Where is Social Justice in Culturally Responsive Teaching?
DOI: 221 Downloads 5682 Views
Author(s)
Abstract
Over the past twenty-five years, there have been considerable demographic shifts in public school populations in the United States particularly in urban schools and in some of the largest states in America. As the school populations become more diverse, they pose serious challenges for teachers because of the academic and disciple gap that exist between White and African American, Latino, Native American and some Asian American students. Today, educators are looking to culturally responsive teaching as a way of closing the achievement and discipline gaps especially as school districts focus more and more on rigor as a way of meeting the needs of the Common Core Standards. Numerous researches have shown that culturally responsive teaching is the most effective way of meeting the learning needs of culturally diverse students. Consequently, scholars have written extensively on culturally responsive teaching, but most often, these scholars mention social justice as essential components of culturally responsive teaching without delving into the underpinnings between culturally responsive teaching and social justice in students’ academic achievement. Some scholars have even ignored the issue of social justice in their studies completely, and one editor even wondered if we can realize social justice in the field of teaching? In other words, although social justice is an essential component in the conceptualization of critically responsive teaching, in most cases, it is either overlooked or marginalized. The purpose of this article is to present a conceptual framework that integrates critical reflection, social justice, and critical questioning and analyses into culturally responsive teaching as meaningful ways of improving student learning.
Keywords
Social justice, Culture, Equity, Education, Political knowledge, Social change
Cite this paper
Magnus O. Bassey,
Where is Social Justice in Culturally Responsive Teaching?
, SCIREA Journal of Education.
Volume 5, Issue 3, June 2020 | PP. 59-73.
References
[ 1 ] | Allen, A., Hancock, S. D., Starker-Glass, T., and Lewis C. W. (2017). Mapping culturally relevant pedagogy into teacher education programs: A critical framework. Teachers College Record, 119, 010307, 1-26. |
[ 2 ] | Almaguer, I. (2019). Addressing implications of culturally empowering pedagogical frameworks: The influence of language for Mexican Americans and Native Hawaiians. Journal of Research and Practice, 9 (3-4), 181-190. |
[ 3 ] | Bassey, M. O. (2016). Culturally responsive teaching: Implications for educational justice. Education Sciences 6 (35), 1-6. |
[ 4 ] | Brockenbrough, E. (2014). Becoming queerly responsive: Culturally responsive pedagogy for Black and Latino urban queer youth. Downloaded from uex.sagepub.com at Queens College Library on October 6, 2014. |
[ 5 ] | Cammarota, J. and Ginwright, S. (2007). Today we march, tomorrow we vote: Youth transforming despair into social justice. The Journal of Educational Foundations, 21(1-2), 3-8. |
[ 6 ] | Chilcoat, G. W and Ligon, J. A. (2000). “Great potential curriculumers”: Educational projects that informed the curriculum design of the Mississippi freedom schools. Paper Presentation at the American Educational Research Association Annual Meeting, Division B, Curriculum Studies, Session Number 33.63, New Orleans, Louisiana. |
[ 7 ] | Coalition for Psychology in Schools and Education (2015) PRINCIPLE 13 Learning is situated within multiple social contexts. |
[ 8 ] | Cuban, S., and Anderson, J. B. (2007). Where’s the justice in service-learning? Institutionalizing service-learning from a social justice perspective at a Jesuit university. Equity & Excellence in Education, 40 (2), 144-155. |
[ 9 ] | Curry, Constance (2005). In The legacy of a freedom school. New York: Palgrave Macmillan (blurb, back page). |
[ 10 ] | Garlen, J. C., Kuh, L., and Coleman, B. (2017). Teaching for social justice in the early childhood classroom. Teachers College Record, http://www.tcrecord.org ID Number: 21890 (Accessed 4/1/2017. |
[ 11 ] | Eglash, R., Gilbert, J. E., Taylor, V., and Geier, S. R. (2013). Culturally responsive computing in urban, after-school contexts: Two approaches. Urban Education 48 (5), 629-656. |
