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ECE 7350 The Anti-Bias Curriculum in Early Childhood Education

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Title: ECE 7350 The Anti-Bias Curriculum in Early Childhood Education


1
EDE 735The Anti-Bias Curriculum in Early
Childhood Education
  • Will Mosier
  • Professor
  • Wright State University

2
Valuing Diversity
  • The Primary Years
  • Introduction

3
Definitions
  • Anti-bias An active approach to challenging
    prejudice stereotyping
  • Bias Any belief that results in and helps
    justify unfair treatment of an individual because
    of his or her identity
  • Handicappism Any action that subordinates people
    due to disability (Handicappist practices prevent
    the integration of differently-abled people into
    the mainstream of society)

4
Definitions(continued)
  • Prejudice An opinion without adequate knowledge
    or reason (Prejudice can be prejudgment for or
    against any person, group or sex)
  • Pre-prejudice Beginning ideas in a very young
    children that may develop into real prejudice
    through reinforcement by prevailing biases
    (Pre-prejudice may be misconceptions based on
    young childrens limited experience and
    developmental level, or may consist of imitations
    of adult behavior)

5
Definitions (continued)
  • Racism Any action that subordinates people
    because of their color (This includes the
    imposition of one ethnic groups culture over
    another, as to withhold respect for, to demean,
    or to destroy the cultures of other groups)
  • Stereotype An oversimplified generalization
    about a particular group, race or sex, which
    usually carries derogatory implication
  • Homophobia A fear of gay men and lesbians that
    discriminates against them

6
Children need to know that diversity is valued
  • An appreciation for diversity is the touchstone
    of our modern world
  • Mobility characterizes families in America
  • People must have three qualities to succeed in
    such a mobile society
  • The ability to cope with change
  • An open, flexible personality that enjoys the
    process of change
  • The ability to assimilate changes into a
    satisfying personal lifestyle

7
Children need to know that diversity is
valued(continued)
  • Whether children
  • speak a different language
  • worship differently
  • eat different food
  • have skin a different tone
  • have behavioral qualities that are different
  • Children need to be encouraged to see the basic
    similarities of all people and yet appreciate
    their fascinating differences

8
Children need to know thatdiversity is
valued(continued)
  • Closed rigid individuals are prone to prejudice,
    biased against anything that does not match their
    expectations
  • Children need to know that people of all cultures
    and levels of ability are important
  • Children need to know that love, peace, and
    respect are universal concepts regardless of the
    language used to expressed them

9
Exploring Classroom Resources
  • Young children are natural and eager learners
  • They adopt attitudes they see expressed by other
    children, family members teachers
  • They become aware of differences in ethnicity at
    an early age
  • Television has undoubtedly made its contribution
    to bias
  • By the time they begin formal schooling, how they
    feel about themselves others has been strongly
    influenced

10
Early Childhood Conditioning
  • At a very young age children become aware that
    color, language, gender, and physical abilities
    differ are connected to privilege and power
  • They learn by observing the differences and
    similarities among people and by absorbing the
    spoken and unspoken messages about those
    differences that they see others expressing
  • Ethnicity, sexism, ageism and handicappism have
    a profound influence on childrens developing
    sense of self and others

11
Early Childhood Conditioning (continued)
  • Exposure to bias that declares a person inferior
    because of gender, age, ethnicity, or
    disability stifles a childs social competence
  • Learning to believe they are superior because
    they are White, or male, or able-bodied,
    dehumanizes and distorts reality for growing
    children

12
Early Childhood Conditioning (continued)
  • Children internalize the negative messages they
    are exposed to
  • It is too dangerous for early childhood educators
    to take an ostrich-in-the-sand stance to the
    issue of bias
  • Actions speak louder than words
  • Empowerment for children of color requires that
    they develop both a strong self-identity and a
    proud and knowledgeable group identity to
    withstand the attacks of racism

13
Early Childhood Conditioning (continued)
  • White childrens task is to develop a positive
    identity without White ethnocentrism and
    superiority
  • Girls need to learn that they can be competent in
    all areas and can make choices about their lives
  • Boys need to learn competence without also
    learning to feel and act superior to girls

14
Early Childhood Conditioning (continued)
  • The developmental task of children with
    disabilities include learning to use alternative
    abilities and to gain skills for countering
    societal practices that sabotage opportunities
    for growth
  • Able-bodied childrens tasks include extending
    unconditional positive regard to
    differently-abled people and to resist
    stereotyping

15
What is needed for an Anti-Bias Curriculum?
  • Anti-bias curriculum embraces respecting
    differences and not accepting unfair beliefs and
    acts
  • An anti-bias perspective is integral to all
    aspects of daily classroom life
  • There is no recipe for empowering young children
  • It is not always easy to implement anti-bias
    curriculum on a regular basis, but we must!

16
What is needed is an Anti-Bias Curriculum, but...
  • Few early childhood educators have been prepared
    to talk with children about race, ethnicity, and
    disabilities
  • The discomfort adults feel about dealing with
    issues of bias is similar to responding to the
    question Where do babies come from? it makes
    many adults uncomfortable
  • Like children, grown-ups must learn by doing

17
An Anti-Bias Curriculum is Essential
  • Anti-bias teaching requires critical thinking and
    problem solving by both children and adults
  • At heart, anti-bias is about social change
  • Through anti-bias curriculum, teachers enable
    every child to achieve the ultimate goal of early
    childhood education the development of each
    child to her or his fullest potential

18
Chapter One
  • What Are Children Learning?

19
What do children learning?
  • Children learn exactly what they are taught
  • As we choose themes, materials, and teaching
    strategies, we are preparing children to lead
    productive lives in a diverse world
  • Educational goals for children are best phrased
    as questions
  • Are children learning to love the quest for
    knowledge?
  • Are children learning to see themselves as
    competent communicators, inquirers, and
    discoverers?

