other's
experiences and perspectives.
- Bring the perspectives
and experiences of the students themselves to the fore in the
learning experience.
- Encourage students to
ask critical questions about all information they receive from
you and curricular materials, and model this type of critical
thinking for them.
- Who wrote or
edited that textbook?
- Who created that
Web site?
- Whose voice am I
hearing and whose voice am I not hearing?
- Make content and
delivery relevant for the students—facilitate experiences in
which they connect it with their everyday lives.
- Recognize your
students as your most important multicultural resources.
- Social and Civic
Responsibility
If we hope to prepare
students to be active participants in an equitable democracy, we
must educate them about social justice issues and model a sense of
civic responsibility within the curriculum.
- Starting with the
youngest students, incorporate discussions about difference and
inequality into your lessons—this can be done across all subject
areas.
- How has misapplied
science been used to justify racism and anti-Semitism?
- Look for ways in which
recognized names in various disciplines used their work and
stature to fight social injustices. (It can be particularly
powerful to find people from majority groups who fought certain
types of oppression.)
- Mark Twain
- Albert Einstein
- Eleanor Roosevelt
- When an opportunity
arises to address racism, sexism, homophobia, classism, or other
forms of oppression, facilitate it.
- Have honest discussion
with your students about the history of privilege and oppression
in your subject area, school, education, and society at large.
- Connect teaching and
learning to local community and larger global issues.
- Encourage students to
think critically about the United States, capitalism, the
two-party system, and other traditionally untouchable subjects
of critique.
- Assessment
Curriculum must be
constantly assessed for completeness, accuracy and bias.
- Work with a cohort of
teachers to examine and critique each other's curricular units,
lesson plans, and entire frameworks.
- Request and openly
accept feedback from your students.
- Return to this model
from time to time to make sure you haven't reverted to former
practices.
|
|