[ 12 ] | Gay, G. (2010). Culturally responsive teaching: Theory, research, and practice (2nd edition). New York: Teachers College Press. |
[ 13 ] | Gehlbach, H. (2014, 19 November). Creating birds of similar feathers: Leveraging similarity to improve teacher-student relationships and academic achievement. SEYS Educational Psychology Lecture Series, Department of Secondary Education and Youth Services, Queens College, The City University of New York. |
[ 14 ] | Hale, Jon N. (2018). The freedom schools; Student activists in the Mississippi civil rights movement. New York, NY Columbia University Press. |
[ 15 ] | Hammond, Z. (2015). Culturally responsive teaching & the brain. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin. |
[ 16 ] | Hansen-Thomas, H., and Chennapragada, S. P. (2018). Culture clash in the multicultural classroom: A case study from a newcomer school. English Language Teaching, 11 (4), 82-90. |
[ 17 ] | Harding-DeKam, J. L. (2014). Defining culturally responsive teaching: The case of mathematics. Cogent Education,1(1), 1-18. |
[ 18 ] | Hernandez, C., and Shroyer, M. G. (2017). The use of culturally responsive teaching strategies among Latina/o student teaching interns during science and mathematics instruction of CLD students. Journal of Science Teacher Education, 28 (4), 367-387. |
[ 19 ] | Holmes, T. (2018). High school teachers’ perceptions of preparedness to deliver instruction to culturally diverse students. Ed.D. Dissertation, Northcentral University. ERIC Number: ED588690. |
[ 20 ] | Howard, C., Overstreet, M., and Ticknor, A. S. (2018). Engaging perspective teachers with culturally responsive pedagogy: Three model lessons for teacher educators. Journal of Language and literacy Education, 14 (2), 1-15. |
[ 21 ] | Howard, T. C., and Rodriguez-Scheel (2017). Culturally relevant pedagogy 20 years later: Progress or Pontificating? What have we learned, and where do we go? Teachers College Record, 119 (1), 1-32. |
[ 22 ] | Ladson-Billings, G. (2009). The dreamkeepers: Successful teachers of African American children (2nd edition.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. |
[ 23 ] | Larson, K. E. et al. (2018). Examining how proactive management and culturally responsive teaching relate to student behavior: Implications for measurement and practice. School Psychology Review, 47 (2), 153-166. |
[ 24 ] | Levy, M (2013). A monumental dissent. In Jacqueline Johnson ed. Finding freedom: Memorializing the voices of freedom summer. Miami, OH: Miami University Press. |
[ 25 ] | Lew, M. M., and Nelson, R. F. (2016). New teachers’ challenges: How culturally responsive teaching, classroom management, & assessment literacy are intertwined. Multicultural Education, Spring/Summer. |
[ 26 ] | Mackay, H. and Strickland, M. J. (2018). Exploring culturally responsive teaching and student-created videos in an at-risk middle school classroom. Middle Grades Review, 4 (1), 1-15. |
[ 27 ] | Maiga, H. O. (1995). Bridging classroom, curriculum, and community: The Gao school museum. Theory into Practice, 34 (3), 209-215. |
[ 28 ] | Milner 1V, H. R. (2017). Where’s the race in culturally relevant pedagogy? Teachers College Record, 119 (010303), 1-32. |
[ 29 ] | Mitchell, T. D. (2008). Traditional vs. critical service-learning: Engaging the literature to differentiate two models. Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning, Spring, 50-65. |
[ 30 ] | Muniz, J. (2019). Culturally responsive teaching: A 50-state survey of teaching standards. newamerica.org/education-policy/reports/culturally-responsive-teaching/ |
[ 31 ] | Myers, A. (2019). Confronting mandated curriculum: Being a transgressive teacher and meeting the needs of our urban learners. Urban Education,16 (1), 1-13. |
[ 32 ] | Ozudogru, F. (2018). The readiness of prospective teachers for culturally responsive teaching. Acta Didactica Napocensia, 11(3-4), 1-12. |
[ 33 ] | Rhodes, C. M. (2017). A validation study of the culturally responsive teaching survey. Universal Journal of Education Research 5 (1), 45-53. |
[ 34 ] | Smith, R., Ralston, N. and Waggoner, J. (2018). Impact of culturally responsive teaching workshop on preservice teachers: How to teach Columbus from multiple perspectives, AILACTE Journal, XV (FALL), 61-77. |
[ 35 ] | Zeichner, K. (2006). Reflections of a university-based teacher educator on the future of college and university-based teacher education. Journal of Teacher Education, 57(3), 336-340. |