20
What do children learning?(continued)
  • Are children learning to negotiate and
    collaborate in democratic ways?
  • Are children learning to understand and
    appreciate our worlds rich diversity of
    cultures, heritages, abilities, and interests?
  • Are children learning to apply all of their
    knowledge to build satisfying futures for
    themselves and others?

21
Teaching Substance and Style
  • These ambitious, but realistic, goals can be
    reached with and for children
  • Sensitive and imaginative teachers inspire
    learning and a love of learning when teachers
    have respect of all learners
  • Tourist-type approaches to learning about other
    people rarely broaden childrens genuine
    understanding other people

22
Teaching Substance and Style(continued)
  • Hit-or-miss classroom activities are insufficient
    to establish a classroom permeated with mutual
    respect
  • Instead of relying on a few special activities to
    highlight cultures or human diversity, every day
    should address the issue of sharing mutual
    respect with others
  • Curriculum is everything that goes on in the
    classroom materials, teaching strategies,
    discipline, projects, languages spoken and
    written, ways families are involved, foods
    served, connections that are forged with the
    community

23
Teaching Substance and Style(continued)
  • The curriculum-is-what-happens approach to
    teaching learning empowers children to develop
    empathy for others and counteracts bias
  • We are preparing children to live in a world that
    will always be diverse, therefore...
  • Anti-Bias themes need to be incorporated into the
    daily learning process

24
Americans All Program Goals
  • Increased knowledge about self and the history
    and cultures of others
  • Increased personal relevance of content and
    opportunities for self-expression
  • Improved interpersonal and motivational skills
  • Increased feelings of belonging and affiliation
  • Increased opportunities for positive peer
    relationships and cross-cultural relationships

25
Americans All Program Goals(continued)
  • Increased opportunities for success and
    validating feedback
  • Improved stress management and coping skills
  • Increased knowledge about self, family,
    community, and adaptation to change
  • Improved student performance
  • Decreased environmental stress
  • Decreased student alienation and boredom

26
Fostering childrens intelligences
  • Even when budgets and supplies are limited,
    equipping a classroom with developmentally
    appropriate learning materials makes it possible
    to amplify learning and facilitate relationship
    building

27
Fostering childrens intelligences (continued)
  • People have, at least, seven different ways of
    processing information
  • Linguistic
  • Logical-mathematical
  • Musical
  • Spatial
  • Bodily-kinesthetic
  • Interpersonal - stimulated by interaction with
    others
  • Intrapersonal self knowledge (assimilation and
    accommodation of concepts used for self discovery)

28
Fostering childrens intelligences (continued)
  • Capitalize on young childrens instinctive desire
    to learn
  • Keep children in touch with the world around them
  • Expand familiar teaching strategies and
    curriculum ideas with resources to create an
    integrated approach to respect for others
  • Identify resources on diversity and use them!

29
Why do we need an Anti-Bias Curriculum?Developmen
tal Facts
  • Children from ages 2 through 6
  • Make early observations of racial cues
  • Consolidate group concepts
  • Make evaluative judgments that begin to influence
    their concepts of group
  • Develop a rough determination of racial
    classification from a vague undifferentiated
    awareness of skin tone
  • This classification becomes associated with a
    social interpretation of racial categorization

30
Even toddlers are aware of differences
  • By 2 years of age, children begin to notice
    gender, ethnic differences, and physical
    disabilities
  • By 3 years of age children show signs of being
    influenced by societal norms and biases, and may
    exhibit pre-prejudice toward others on the
    basis of gender or race or being
    differently-abled

31
Differences raise questions for young children
  • Between 3 and 5 years of age, children wonder
  • Will I always be a girl or a boy?
  • If I like to climb trees, do I become a boy?
  • If I like to play with dolls, do I become a girl?
  • What gives me my skin color?
  • Can I change it?
  • If I interact with a child who has a physical
    disability, will I get it?

32
Societal pressure stereotyping
  • By 4 or 5 years of age, children engage in gender
    behavior defined by socially prevailing norms
  • The degree to which 4-year-olds have already
    internalized stereotypic gender roles, racial
    bias, and fear of the differently-abled points
    out the need for anti-bias education with young
    children

33
Do we know what we are teaching?
  • Observational studies demonstrate that young
    girls children with disabilities from ages 2.5
    to 5 years experience over-help and
    over-praise from teachers
  • Differently-abled children and girls are trained
    for dependence and passivity, not for
    independence
  • This is the beginning of the syndrome learned
    helplessness (Froschl Sprung, 1983)

34
Do we know what we are teaching?(continued)
  • Teachers tend to praise young girls for
    appearance, cooperation, and obedience while
    praising young boys for achievement
  • Teachers tend to describe boys as more active
    than girls, even when similar activity levels are
    used
  • Homophobia, is another form of gender bias adults
    teach young children

35
Do we know what we are teaching?(continued)
  • The dictionary lists 44 positive meanings for
    white with 60 negative meanings for black
  • Young children are harmed by the impact of
    sexism, racism, and handicapism
  • Gender stereotyping closes-off whole areas of
    experience to children simply because of their
    sex
  • Handicapism severely harms differently-abled
    children by limiting access to the educational
    experiences necessary for well-rounded
    development and by interfering with the
    establishment of a healthy self concept

