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Antibias curriculum chapter 812

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Title: Antibias curriculum chapter 812


1
Antibias curriculum chapter 8-12
2
Today
  • Present/Discuss anti-bias research papers-
  • chapters 8-12
  • Turn in 4 pages summary notes (1 page per
    chapter- important points)
  • Discussions
  • Other

3
Chapter 8 Learning to resist stereotyping
discriminatory behavior
  • Children sometimes react to cultural differences
    with discomfort and hurtful behaviors.
  • Need to intervene so that pre-prejudice is not
    allowed to ripen into prejudice.
  • See example on page 69
  • Why was the teachers response not enough?
  • What would you do differently?
  • teaching politeness is not enough. Children need
    help understanding why they are uncomfortable.
  • Read the stories on page 69-70
  • What did the teachers do right?

4
Dealing with discriminatory exclusion
  • Give examples based on reading or what you have
    observed in your school

5
Guidelines for dealing with Discriminatory
behaviors
  • Set limits
  • Intervene immediately- children forget what they
    did wrong.
  • Comfort-support the target of discriminatory
    behavior
  • Determine the real reason for the conflict
  • If you believe prejudice underlie the exclusion-
    offer the excluded child further support take
    further action with the child who continuously
    exclude others.

6
Dealing with discrimination
  • Look at page 72- 73
  • What are other examples of activities you can do
    ?
  • While dealing with discrimination
  • 1. Do not ignore
  • 2. Do not excuse
  • 3. Do not be immobilized by fear making mistakes
    is far less serious than not acting at all. p.
    73

7
Stereotypes
  • Where do children learn about stereotypes?
  • Most adults are so accustomed to stereotypes
    that they often dont even recognize them
    discuss
  • Give example of activities to help reduce
    stereotyping in your classrooms- p. 74
  • Page 75- activities to problem solve
    discriminatory behaviors

8
Chapter 9 Activism with young children
  • What does this mean to you?

9
Activisism
  • Children learning to take action against unfair
    behaviors that occur in their own lives is at the
    heart of antibias education p. 77
  • Explain

10
Activism
  • Through activism activities children build the
    confidence and skills for becoming adults who
    assert, in the face of injustice. P. 77
  • Activities to help children become activist for
    social justice include. ?

11
Working together to create change
  • Teach children skills that help them deal with
    real life situation- their daily experiences
  • Interactions
  • Group work
  • Sharing
  • Kindness
  • Respect
  • Community members- not TV figures

12
Beyond the classroom
  • What would be appropriate community based project
    young children can do?
  • The teacher as an activist- What are the roles of
    the activist teacher?
  • Look at examples 1-3 pages 82-84

13
Chapter 10 Holidays in an antibias curriculum
14
What is a Holiday? Examples of Holidays
  • Definition A day on which one is exempt from
    work. Webster, 1987.
  • Examples- National Holidays
  • Other Holidays

15
Assumptions for celebrating National holidays
  • That all Americans celebrate these holidays-
    examples- Thanksgiving, Halloween, Christmas,
    Easter
  • There is a need to challenge these assumptions-
    help learners identify and think critically about
    stereotypes that might be presented during some
    holidays.
  • See hand out from Derman-Sparks ( 1998)-
    Anti-bias Curriculum Tools for empowering Young
    Children

16
Goals of a Holidays Unit
  • A teacher should have the following goals before
    teaching a Holiday unit.
  • Identify your own feelings about holidays
    celebrations
  • Define holiday, celebration, ritual.
  • Examine the role of holidays celebrations in
    multicultural education.
  • Plan multicultural holidays celebrations.

17
What can students learn from holidays activities?
  • Families may celebrate the same holiday in
    different ways.
  • Different families may celebrate different
    holidays.
  • Not everyone celebrates every holiday.
  • What my family does is valued.
  • We can all learn about different holidays and how
    they are celebrated.
  • There are special feelings associated with
    holidays they are more than costumes, food, and
    parties.

18
Lesson Holiday friends
  • Lesson Holidays friends
  • Purpose of lesson Expand childrens friendship
    options within the class
  • Help children recognize others as prospective
    friends and encourange them to be more accessible
    to peers as friendship choices
  • Discuss what they do for holidays with friends
    family
  • NB some children do not celebrate any holidays-

19
Activity 1 Lesson Holidays friends continued
  • Ideas/activities
  • Friendly fingers act holiday cards (murals)
  • Supplies-
  • Finger paints, construction paper, Flour, Water
  • Divide child into groups of 4
  • Mix ¼ cup of flour with 1 cups of cold water,
    add paint ( for each group) each group uses a
    different color
  • To have different colors- children go to other
    stations to use a different color
  • Each child puts one hand into the paint and makes
    a print of their had on the a construction paper
    of the group members.
  • When dry, each child writes their name
  • Title of work Friendly hands
  • Children can write holiday messages on each
    others papers

20
Activity 2 Holidays
  • What holiday do you celebrate?
  • Theme Christmas around the world
  • How do people in different countries celebrate
    Christmas?
  • Activity Hand print tree
  • Supplies needed
  • A lot of green construction paper
  • A piece of brown construction paper (for the tree
    trunk)
  • A piece of yellow construction paper (for the
    star)
  • A large piece of brown paper (or use another
    color)
  • Pencil
  • Scissors
  • Glue
  • Optional Glitter, glitter glue, or paper
    ornaments to glue on the tree
  • For the wreath- A piece of red construction paper
    or a red ribbon would also be needed.
  • Activity Holiday activities

21
Activity 3
22
Activity 4 Making Mkeka- Kwanza mats
  • Celebrating Kwanzaa- An African-American Holiday
  • Cut black, green, red construction paper into
    strips 1 inch.
  • Put a back ground paper on the table- mark one
    inch on the background paper all around. Cut the
    center out.
  • Lay your strips starting from the base ina next
    like format- glue the ends to the background
    paper.
  • Continue until finished.
  • You have a Mkeka- Mat used to sit on during
    Kwanzza.
  • Table mats, floor mats are made using ribbons and
    fabric using Kwanzaa colors.

