I had the opportunity this week to go to a conference
with people from twelve western states (including Hawaii and Alaska), as well
as people from America Samoa, Guam, and the Mariana Islands. The purpose of the
conference was to talk about what states were doing in their Early Childhood
Professional Development Systems to support teachers to prepare children for
school readiness. We were discussing the tools that are widely accepted as
reliable for determining quality in classrooms and programs, when the representative
from Alaska spoke up. She mentioned that native children are not talk to
interact in the same way that Caucasian children are-they are talk to listen as
their way of learning. One of the widely accepted tools to measure interactions
between teachers and children does not take this cultural difference into
consideration, and the scores of the native teachers and children in Alaska
were low. Not because they had poor interactions, but because they had
different interactions than those being measured. This nationally renowned tool
was a microaggression to this leader and the native people in her state because
it says that their way of interacting is not worthwhile. Although the tool is
meant to be a support for teachers, and no malice was put into the design, it
has unintentionally caused this community an indignity.
            This
observation has helped me realize that many things that are designed to benefit
“all” children in the U.S. have been designed by White, middle/upper class,
educated people-and they are piloted on the same demographic. We, as Early
Childhood leaders need to be willing to step out of our reality and realize
that our world is changing. I will take the lesson learned from my colleague in
Alaska and ask myself if what I am sending out to the providers in Utah, in
regards to Professional Development, are truly taking many right ways of doing
what is best for children. 
Carolyn,
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing that. When we went to our 2nd graders family night the teacher was describing some upcoming testing. She said the test is designed for 2nd to 5th grade children and that our children may find it frustrating and stressful. As I sat there I had to think what is the use of the tool. Daily observation and data collection by skilled adults who know and understand the children certainly seems more appropriate to me.
Great example of how the dominant culture has the power and marginalizes other cultures.
Hope the conference was great!
Betsy
Carolyn,
ReplyDeleteThis example shows how microagressions can stem from cultural beliefs. The dominant culture is strong in many areas, and it is sad when educators are stuck with these types of beliefs. I agree that observations are important in education. However, I have learned that teaching and learnnig is different in other cultures.