|
MINORITIES
IN THE CLASSROOM
Abstracted from ERIC Digest
(EDO-HE-8811, ERIC Clearing House on Higher Education,
George Washington University,
Washington, DC
Teaching for minority student retention is one of the most
critical and challenging issues facing faculty and TA's today.
It requires that those educators who are committed to teaching
excellence become sensitive to the needs and experiences of
a range of persons with widely different ethnic, cultural,
and social histories.
Based on the review of literature in the field, the following
are recommendations that can be adopted by faculty and TA's
committed to improving the educational development of minority
students:
• Create a learning environment in which minority students
are encouraged to participate in class discussions and a variety
of learning activities Avoid, however, calling on minority
students to serve as "experts" on minority issues.
• Welcome differences in
communication styles.
• Expand the definition
of "good teaching so that it is defined by such attributes
as caring, mentoring, sensitivity to cultural differences,
and high expectations for all students, in addition to knowledge
of subject matter.
• Create a non-threatening
social environment in which problematic overt and covert behaviors
are not tolerated, whether this includes racial slurs and
jokes, or other forms of insensitive language and nonverbal
behavior.
• Bridge the educational gap, i.e., provide under-prepared
students with opportunities for academic success through extended
classes, tutoring, learning laboratories, study groups, and
strong advising.
• Get to know students as individuals; avoid making
overgeneralizations about students' backgrounds, abilities,
and preparation levels.
• Recognize the legitimacy
of variations in students' preferred learning styles. Provide
students with options for receiving and processing information
that reflect students' preferred learning styles.
• Provide students with honest feedback, both positive
and negative, early and frequently, both in class and outside
the classroom
• Design courses so that the contributions of minority
scholars to the discipline are an integral part of the course
content. Examine basic assumptions for discriminatory biases,
thus expanding the repertoire of world views, creating new
paradigms, and bringing a richer conceptualization to the
discipline.
• Encourage the success of minority students by welcoming
meetings outside class, providing them with good advising,
recruiting them as majors, and nominating them for awards
or other opportunities.
To implement these strategies and skills for effectively teaching
a diverse student population, faculty and TA's will want to
prepare themselves by
• Obtaining a sound understanding of not only the learning
styles associated with various minority students but by becoming
more aware of biases in instructional materials. These ethnically
biased representations perpetuate discrimination through the
inclusion of racially offensive material as well as the omission
of important references to contributions of minorities to
the discipline.
• Learning about the history
and culture of minority groups and researching the contributions
of minorities to the disciplines.
• Caring about the developmental welfare of minority
students and working to uncover and release personal biases
that prevent effective teaching. These, perhaps, will present
the greatest challenge to faculty and TA's, yet the achievement
of both can yield the greatest personal reward.
The dedication that teaching for minority student retention
demands and the determination to do whatever it takes to enable
minority students to success-whether this involves improving
faculty-student relationships in and out of class, expanding
course designs to reflect contributions of all cultures to
the disciplines and social conditions, creating learning environments
in which all students feel respected by peers and teachers-empowers
both students and educators to maximize their potential and,
thus, make significant contributions to the society of today
and the one that is yet to come with all its demographic changes.
The caring, conscientious educator will embrace this challenge,
seek whatever support is necessary to meet it, and, together
with students, soar.
References
American Council on Education. (1988). Handbook on minority
participation in higher education. Washington, DC: ACE.
American Council on Education and Education Commission of
the States. (1988). One-third of a nation: A report of the
commission on minority participation in education and American
life. Washington, DC and Denver, CO: ACE and ECS. ED 297 057.
Anderson, J. A. (1988). Cognitive styles and multicultural
populations. Journal of Teacher Education, 390), 2-9.
Astin, A. (1975). Preventing students from dropping out. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Banks, J. A. (1988). Multiethnic education: Theory and practice.
Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
|
Chism, N. V., Cano, J., & Pruitt, A. S. (Forthcoming).
Teaching in a diverse environment. New Directions for Teaching
and Learning. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Green, M. F. (Ed.). (1988). Minorities on campus: A handbook
for enhancing diversity. Washington, DC: American Council
on Education.
Hilliard, A. G. (1989). Teachers and cultural styles in a
pluralistic society. NEA Today. Washington, DC: National Education
Association.
Kuroiwa, P. (1975). The "invisible" students. Momentum,
63, 34-36
Mingle, James R. (1987). Focus on minorities. Trends in higher
education participation and success. A joint publication of
the Higher Education Executive Officers. Denver, CO: ECS and
SHEEO. ED 287 404.
Pemberton, G. (1988). On teaching the minority student: Problems
and strategies. Brunswick, ME: Bowdoin College.
Sedlacek, W. E. (1983). Teaching minority students: In J.
H. Cones, J. F. Noonan, & D. Janha (Eds.), Teaching Minority
Students. New Directions for Teaching and Learning, no 16.
San Francisco: JosseyBass.
Related
Web Resources
"Race
Consciousness and Race Blindness"
(from the Affirmative
Action and Diversity Project site)
"Diversity
at UCSB" (from Kiosk,
the UCSB Student Handbook)
Resource Description |
| Author/Artist: Edited by Zia Isola
from Dept. Materials |
Media: |
| Date of Composition: |
Dimensions: |
| Original Course: |
Bibliographic Information: |
| Description: Minority, Diversity, TA Handbook |
Location of Artifact: |
| Category: |
Date of Publication/Exhibition: |
| Period/MA Field: |
Keywords:Minority, Diversity, TA Handbook |
|