{"id":7028,"date":"2016-09-13T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2016-09-13T04:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/blog\/cw_post\/why-arent-we-talking-about-culturally-responsive-education-in-next-gen-learning\/"},"modified":"2020-02-27T14:46:06","modified_gmt":"2020-02-27T19:46:06","slug":"why-arent-we-talking-about-culturally-responsive-education-in-next-gen-learning","status":"publish","type":"cw_post","link":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/cw_post\/why-arent-we-talking-about-culturally-responsive-education-in-next-gen-learning\/","title":{"rendered":"Why Aren\u2019t We Talking about Culturally Responsive Education in Next Gen Learning?"},"content":{"rendered":"
This post originally appeared at Next Generation Learning Challenges<\/a> on August 4, 2016.<\/em><\/p>\n Those of us in the next gen learning space are ignoring a great opportunity. Something that could propel next gen learning to be the force we say we want it to be: one that fundamentally changes the life trajectories of the students we serve.<\/p>\n I\u2019ve been thinking a lot about equity in relation to next gen learning lately. I\u2019m asking tough questions of myself, questioning assumptions in our work instead of letting them go unstudied, thinking about \u2018user-centered design\u2019 in a whole new light, and sitting with new information as I try to process and understand it.<\/p>\n The news of recent weeks has been heartbreaking. From the highly publicized police shooting deaths of unarmed Black men, to the shooting spree and deaths of police officers, to the White backlash against Black Lives Matter and, in the education reform world, backlash against empowering people of color to address systemic racism in education<\/a>, the crack in race relations in this country is opening wider and exposing the problems I knew existed but swept under the rug and out of my consciousness.<\/p>\n My response to this heartbreak: lift up the rug, expose the crack, raise my consciousness, and work to understand what it is underserved students really need. (And, by the way, understand what it is advantaged students need. I wonder if educational equity wouldn\u2019t be better served if higher-income White education reformers\u2014and by that I mean, me\u2014focused more attention on serving advantaged students through social justice education and helping them develop the skills of an ally.<\/em>)<\/p>\n And then I stumbled upon this:<\/p>\n If students survive their educations, they potentially become widgets\u2014unimaginative, obedient, conforming replicas of each other. Students who do not survive their widget-making education risk higher levels of lifetime poverty and incarceration, as well as poorer physical and mental health outcomes than students exposed to more student-centered educational interventions. \u2014Diversity Challenge 2016: Race, Culture, and Educating Our Youths \u2013 Developing Whole People Not Widgets.<\/a><\/p>\n This! Yes! This is why the current system isn\u2019t good enough. And this is why I am so passionate about next gen learning. I believe it can and will help us move away from the \u2018lose-lose\u2019 proposition of a factory model, widget-producing school system. It can help us move toward schools that honor students\u2019 individuality and self-authorship by providing meaningful learning experiences that lead to richer, deeper, broader outcomes than proficiency on a test. (What\u2019s the opposite of a widget? A work of art? Or, maybe we need to drop the metaphors and simply say that a student is an individual whose humanity and dignity is celebrated.<\/em>)<\/p>\n I kept reading:<\/p>\n Racially and culturally responsive student-centered educational systems ought to promote development of whole persons who value themselves and, therefore, contribute to society in positive and meaningful ways. Whole person interventions would incorporate skills and talents that students bring with them from their cultural home environments including language diversity, leadership skills, panache, and social media expertise. They would also address and teach students to recognize and resist institutional and interpersonal racism and ethnoviolence as they are manifested in schools and the environments in which students and their families function.<\/p>\n This incredible description of what schools \u201cought to\u201d do\u2014what students deserved\u2014is a call for proposals for a diversity conference<\/a> out of the Institute for the Study and Promotion of Race and Culture, housed at Boston College under the direction of Dr. Janet E. Helms. (October 28-29 if you\u2019re interested.<\/em>) And it felt like the most authentic equity-minded expression of next gen learning that I have heard or read. I think the reason it resonates is because the authors are starting from a place of equity<\/strong>. Equity, first; how we get there (our answer: next gen learning), second.<\/p>\n If we start with equity first, how would the field of next gen learning measure up? Instead of justifying the equity within next gen learning, can we justify next gen learning in service of equity? If scholars of educational equity looked at our collective theory, principles, and practices, would they find next gen learning\u2014which intends to replace the factory model, claims to serve ALL students, and professes equity as its mission\u2014as leading or lacking?<\/p>\n I lifted up the rug. I looked at documents and websites expressing the guiding principles for our field: design principles, comprehensive lists of student success competencies, calls for proposals, mission statements, school profiles. And here\u2019s the crack:<\/p>\n Culturally responsive education\u2014its absence is widespread and noteworthy.<\/strong><\/p>\n We claim to value whole person development, but we\u2019re silent on cultural competence and identity development.<\/p>\n We promote learning pathways tailored to individual student\u2019s level of achievement and needs, but where do we advocate for using a cultural lens when creating a learner profile and designing pathways?<\/p>\n And there is no expression within any of the foundational materials I looked at in which \u201caddressing and teaching students to recognize and resist racism and ethnoviolence\u201d is included as a central component of next gen learning.<\/p>\n If we\u2019re serious about equity, we need to ask ourselves why cultural responsiveness<\/strong> is not as visible and valued as whole person development<\/strong> and personalization<\/strong> within next gen learning.<\/p>\n I know there are educators in our field who embrace cultural responsiveness in their school designs and instructional practices. I\u2019m certain there are next gen school networks, districts, or organizations that incorporate and integrate culturally responsive education into their vision for a new non-widget-producing system. I\u2019m sure that part of the problem is that I\u2019m just not aware of the role cultural responsiveness does play in our collective work.<\/p>\n But that\u2019s my point of concern: Why isn\u2019t it front and center? Why aren\u2019t we talking about it?<\/p>\n Let\u2019s start talking about it and propel next gen learning to be that force for equity we need it to be.<\/p>\n What does it look like in practice when cultural responsiveness is matched with whole person development and personalization? Let\u2019s hear from educators who are helping students develop the ability to recognize and resist racism, ethnoviolence, and other issues we tend to sweep under the rug within a personalized, student-centered, next gen learning environment.<\/p>\n See also:<\/p>\n Kristen Vogt, knowledge management officer for NGLC, makes lessons, strategies and outcomes from NGLC grantee projects available to a wider audience. Kristen previously at the Woodrow Wilson Foundation in Princeton, NJ. Kristen also has past experience in student and academic affairs in higher education, in particular with first-year transition programs and student support. Kristen earned a B.S. in Mathematics from the University of Notre Dame, an M.A. in Higher Education from the University of Michigan, and a Ph.D. in College Student Personnel from the University of Maryland.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_relevanssi_hide_post":"","_relevanssi_hide_content":"","_relevanssi_pin_for_all":"","_relevanssi_pin_keywords":"","_relevanssi_unpin_keywords":"","_relevanssi_related_keywords":"","_relevanssi_related_include_ids":"","_relevanssi_related_exclude_ids":"","_relevanssi_related_no_append":"","_relevanssi_related_not_related":"","_relevanssi_related_posts":"","_relevanssi_noindex_reason":"","mapsvg_location":""},"legacy_category":[99],"issue":[368,402],"location":[],"class_list":["post-7028","cw_post","type-cw_post","status-publish","hentry","legacy_category-reflection","issue-issues-in-practice","issue-commit-to-equity"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nCulturally Responsive Education<\/h2>\n
Is next gen learning an equitable solution?<\/h2>\n
Let\u2019s start talking about culturally responsive education<\/h2>\n
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