36
Do we know what we are teaching?(continued)
  • Racism damages white children intellectually
    and psychologically (Bernadr Kutner,1985)
  • Racial prejudice in young children affects their
    ability to reason and distorts their judgment
    perception of reality (Kenneth clark,1955)
  • White children learn to be hypocritical about
    differences at a very early age (Alice Miel.1976)

37
What is our responsibility?
  • Early childhood educators have a responsibility
    for finding ways to prevent and counter the
    damage before it becomes too deep
  • Active intervention to remedy cognitive, social
    emotional damage inflicted on children (Selma
    Greenberg,1980) For example
  • When children enter an early childhood
    environment, they are more open to friendship
    with members of the opposite sex, and more open
    to non-stereotypic play experiences than they are
    when they leave
  • Even though the early childhood environment
    cannot be held solely responsible for bias
    development, it cannot be held totally guiltless

38
What is our responsibility?(continued)
  • To evaluate existing early childhood curriculum
    and develop ways to prevent gender stereotyping
  • Active intervention, by teachers, is necessary if
    children are to develop positive attitudes about
    people of different ethnic groups and physical
    abilities
  • If children are to grow up with the attitudes,
    knowledge, and skills necessary for effective
    living in a complex, diverse world, early
    childhood programs must actively challenge the
    impact of bias on childrens development

39
Empowerment
  • Cultural differences are real but do not
    constitute deficit
  • Bicultural education means children learn the
    beliefs, values, rules, and language of their own
    culture in the learning/teaching style
    appropriate to that culture and also learn the
    beliefs, values, rules, language, and learning
    style of the dominant culture
  • The ideal early childhood program would
    incorporate both an anti-bias approach to
    learning on a daily basis and, where appropriate,
    a bicultural, bi-cognitive curriculum

40
Questions about Anti-Bias Curriculum
  • Wont an anti-bias curriculum make things worse?
  • If you talk about stereotypes, wont you be
    teaching children things they would otherwise not
    learn? (Isnt it better to emphasize the
    similarities and ignore how people are
    different?)
  • Concern about addressing differences arises from
    a mistaken notion of the sources of bias (It is
    not differences, in themselves, that cause
    prejudice, but how people respond to differences)

41
Questions about Anti-Bias Curriculum (continued)
  • How does anti-bias curriculum differ from
    multicultural curriculum?
  • Multiculturalism intent is positive (However,
    deterioration into tourist-curriculum often keeps
    this approach from accomplishing its intent)
  • Tourist-curriculum is likely to teach about
    cultures through celebrations and through such
    artifacts of the culture as food, traditional
    clothing, and household implements (Planned
    multicultural activities are special events in
    the childrens week, separate from the ongoing
    daily curriculum)

42
Questions about Anti-Bias Curriculum (continued)
  • How does anti-bias curriculum differ from
    multicultural curriculum? (continued)
  • Chinese New Year teaches about Chinese-Americans
    a dragon is constructed, and parents are asked to
    come to school wearing Chinese clothing cook
    a Chinese dish
  • Mexican-American life is introduced through Cinco
    de Mayo, the Aztec calendar, Mexican food dance
  • This tourist-curriculum approach emphasizes the
    exotic differences between cultures and avoids
    the real-life daily problems and experiences of
    people that unite us

43
Questions about Anti-Bias Curriculum (continued)
  • How does anti-bias curriculum differ from
    multicultural curriculum? (continued)
  • Anti-bias curriculum incorporates the positive
    intent of multicultural curriculum and uses some
    similar activities, while seeking to avoid the
    dangers of a tourist approach

44
Questions about Anti-Bias Curriculum (continued)
  • Anti-bias curriculum provides a more inclusive
    education
  • It addresses more than cultural diversity by
    including gender and differences in physical
    abilities
  • It is based on childrens developmental tasks as
    they construct identity and attitudes
  • It directly addresses the impact of stereotyping,
    bias, and discriminatory behavior in young
    childrens development and interactions

45
Questions about Anti-Bias Curriculum (continued)
  • Isnt an anti-bias approach really an adult
    issue? (Why bring children into it?)
  • Failure to address and challenge bias allows
    children to adopt socially prevailing attitudes
  • What aspects of anti-bias work are appropriate
    for children?
  • Adults have a twofold responsibility
  • provide children with an anti-bias educational
    setting
  • eliminate bias instruction

46
Questions about Anti-Bias Curriculum (continued)
  • Is it developmentally appropriate to openly raise
    these anti-bias issues of injustice with young
    children?
  • Adults often want to defer childrens exposure to
    the unpleasant realities of bias, to create a
    protected world of childhood (However, by doing
    so we leave children to attempt the solving of
    troublesome problems, by themselves)

47
Questions about Anti-Bias Curriculum (continued)
  • I already have so much to do, how will I find
    time to learn the necessary skills for adding an
    anti-bias emphasis to the curriculum?
  • Anti-bias approach is integrated into, rather
    than added onto, existing curriculum
  • Looking at curriculum through an anti-bias lens
    affects everything a teacher does
  • Much classroom work will continue some
    activities will be modified, some eliminated
  • Teachers have to re-evaluate what they have been
    doing
  • After a while it becomes impossible to teach
    without an anti-bias perspective

48
Chapter 2
  • Liberating the Human Spirit

49
Liberating the Human Spirit
  • Educators have four ethical commitments they must
    strive to implement when curricula is grounded
    on respect for all people
  • Teachers must challenge themselves to grow with
    these four commitments
  • What are these commitments?

