chapter5.ppt

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Who are Today’s Students?

Chapter Five

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U.S. Student Demographics

  • Number of public school students is rising
  • Enrollment rose dramatically from 1985-2010
  • Demographics changing
  • Number of non native English speaking students rose dramatically during this period.
  • Over 43% of public school students are part of a racial or minority group;
  • Latino and Latina students are the fastest growing segment of the school population.

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Equal May Not Be Equitable

  • Equity: Treating individuals & groups fairly & justly, free from bias or favoritism
  • Equity does not mean treating groups equally- it means treating them in ways that maximize their potential for learning.
  • Those ways may be different for different groups- but the outcomes are the same!

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Where’s the ethnic diversity?

  • Immigration
  • New York, New Jersey, California, Texas, Nevada: Highest % of immigrants
  • ~ 1/5 of students are from immigrant families
  • Rise in segregation in past few decades
  • Whites move to suburbs, build new schools
  • Latinos account for 65% of increased enrollment in older schools…..de facto segregation!

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Language Diversity

  • “English-language learners” (ELLs) or “language minority” students: Speak a language other than English at home, need to learn English in school
  • 1979-2009 # ELLs rose from 9% to 20%
  • About ¾ speak Spanish
  • Bilingual education has met with some success

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Bilingual Education Approaches

  • Dual (“two-way bilingual”): ELLs & native English-speakers both become fluent in 2 languages (several program variations)
  • English as a second language (ESL): Academic subjects in native tongue; students pulled out for English instruction
  • English-only immersion
  • Specially designed academic instruction in English (SDAIE): English-only, instruction modified to help ELLs understand

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Religious Diversity in the U.S.

  • Christians account for 78.4 percent of the American population, with Protestants

accounting for 51.3 percent of that total.

  • The total number of Americans who identified their religion as something other than Christian increased by more than 32 percent over the last two decades.

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Religion in Public Schools: Separation of Church and State

  • One Cannot:
  • Teach a religion (indoctrinate or inhibit)
  • Encourage, participate in students’ religious activities
  • One Can:
  • Teach about religion
  • Honor privacy of students’ rituals, as long as they don’t interfere with class/school function
  • Teach values such as honesty, respect, citizenship
  • Guidance from the First Amendment Center

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Sexual Orientation

  • Enduring emotional, romantic, or sexual attraction for people of one or both sexes
  • LGBT students fear rejection and harm:
  • Over 60% surveyed felt unsafe at school
  • LGBT students suffer greater risk of suicide, depression, bullying, assault
  • Unlike most minority students, LGBT may experience prejudice & isolation at home

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Socioeconomic Diversity

  • Socioeconomic status: Based on family income, occupation, education, and social status:
  • Relates to social capital of family
  • Students with higher socioeconomic status tend to outperform those w. low social capital
  • >30% of all U.S. kids live in single-parent household

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Students at Risk

  • Students in danger of dropping out before completing high school or not acquiring adequate skills for success
  • “High-risk child” = one whose family has 4 or more of these risk factors:
  • Household head is high school dropout
  • Family income below poverty line
  • Child living with underemployed parent(s)
  • Family receives welfare
  • Child lacks health insurance

-from Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2003

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Social Risk Factors

  • Most significant are:
  • Poverty
  • Substance abuse
  • Child abuse
  • Homelessness
  • Hunger
  • Depression
  • Teen pregnancy (major reason girls drop out)
  • High-risk 16-19 yr. olds are 4x more likely to drop out of HS than those not in category

-from Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2003

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Sex, Drugs & Violence

Survey of public & private school students in grades 9-12

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance-United States, 2005,” Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 55 (no. SS-5), June 9, 2006.

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Multicultural Education

  • Creates equal learning opportunities for students from diverse racial, ethnic, socioeconomic groups
  • Curriculum as Window and Mirror- topics outside of the students’ world and topics that reflect the students’ world;
  • Culturally relevant pedagogy: Places learner’s culture at center of instruction
  • Incorporates culture into curriculum
  • Respect students’ experiences

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Single-sex Schooling

  • Girls often squelched in coed classrooms
  • Teachers tend to call on boys more often
  • Girls less likely to express themselves
  • Fewer leadership roles
  • Women underrepresented in curriculum
  • Single-sex schooling predicted to become more common in public schools
  • Gender-fair education: Helps females & males achieve full potential

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Variation in Intelligences

  • Theory of multiple intelligences (Gardner): Intelligence is reflected in many types of abilities, not a single fixed attribute
  • Explore topics in multiple ways to play to different intellectual strengths, learning styles
  • Watch the Teach Source Video Case, “Multiple Intelligences: Elementary School Instruction”

  • In what ways is this lesson an example of teaching to multiple learning styles?

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Conclusion

  • Different is just different; it’s not lesser
  • Treat your students’ differences as a gift, not a barrier to be overcome
  • Learn from them
  • And with them
  • Help them be all they can be: Through your non-biased teaching practices and your pursuit of equity!

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