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Presented by: Yoany Beldarrain, Instructional Leader Tammy Hinson, English Instructor Florida Virtual School 2007 FASCD Conference Orlando, Florida How Students learn, How Teachers Teach, and How Administrators serve as Literacy Leaders: An Extreme Makeover for Preparing Minority Students for the 21st Century.

How Students learn, How Teachers Teach, and How ... · Introduction If students were distributed evenly across the nations’ classrooms, every class of 30 students would include

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Presented by:Yoany Beldarrain, Instructional Leader

Tammy Hinson, English InstructorFlorida Virtual School

2007 FASCD ConferenceOrlando, Florida

“How Students learn, How Teachers Teach, and How Administrators serve as Literacy Leaders: An Extreme Makeover for Preparing Minority Students for the 21st Century. ”

Introduction

If students were distributed evenly across the nations’

classrooms, every class of 30 students would include about

10 students from ethnic or racial minority groups. Of these

10, about 6 would be from language minority families (homes

in which languages other than English are spoken); 2-4 of

these students would have limited English proficiency (LEP),

of whom 2 would be from immigrant families. Of the 6

language minority students in the class, 4 would speak

Spanish as their native language, and 1 would speak an

Asian language. The other language minority student would

speak any one of more than a hundred languages.

Of the 30 students in this hypothetical class, 10 (including

nearly all of the language minority students) would be

poor. The neighborhoods where poor children live are

likely to be beset with multiple problems--inadequate

health, social, and cultural services; insufficient

employment opportunities; crime, drugs, and gang activity.

Their families are likely to suffer the emotional stresses

associated with poverty, and parents are likely to worry

about their children's safety in a dangerous environment

and about their future with few positive prospects.

Overview- The Extreme

Makeover…

This presentation will provide a framework for providing reading instruction to minority students. Furthermore, it will provide strategies for teachers to use that will help these students think critically and function socially as they come of age and define their place in the 21st Century.

In addition, participants will engage in

hands-on activities that will help them

to become more culturally responsive

to the literacy needs of minority

students and to help foster those

academic and social identities that

will allow them to develop a

symphony of skills for living in the

21st Century.

Objectives:

Understand why we need to give special

attention to the literacy of minority students.

Use strategies for increasing the standardized

test scores of minorities.

Select text materials that empower and engage

minorities.

Understand what it means to be a “culturally

responsive” teacher.

Implement research-based literacy strategies

that work with minorities.

“Teacher InquIry”

Culture Counts…

Id, Ego, and Superego

i am overwhelmed with inadequacies

And i

Fear inadequacy

And i

Suffer from the reality of inadequacy

While i

Deny inadequacy.

Then i

Cry inadequacy

But i

Buy inadequacy

As it is pedaled by the meritocracy

Who tell me i am inadequate,

And i believe.Poem taken from…

www.edchange.org/multicultural

voices/p_2007id.html

REFLECTIONS…

Using the poem as a guide, discuss these questions with the person sitting next to you…

Is there a divide between in-school and out-of-school literacies of minority students? How early in life do you

think minority students conclude that “traditional American education” is indifferent to their existence?

VIDEO CLIP- Freedom Writers

How does the clip from the movie reflect the meaning of the poem Id, Ego, and Superego?

Culture Counts…

Culture Counts….

Alfred Tatum’s 4 C’s for creating a

curriculum that fosters multiculturalism: Compassion

Competence

Commitment

Cultural Responsiveness

CAN YOUR CLASSROOM, YOUR SCHOOL, or YOUR

DISTRICT EQUIP MINORITY STUDENTS FOR THE

21st CENTURY IN THE FACE OF NATIONAL

LEGISLATION?

The 4 C’s

Brainstorm:Create a partnership with someone from another

school or district and discuss with this person

strategies that a teacher and an administrator

could use to model culturally responsive

pedagogy?

Can your classroom, your school, or your district

equip minority students for the 21st century in the

face of national legislation?