50
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • Commitment 1 Identify and examine how schools
    perpetuate racism in obscure, yet systematic
    ways
  • Institutional bias cannot be denied
  • By accepting that society subtly, discriminates
    and stereotypes, we can better understand the
    children we teach
  • With this perception it is possible to establish
    a classroom atmosphere that values diversity
  • Nearly 1/3 of U.S. students live in non-White,
    immigrant families (ogbu,1987)

51
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • By the year 2050 half of the U.S. population will
    be non-European
  • Discussions are excellent ways to bring out
    differing experiences and perceptions of bias in
    society
  • To examine parents experiences teachers can
    organize informal gatherings to gain a better
    understanding of their backgrounds
  • Teachers can read about attend workshops that
    address identified, systematic discrimination

52
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • Questions to ask yourself
  • Why are so many national leaders White males?
  • What are the long-term implications of testing
    and tracking for children?
  • What kind of role models are exemplified in
    Sports? Movies? The news?
  • Why are government budgets often balanced on the
    backs of people with the fewest resources
  • Is this true? What do you think?
  • (Bring evidence to class to substantiate your
    perspective)

53
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • By assessing our society, teachers grow, both
    professionally and personally
  • Once we understand the pernicious nature of
    racism, we can never remain in the comfortable
    position of ignorance, we can only move toward
    full equality
  • There is no turning back

54
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • Commitment 2 Examine how we, as individuals,
    participate in our own oppression and the
    oppression of others by unconsciously mirroring
    the oppressive relations of the larger society
  • The following action and questions may help
    adults recognize and analyze their own
    ethnocentrism
  • Do we expect continuity of care for children with
    stay-at-home mothers to be better nurtured than
    children whose parent(s) work?

55
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • How do we respond to jokes that poke fun of
    people for their religion, ethnic group,
    nationality, or other characteristic?
  • What is our reaction to comments such as
  • I dont notice skin color
  • Everyones the same to me
  • Why do we use common phrases, holiday greeting
    cards, posters, or work-sheets that depict
    stereotypes?

56
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • How do we handle childrens questions about skin
    color, clothing, hair-styles ,language, or
    abilities?
  • Only through honest self-examination can we root
    out the prejudices that we have learned,
    practiced, and intentionally or inadvertently
    passed on to children
  • Experiences (past and present)-stories read to
    children, TV and movie images, holiday
    celebrations, statements made by friends and
    acquaintances - shape our beliefs

57
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • Research indicates that many teachers are biased
    against either males or females, as well as
    African American children, lower-socioeconomic-sta
    tus (lower-SES) children, and children with
    different abilities (Curry Johnson,1990)
  • By accepting these common oppressive biases,
    teachers erode opportunities to nurture

58
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • When a child is diminished in any way, all
    children are diminished
  • Education about diversity, is designed to help
    each of us overcome the tendency to harbor
    demeaning attitudes about some differences, while
    placing a positive value on others
  • Neither mainstream America nor any other culture
    or group is the center of the universe

59
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • Young children are curious about commonalties and
    diversity
  • Children and educators can put into daily
    practice the values of democracy, respect, free
    speech, truth, justice, and harmony
  • Children who learn in a democratic atmosphere
    will gain the perspectives and knowledge they
    need to make wise decisions (Hendrick,1992 Perry
    Fraser,1993)

60
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • Commitment 3 To understand what culture means
    to a group of people, understand how culture can
    be a source of group empowerment strength
  • Examine how to nurture groups retaining their
    cultural integrity, while gaining the skills to
    function in the larger society

61
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • Looking at our own lives and then attempting to
    put ourselves in others shoes is a good way to
    consider how to meet the challenge of
    implementing an anti-bias curriculum

62
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)As an
exercise, divide into 4 groups answer the
following questions. Write down your group
concerns
  • What does our culture mean to us? Why and how do
    we celebrate important events? How would we feel
    if our language, or clothing, or cherished values
    were ignored or ridiculed?
  • What aspects of other cultures make us feel
    comfortable? Which characteristics tend to tip
    us off balance? (History, language, music, dress,
    art, literature, religion?)
  • What additional skills and perspectives might
    some children need if they are to function
    successfully in the broader society?

63
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • The greater disparity between home and school,
    the greater the anxiety for children
  • How can teachers smooth this frightening
    transition for young children?
  • Answer By aligning home and school, teachers
    demonstrate genuine respect for children and
    their families

64
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • In a genuinely diverse classroom, all children
    are empowered as learners
  • Children who get off to a sound educational start
    during their impressionable early years are far
    more likely to become productive, responsible
    adults (Weikart,1989)
  • Effective educators are sensitive to.
    well-informed about, and responsive to cultural
    differences
  • School drop-out rates attest to the lack of
    meaningful, confidence-inspiring education for
    children

65
Liberating the Human Spirit(continued)
  • Commitment 4 Use our power as teachers to
    change oppressive systems that exist in our
    society
  • School alone cannot make up for all the barriers
    children face
  • However, schools can create opportunities for
    children to overcome hurdles
  • Educators can be the standard bearers for human
    rights and democracy in school and go beyond to
    talk about the problems in society
  • We may need to reframe our perspectives about
    differences before teaching can be effective, we
    must address our ethical commitments in light of
    the impact bias has on children

66
Liberating the Human Spirit (continued)
  • Teachers who develop curricula based on trust and
    respect
  • Examine how American society perpetuates racism
    and oppression in subtle, yet systematic ways
  • Recognizes how individuals unconsciously mirror
    this oppression
  • Enable cultural groups to retain their integrity
    while they gain skills to function in the larger
    society
  • Work to change oppressive systems