23
Best Practice
  • Teachers may survey families at the beginning of
    the year to determine what holidays to celebrate.
  • ask the children to create their own holiday to
    help them learn the concepts that underlie such
    valued traditions.
  • holiday celebrations are just one way for
    programs and families to work together to create
    developmentally and culturally appropriate
    learning experiences.

24
Best practice continued
  • Be Accurate and Sensitive-
  • Be aware that some religions teach that
    celebrating holidays -- or birthdays -- is wrong.
    Children should always be permitted not to
    participate and should have the opportunity to
    engage in optional, enjoyable activities.

25
Best Practice Cont.
  • Avoid Stereotyping
  • Not all members of the same religious group
    observe a holiday in the same way.
  • do not treat some holidays as regular and others
    as "exotic," nor that you introduce an ethnic
    group only in terms of its holiday observances.
    Multicultural activities that focus only on foods
    and holidays have been justifiably labeled the
    "tourist approach."

26
Best Practice Cont.
  • Be Constitutionally Appropriate
  • Holiday observances, if held under public school
    auspices, violate the First Amendments
    separation-of-church-and-state mandate. Joint
    celebrations (Christmas-Chanukah, for example) do
    not solve the problem, as they only serve to
    introduce religious observances into the schools,
    They also tend to pit holidays in competition,
    with each other and distort the significance of
    each. While recognizing a diverse group of
    holidays validates children and their families,
    bringing religious leaders into a public setting
    is not appropriate.

27
Conclusion
  • Use holiday activities as a way of enhancing
    respect for religions and traditions different
    from ones own, but stress common themes, as
    well.
  • Many religions focus on festivals of light,
    including Christmas, Chanukah, Kwanzaa, Santa
    Lucia Day and Diwali. Liberation is the theme of
    such holidays as the Fourth of July, Passover,
    Cinco de Mayo, Juneteenth and Martin Luther King
    Jr.s Birthday.
  • By connecting holiday themes, you communicate
    that holidays are a valid expression of cultural
    and religious pride. You also convey that its
    okay to be different.

28
Working with parents
  • Parent work is vital to antibias curriculum p.
    97What would be your goals when working with
    parents why?
  • Activities you can do with parents?
  • For example to raise parent awareness of
    stereotyping what would you do?
  • When you disagree with parents what steps should
    you take? P. 107

29
Strategies working with parents
  • Need resources- what do you have?
  • What issues might be relevant to your parent
    population?
  • What are the effective methods to work with
    parents?

30
Chapter 12 Getting a self-education
professional development
  • Define professional development
  • What are the purposes of taking a multicultural,
    social justice, antibias classes?
  • What are the goals of professional development?
  • What is a support group why is it important
    while teaching using an antibias curriculum?
  • We all carry scars, whether as initiator or
    target of unjust acts. Few of us have taken the
    opportunity to examine deeply and openly their
    impact on us of these experiences. We keep them
    hidden and are reluctant to expose our
    confusion, frustrations, hurt, anger, and guilt.
    These experiences influence our interactions with
    children, even if we are not aware p. 112

31
Planning to integrate antibias curriculum into
your program
  • Evaluate materials
  • Increase the diversity of your environment
  • Evaluate your current activity
  • Observe children as they play and see how you can
    help them grow developed to be anti-biased.
  • Evaluate how you interact with people of other
    cultures with children
  • Evaluate your curriculum- make choices
    consciously- use antibias children literature
  • Use an antibias curriculum in all subject areas.
  • Involve you parents

32
References
  • ReferencesBisson, J. (1997). Celebrate! An
    Anti-Bias Guide to Enjoying Holidays in Early
    Childhood Programs. St.Paul, MN Redleaf
    Press.Derman-Sparks, L. the ABC Task Force
    (1989). Anti-Bias Curriculum Tools for
    Empowering Young Children. Washington, DC
    NAEYC.Haynes, C. Thomas, O. (2001). Finding
    Common Ground A Guide to Religious Liberty in
    Public Schools. Nashville, TN First Amendment
    Center. (also available as a PDF at
    http//www.freedomforum.org)Jones, G. and
    Moomaw, S. (2002). Lessons from Turtle Island
    Native Curriculum in Early Childhood Classrooms.
    St. Paul, MN Redleaf Press.Lee, E., Menkart,
    D., Okazawa-Rey, M., Eds. (1998). Beyond Heroes
    and Holidays A Practical Guide to K-12
    Anti-Racist, Multicultural Education and Staff
    Development. Washington, DC Network of Educators
    on the Americas.O'Neil, J. and Loschert, K.
    (November, 2002). "Navigating Religion in the
    Classroom" in NEA Today. Washington, DC National
    Education Association. Available at
    http//www.nea.org/neatoday/0211/cover.html
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