How Administrators serve as

Literacy Leaders

A newly defined role:

1. Instructional leadership

2. Coaching

3. Professional Development

The Culture of Florida Virtual School: A Symphony of Skills

Bringing out-of-school literacies in the

classroom for students.

Going beyond Skill and Strategy

Instruction.

Strengthening Concepts of Reading

Teaching Students Responsibility

Setting high expectations and supporting

these expectations in a nurturing

environment.

Ongoing professional Development for

Administrators, Teachers, and Staff

Use of Cutting Edge Technology to prepare

students and teachers for 21rst Century

Learning

Culturally Responsive

Teachers…

Know their students & the subject

matter they teach.

Place learning in a meaningful context.

Help students understand more about

themselves and about the world.

Use literacy that is culturally relevant

and speaks to their students’

experiences.

Culturally Responsive Teachers…

Help students understand society’s perception of who they are while helping students define who they want to become.

Establish trusting relationships and feelings of kinship.

Understand the lived experiences of their students and how their students respond to these experiences.

Culturally Responsive

Teachers…

Connect, as best as they can, students’

in-school lives with their out-of-school

lives.

Understand their role as being broader

than just helping students do well on

tests.

Understand cultural specific behaviors.

Culturally Responsive

Teachers…

Plan instruction and assessment with a

rich audit of who students are.

Focus instruction on helping students

develop strategies and hope for

overcoming academic and societal

barriers.

Culturally Responsive Teachers…

Culturally Responsive Teachers: Always Sometimes Never

Know their students and the subject matter they teach.

Place Learning In a Meaningful Context.

Help students understand more about themselves and

more about the world.

Use literature that is culturally relevant and that speaks

to their students’ experiences.

Help students understand society’s perception of who

they are while helping students t define who they want

to become.

Establish trusting relationships and feelings of kinship.

Understand the lived experiences of their students and

how their students respond to these experiences.

Connect, as best as they can, students’ in –school lives

with their out-of-school lives.

Understand their role as being broader than just helping

students do well on tests.

Understand cultural specific behaviors.

Plan instruction and assessment with a rich audit of

who the students are.

Focus instruction on helping students develop strategies

and hope for overcoming academic and societal barriers

Changing Expectations

Shifting from remedial education to high

standards and expectations for all….

Video Clip-Mona Lisa Smiles

Discussion Topic:

How does the teacher in this video clip change

expectations and motivate her students to become more

that what was expected of them?

A Shift in Pedagogy…

Video Clip

“Akeelah & the Bee”

How did the teacher in this film change the

traditional approach of instruction to help

Akeelah define meaning for herself? How

did Dr. Larabee build on and support

Akeelah’s desire for success?

A Shift in Pedagogy

Changing your Pedagogy…

Teacher: How does my literacy

instruction affect minority students in

my class whose out-of-school literacies

over power their in-school-literacies?

Administrator: How do I support my

teachers to ensure that they are placing

learning in a meaningful context for all

students?

A Shift in Pedagogy

FLVS NEHS hosts an online African American Read-In…

Sponsors:

D. Hernandez & M. Keller

Guest readers and speakers from the

business and academic communities

over the USA share with students their

favorite African American Writings and

authors. Time periods covered range

from Early Slavery to Modern Day.

Meeting the Literacy Needs

of Minority Students…

Establish a broader definition of literacy instruction that guides the selection of course material.

Discuss texts and topics in culturally responsive ways.

Identify texts that balance the out-of-school literacy overload.

Examine your disposition toward using multicultural texts and content with minority students.

(Tatum, 2005)

~activity~

Literacy must focus on skill and strategy knowledge,

content knowledge, and identity development.

(McGowan, 2005)

Tapping Into Students’

Funds of Knowledge

A Model Lesson for Culturally Responsive

Teaching…

Learning is a social process, influenced by

culture…

Funds of Knowledge…

“Students benefit when they can extend the ideas contained in texts into their

own lives”

(Tatum, 2005).