67
Chapter 2
  • Creating an Anti-Bias Environment for Young
    Children

68
Creating an Anti-Bias Environment
  • An environment that is rich in possibilities for
    exploring gender, ethnicity, and
    different-abledness sets the scene for practicing
    anti-bias curriculum
  • What is in the environment alerts children to
    what the teacher considers important or not
    important

69
Creating an Anti-Bias Environment (continued)
  • The challenge
  • To increase materials that reflect children and
    adults who are of color, who are
    differently-abled, and who engaged in
    non-stereotypic gender activities
  • To eliminate all stereotypic and inaccurate
    materials

70
The Visual/Aesthetic Environment
  • Ensure
  • Images of all the children are in abundance
  • Images of children and adults from the major
    ethnic groups are displayed
  • People of color are not represented as tokens
  • A fair balance of images of women and men show
    both doing jobs in the home that are
    stereotypically done only by one or the other

71
The Visual/Aesthetic Environment (continued)
  • 5. Images of elderly people of various
    backgrounds are doing different activities
  • 6. Images of differently-abled people of various
    backgrounds show them doing work and
    participating with their families in recreational
    activities
  • 7. Images of diversity in family styles depict
    single mothers or fathers, extended families,
    families with a grandparent as the primary
    caregiver, interracial multiethnic families,
    differently-abled families

72
The Visual/Aesthetic Environment (continued)
  • 8. Images of important individuals-past and
    present reflect racial/ethnic, gender, and
    abledness diversity
  • 9. Aesthetic artwork reflects the culture of the
    families represented in your classroom

73
Toys and Materials
  • Every center should contain regularly available
    materials representing the backgrounds of the
    families in your classroom
  • All childrens books should reflect positive
    social values and attitudes.
  • Many books, considered classics, reflect bias of
    some kind
  • Since books are a significant part of young
    childrens lives, great care must be given to the
    selection and use

74
Toys and materials for child play must
  • Reflect diversity of gender, roles, and racial
    and cultural backgrounds, special needs and
    abilities a range of occupations a range of
    ages
  • Show people from all groups living their daily
    lives working, being with family, solving issues
    relevant to young children, not just having
    celebrations
  • Most books should be about contemporary life in
    the U.S.

75
Toys and materials for child use must
(continued)
  • Depict a variety of children and families
  • Reflect different languages including sign
    language
  • (When choosing books to read to children,
    pay close attention to fostering awareness of
    diversity)
  • Select books that depict different ways of
    living and books that show various groups solving
    similar problems

76
Toys and Materials(continued)
  • Dramatic Play
  • The equipment, objects, and spatial organization
    of the dramatic play area should include and
    encourage
  • Diversity of gender play
  • Cultural diversity
  • Child-size mirrors

77
Toys and Materials(continued)
  • Language
  • should include
  • Sign
  • Labeling materials
  • Music
  • Should reflect the culture of the children, both
    for singing and as background music

78
Toys and Materials(continued)
  • Art Materials
  • Artwork, (paintings, drawings, sculpture) by
    artists of diverse backgrounds depicting women
    men from various ethnic backgrounds should be
    displayed
  • Manipulatives
  • Manipulative materials should depict diversity
    (Avoid stereotyping images such as Cowboys and
    Indians)
  • Cameras
  • Polaroid cameras are invaluable for creating
    anti-bias materials (Pictures of the children at
    work in the classroom)

79
Toys and Materials(continued)
  • Dolls
  • Representing a fair balance of all the major
    ethnic groups (They should reflect the range of
    skin tones within various groups) Dolls should
    be reasonably authentic looking
  • A fair balance of male and female anatomically
    correct dolls is developmentally appropriate
  • A selection of dolls with different kinds of
    disabilities should be available (These dolls
    should reflect varied ethnic backgrounds and
    include both boys and girls
  • Persona dolls (Mirror dolls)

80
Adaptation for your specific classroom
  • Children of color more than half, although not
    all, images should reflect their background
  • Children from low-income families a large number
    of images and materials should depict
    working-class life
  • White children at least half of the images
    should introduce diversity
  • Differently-abled children a large number of
    images should depict children and adults with
    disabilities doing a range of activities
  • If there are only a few children who are
    different from the rest of the group, then take
    care to ensure that those childrens background
    is represented along with representation of the
    majority groups in the class

81
Interactions
  • Interactions between teachers and children may
    teach gender, racial, and handicappism biases
    even without deliberate intent
  • Do you pick up on nonverbal and verbal
    expressions of interest as quickly with girls as
    they do with boys? With differently-abled
    children? With children of color?
  • Do you offer girls as much physical freedom and
    use of large-motor equipment as they offer boys?
  • Do you allow boys freedom to express feelings?
  • Do you help girls more often than boys (or
    vice-versa)?

82
Interactions(continued)
  • 5. Do teachers over-help children who are
    different?
  • 6. Are similar behaviors interpreted and
    responded to differently with boys and girls?
  • 7. Do teachers respond differently to an
    aggressive act of a boy, of a minority child or a
    mentally retarded child?
  • 8. Are girls complimented on appearance and boys
    on achievement?

83
Interactions(continued)
  • 9. When children touch an adults hair or skin,
    or make comments about skin color or hair
    texture, do teachers facilitate exploration,
    ignore or redirect?
  • 10. When children ask about genitals, do teachers
    give matter-of fact, feedback?
  • 11. When children ask or make comments about
    disabilities, do teachers give them direct,
    accurate feedback?

84
Interactions(continued)
  • 12. Are childrens learning styles respected? Are
    provisions made for
  • a) children who prefer to play and work alone?
  • b) children who prefer learning with action- or
    people-oriented activities?
  • 13. Are all children supported in their preferred
    learning styles?

85
Selecting Anti-Bias Materials
  • Making new materials
  • Finding sufficient anti-bias materials can be
    difficult (Making ones own anti-bias materials
    is essential)
  • Picture files
  • Finding accurate, non-stereotypic pictures of
    people of color of people with hearing or vision
    impairments, orthopedic conditions, and of men
    and women in nontraditional roles takes
    persistence and patience

86
Selecting Anti-Bias Materials(continued)
  • Magazines
  • Such as Young Children, Ms., Ebony, Life, Faces,
    National Geographic, National Black Child
    Development Institute, Syracuse Peace Workers or
    feminist groups have excellent anti-bias pictures
  • Photographs
  • Take lots of pictures of children in the
    classroom, request pictures of their families
    (Ask parents for family pictures)

87
Selecting Anti-Bias Materials(continued)
  • Posters
  • NAEYC has many appropriate posters
  • Create your own card games
  • Photos of children and adults of diverse
    backgrounds, physical abilities, and occupations,
    two of each picture on cardboard (Children can
    play an anti-bias Go Fish game)

88
Class Project
  • Books
  • Make books with magazines, pictures and photos
    about
  • All the things girls and boys can do (including
    children of different ethnicity and abilities)
  • All kinds of families
  • An Anti-Bias Alphabet Book

89
Chapter 3
  • Criteria for
  • Learning Materials and Activities

90
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
  • Guidelines help evaluate how well typical
    teaching resources convey respect for the dignity
    of children and their families
  • Apply the following guidelines whenever new
    classroom material or teaching strategies are
    chosen
  • These guidelines will ensure that you are using
    high-quality, developmentally appropriate,
    anti-bias curriculum activities for children

91
Criteria forLearning Materials and
Activities(continue)
  • Guideline 1. Do children learn primarily by
    extending their own experiences and gaining
    insights from each other? (Does the activity or
    materials make sense to them?)
  • Young children learn best when they start with
    what they already know and then have
    opportunities to expand upon their ideas and
    experiences through the process of Scaffolding

92
Criteria forLearning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Memorizing facts, such as dates or the name of
    capital cities is a waste of time at any age
    (Dates are only meaningful when children have
    developed a concept of the passage of time and
    understand the importance of the events)
  • Young children assimilate information best when
    they use facts for generating their own sense of
    history

93
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Ask these questions for every activity
    material
  • Are children really learning by this experience?
  • Does it have a meaningful purpose for
    childrendoes it make sense to them?
  • Whatever the project, learning is enhance if
    children can identify something familiar that
    they can latch onto and then workusually
    individually or by collaborating in small
    groupsto build on what they already know

94
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Guideline 2. Can children carry out nearly all
    of the activity by themselves?
  • Curricula that truly respect childrens
    intelligence center on projects and themes that
    children can accomplish by themselves as
    industrious learners (Education is not a
    spectator sportit is a social learning process)
  • Systematic instruction can immerse children in
    learning when activities are structured to engage
    childrens thinking (Children are curious by
    nature) The teachers role is to capitalize on
    this energy

95
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Classrooms that respect childrens differences
    proudly display childrens original artwork,
    creative writings, and other cooperative and
    individual efforts so that everyone can
    appreciate their true accomplishments
  • Progress should be measured in terms of goals
    reached by each child
  • Evidence of childrens progress, untouched by
    adult interference, should cover walls and halls

96
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • workbooks, patterns, cutting and tracing are a
    waste of childrens time, (Katz Chard, 1989)
  • If school doesnt make sense to children, they
    will wander aimlessly, interrupt others, or
    ignore whats assigned
  • Conversely, when children experience successes
    they grow increasingly involved
  • Children immersed in learning rarely exhibit
    discipline problems

97
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Young children can become engrossed in doing
    their own personal research with picture books,
    making visits to historical sites, or conducting
    informal interviews of friends or relatives
  • A second grade class can find out how and when
    their families first came to the United States
  • Some children might use a tape recorder, others
    could write notes
  • The possibilities are endless for stretching
    childrens varied intelligences

98
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Guideline 3.
  • Do culture and history come alive?
  • The best materials and activities authentically
    capture real-life people
  • .

99
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Guideline 4. Are peoples real
    experiencesclothing, habits, music, homes,
    families, foods, capabilities, preferences,
    agesaccurately portrayed?
  • Children can develop critical-thinking skills as
    they evaluate how an illustration might make
    someone feel

100
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Together, teachers and children can search for
    terminology that is positive (rather than
    condescending, patronizing, or dehumanizing
    Example savage, primitive or I is for Indian)
  • Weed-out materials that perpetuate myths or that
    portray insulting images

101
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Guideline 5. Are a variety of cultures and human
    characteristics included, with emphasis on the
    people who live within the childrens community?
    (Are people viewed as unique individuals within a
    culture?)
  • Children who are not native-English speakers will
    eventually learn English (They will eventually
    thrive by becoming fluent in two languages, as is
    common in industrialized Europe)

102
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Learning to sign a few fragmented vocabulary
    words, to sign one song in French or to identify
    a few Braille letters is linguistic tokenism that
    could be seen as demeaning to peoples abilities
  • Encourage children to read and write in the
    language in which they most comfortably
    communicate (They can teach each other and their
    teacher useful phrases and beloved songs in their
    own language)