Activity:

Luther and

“MY Man Blue”

Funds of Knowledge

After viewing Luther’s video “Dance

with my Father” and listening to “My

Man Blue”, how does Damon’s

relationship with Blue differ from those

relationships portrayed in Luther’s

video? How is it the same?

Compare and contrast your relationship

with your father to that of either Damon

& Blue or those portrayed in the

video…or both.

Changing Expectations Means

Transforming Schools and

Schooling…

Student-Centered Pedagogy

•The experiences of students must be brought to the

fore in the classroom, making learning more active,

interactive, and engaging.

•Traditional teaching approaches and pedagogical

models must be deconstructed to examine how they are

contributing to and supporting institutional systems of

oppression.

•Known oppressive practices like tracking (even if

informal) must be exposed and critically examined.

Student-Centered Pedagogy

All aspects of teaching and learning in

schools must be refocused on, and

rededicated to, the students themselves

instead of standardized test scores and

school rankings.

Emphasis should be put on critical and

creative thinking, and deep social

awareness. They must be able to compete in

a global marketplace.

Student-Centered Pedagogy

• Pedagogy must provide all students with equal potential to reach their potential as learners.

• Pedagogy must be flexible enough to allow for the diversity of learning styles present in every classroom.

Changing Expectations Means

Transforming Schools and Schooling…

Multicultural Curriculum

•All curricula must be studied for accuracy and completeness.

•All subjects must be told from diverse perspectives -- this is related to accuracy and completeness.

•"Inclusive curriculum" also means including the voices of the students in the classroom.

Multicultural Curriculum

• Concepts such as "the canon" and "classic literature" must be reconceptualized, again with the idea of accuracy and completeness, to debunk the perception that the only great literature came from the U.S. and England.

• Curricula should reflect the diversity of learning styles in every classroom.

Inclusive Educational Media and Materials

•Educational materials should be inclusive of

diverse voices and perspectives.

•Students must be encouraged to think critically

about materials and media: Whose voice are they

hearing? Whose voice are they not hearing? Why

did that company produce that film? What is the

bias this author may bring to her or his writing?

Changing Expectations Means

Transforming Schools and

Schooling…

2000 American Anthropological Association. This information was cited in the December 2000 issue of

Anthropology and Education Quarterly (31:4).

Supportive School and

Classroom Climate

• Teachers must be better prepared to foster a

positive classroom climate for ALL students.

• Overall school cultures must be closely

examined to determine how they might be

cycling and supporting oppressive societal

conditions.

Supportive School and

Classroom Climate

Administrative hierarchies in schools

must be examined to assess whether

they produce positive teaching

environments for all teachers.

A Literacy Leader’s Perspective

A Blueprint for Success.

Establish, implement, and achieve academic standards that prepare students for the 21st Century.

Be an instructional resource for your staff (get the curriculum needed to help the teacher reach these students. Write grants, seek donations from business partners, host school-wide fundraisers, etc.)

Create a learning-oriented school culture and climate .

Communicate your school’s vision and mission to staff and students in culturally responsive ways.

Supporting Teachers and Minority Students

Set high expectations for your staff and yourself.

Develop teacher leaders (allow teachers to share their expertise and “what works” with their colleagues and teammates).

Develop and maintain positive relationships with students, staff, and parents- Compassion leads to the motivation that fosters SUCCESS!

Taken from: Seven Steps to Effective Instructional Leadership by Elaine K. McEwan

Activity…

Grandfather’s Journey

By Allen Say

Resources

Gay, G. (1995). Bridging multicultural theory and practice. Multicultural Education, 3(1), 4-9.

Lyons, C., and Pinnell, G.S. 200l. Systems for Change in Literacy Education: A Guide to Professional Development. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

Tatum, A. W. 2005. Teaching Reading to Black Adolescent Males: Closing the Achievement Gap.Portland, ME: Stenhouse.

Parking Lot!

Questions, Answers & Kudos…

Contact Information:

Yoany Beldarrain

[email protected]

Tammy Hinson

[email protected]