103
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Guideline 6. Is pride in each childs heritage
    fostered?
  • A balanced, integrated educational approach never
    sets one culture above another, but rather helps
    children gradually learn to appreciate diversity

104
Criteria for Learning Materials and Activities
(continued)
  • Guideline 7. Are principles of democracy
    instilled?
  • Using teaching materials and strategies that
    integrate concepts of respect, human diversity,
    and democracy is essential if children are to
    become self-motivated, self-controlled
    problem-solvers

105
Signs of a Tourist Curriculum
  • Trivializing Organizing activities only around
    holidays or only around food only involving
    parents for holidays and cooking activities
  • Tokenism Having one Black doll amid many White
    dolls a bulletin board of ethnic imagesas the
    only diversity in the room only one book about
    any cultural group

106
Signs of a Tourist Curriculum (continued)
  • Disconnecting cultural diversity from daily
    classroom life Reading books about children of
    color only on special occasions teaching a unit
    on a different culture and then never referring
    to that culture again
  • Stereotyping Showing images of Native Americans
    all from the past people of color always shown
    as poor people from cultures outside the U.S.
    only shown in traditional dress in rural
    settings

107
Signs of a Tourist Curriculum (continued)
  • Misrepresenting American ethnic groups Treating
    books and pictures about life in Mexico as
    equivalent to the culture of Mexican Americans
    doing activities based on Mexican American
    culture to teach about families from El Salvador,
    Guatemala or Nicaragua

108
Distinguishing Myth From RealityNative Americans
  • Myth Columbus discovered America in 1492.
  • Reality
  • Native Americans walked from Asia to the
    continent of North America as long as 30,000
    years before Columbus landed here
  • There were about 10 million peoplespeaking 350
    different languagesliving on this continent in
    the late 1400s

109
Distinguishing Myth From RealityNative
Americans (continued)
  • Myth The first Thanksgiving was a Pilgrim and
    Indian feast of rejoicing
  • Reality A feast of Thanksgiving likely never
    happened. Many Native Americans groups regard
    Thanksgiving as a Day of Mourning...For them, it
    is a symbol of the Europeans first foothold on
    the North American continent and the demise of
    the Native way of life (Ramsey,1979)

110
Distinguishing Myth From RealityNative
Americans (continued)
  • Myth Indians were savages who scalped settlers
  • Reality
  • Native Americans were kind to the new arrivals,
    and taught them how to survive in the wilderness
  • They shared their medicines, and helped
    immigrants build shelters and canoes with trees
  • They introduced foods to the Europeansturkey,
    maple sugar, corn, beans, squash, sunflowers, and
    pumpkins

111
Distinguishing Myth From RealityNative
Americans (continued)Reality (continued)
  • They taught the newcomers how to farm the soil
    and how to dry foods to preserve them
  • The first Americans showed how to mine precious
    metals from the ground
  • In return the Europeans shared their metal tools,
    cloth, guns, sheep, goats, and horsed with the
    Native Americans
  • The democratic principles of the Iroquois
    government probably influenced the content of the
    U.S. Constitution

112
Distinguishing Myth From RealityNative
Americans (continued)
  • Myth The U.S. government has been generous with
    Native Americans
  • Reality
  • As European immigrants spread out across America,
    they took over the fields, pastures, forests, and
    hunting and fishing areas that had been cared for
    by Native Americans for generations
  • The Indians lost about a billion acresoften in
    fierce battlesand were forced onto reservations
    unsuitable for farming or hunting

113
Distinguishing Myth From RealityNative
Americans (continued)Reality (continued)
  • The U.S. government signed at least 380 treaties
    with the Native Americans and broke most of them
  • The needs and rights of Indians were often
    ignored or even trampled on by the Bureau of
    Indian Affairs
  • The First Americans did not gain U.S. citizenship
    until 1924
  • Indian children were taken from their homes and
    sent to schools in an effort to replace Indian
    languages and cultures with White American ways
  • Today, the U.S. government is making efforts to
    repair the damaging effects of the broken treaties

114
Distinguishing Myth From RealityAfrican
Americans
  • Myth All Africans were brought to America as
    slaves
  • Reality Some Africans came with the Spanish
    explorers as soldiers and guides
  • Archeological clues in Central and South America
    indicate that African explorers and traders may
    have arrived in this hemisphere before 1492

115
Distinguishing Myth From RealityAfrican
Americans (continued)Reality (continued)
  • About 15 million slaves were brought here between
    1600 and 1800
  • After slavery was abolished, millions of free
    Black immigrants came to this countrymany to
    northern industrial citiesto look for jobs
  • In the early 1900s, about 500,000 immigrants
    arrived at Ellis Island from Africa and the
    Caribbean

116
Distinguishing Myth From RealityAsian Americans
  • Myth Asian immigrants easily assimilated into
    U.S. culture
  • Reality Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos, and
    immigrants from countries such as Vietnam,
    Thailand, and Korea often have been lumped
    together as a group, but their histories,
    cultures, and experiences in this country are
    very different
  • Until the 1960s, most Asian immigrants were
    treated unfairly by immigration laws

117
Distinguishing Myth From RealityAsian Americans
(continued)Reality (continued)
  • Chinese. During the gold rush of the 1850s,
    Chinese miners were discriminated against making
    it practically impossible for them to own a claim
  • Thousands of Chinese workers labored in the
    1860sat lower wages than Whitesto build the
    western part of the U.S. transcontinental
    railroad
  • Anti Chinese sentiments prevailed for years from
    1882 until 1943, only a few Chinese students,
    teachers, and merchants were allowed to come to
    this country

118
Distinguishing Myth From RealityAsian Americans
(continued)Reality (continued)
  • Japanese. Hawaiis sugar plantations drew the
    first large wave of Japanese immigrants in the
    1880s, but racist laws limited the number who
    entered the mainland
  • Japanese immigrants, mostly men, were only
    allowed to marry other Japanesea restriction
    that led to the dehumanizing practice of
    selecting brides chosen from pictures
  • During World War II, the U.S. government sent
    many Japanese Americans to detention camps in
    this country

119
Distinguishing Myth From RealityEuropeans
  • Myth Most European immigrants came to America to
    escape religious persecution
  • Reality Religious persecution brought Pilgrim
    and Puritan families here, but many European
    immigrants came for other reasons adventure,
    dreams of riches, political freedom, jobs, escape
    from famine or overcrowded homelands, gain of
    land for farming, relief from taxes

120
Distinguishing Myth From RealityEuropeans
(continued)Reality (continued)
  • Between 1600 and 1800, about half of the
    immigrants came as indentured servants (they
    agreed to work a given number of years for the
    person who paid their boat fare)
  • Upon arrival, many Europeans experienced
    continued oppression for their religious beliefs,
    found difficulty in securing jobs, and paid taxes
    without representation (Bailey,1996)

121
Distinguishing Myth From RealityMexican
Americans
  • Myth Mexican Americans are new-comers to the
    U.S. southwest
  • Reality In 1521 Spain invaded and defeated the
    Aztecswho had long lived in what is now
    Mexicoand enslaved the Indians and exposed them
    to European diseases
  • Within 150 years, so few Native Americans
    remained that African slaves were brought to
    Mexico
  • The three cultural groups intermarried and they
    are the ancestors of todays Mexicans

122
Distinguishing Myth From RealityMexican
Americans (continued)Reality (continued)
  • Land disputes in the U.S. southwest have played a
    major role in the fate of Mexican Americans
  • Before it became a state, Texas was part of both
    Mexico and the U.S.
  • New Mexico, California, Nevada, Utah, and parts
    of Colorado, Wyoming, and Arizona were ceded from
    Mexico to the U.S. in 1848, and suddenly many
    Mexican became residents of the U.S.

123
Distinguishing Myth From RealityMexican
Americans (continued)Reality (continued)
  • Mexican-Americans were frequently treated as
    conquered people, and discrimination was common
  • Mexican farmers and ranchers were forced off
    their lands by the railroads
  • They resorted to migrant work at low wages
  • Many Mexicans still find themselves unwelcome in
    the U.S. except to be used as cheap labor

124
Distinguishing Myth From RealityPuerto Ricans
  • Myth Puerto Rico is an independent country
    Puerto Rico is like a U.S. state
  • Reality Puerto Rico is a commonwealth, or
    self-governing U.S. possession
  • Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens who elect a
    governor and rule themselves under their own
    constitution
  • Their representative in the U.S. Congress cannot
    vote
  • Puerto Ricans living in Puerto Rico can vote only
    in local elections, not for members of Congress
    or for the president (those who live in the U.S.
    can vote in all U.S. elections)
  • Puerto Ricans pay U.S. taxes and serve in the
    armed forces

125
Distinguishing Myth From RealityPuerto Ricans
  • Myth Puerto Ricans are the same as Mexicans
  • Reality The Puerto Ricans people are a blend of
    the islands original Taino Indians and settlers
    from Spain, Portugal, France, and Italy
  • Puerto Ricans have their own unique Caribbean
    culture

126
Important facts
  • All children need to see people like themselves
    in abundance in their classrooms
  • Those children most likely to see images of
    people who look and live like themselves are
    European American, middle or upper-middleclass,
    able-bodied, or male, and live in two-parent,
    heterosexual families

127
Important facts (continued)
  • Those children least likely to see images of
    people who look and live like themselves are
    childrenof color in interracial/interethnic
    families with disabilities or in families that
    are poor, homeless, single-parent, extended, or
    gay/lesbian headed

128
Important facts (continued)
  • Early childhood educators must take care to
    ensure that images of children and adults from
    the least-likely-to-see-themselves groups are
    amply and accurately represented
  • Children learn when their hearts, hands, and
    minds are engaged
  • Make sure materials are good matches to their
    need for concrete, hands-on learning

129
Criteria forlearning materials and activities
  • Do children learn primarily by extending their
    own experiences and gaining insights from each
    other?
  • Does the activity or material make sense to them?
  • Can children carry out nearly all of the activity
    themselves?
  • Do culture and history come alive?

130
Criteria for learning materials and activities
(continued)
  • 5. Are peoples real experiencesclothing,
    habits, music, homes, families, foods,
    capabilities, preferences, agesaccurately
    portrayed?
  • 6. Are a variety of cultures and human
    characteristics included, with emphasis on the
    peoples who live within the childrens
    community?
  • 7. Are people viewed as unique individuals within
    a culture?

131
Criteria for learning materials and activities
(continued)
  • 8. Is pride in each childs heritage fostered?
  • 9. Are principles of democracy instilled?

132
Chapter 4
  • Preparing a Diverse Environment

133
Preparing a Diverse Environment
  • Concentrate on bringing topics to lifein a way
    that integrates the curriculum, whether its
    science, reading, spelling, language, arts, math,
    music, art, physical education, or social studies
  • Collaborate with other teaches to accumulate a
    varied collection of artifacts, then rotate items
  • Labels in two or more languages might be attached
    to pet cages, pencil sharpeners, a
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