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National Center for Culturally Responsive Educational Systems

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Title: National Center for Culturally Responsive Educational Systems


1
National Center for Culturally Responsive
Educational Systems
Conceptual Framework for Understanding
Disproportionality
2
Purpose
Provide technical assistance and professional
development to
  • close the achievement gap between students from
    culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds
    and their peers, and
  • reduce inappropriate referrals to special
    education.

Critical Foci
Culturally responsive practices Early intervention
Literacy Positive behavioral supports
3
Outcomes
  • increase the use of prevention and
  • early intervention strategies,

decrease inappropriate referrals to special
education, and
increase the number of schools using effective
literacy and behavioral interventions for
students who are culturally and linguistically
diverse.
4
  • General Special Education Audiences
  • Students
  • Families
  • Practitioners
  • Administrators
  • Researchers
  • Teacher Educators
  • Policy Makers
  • Products
  • Research syntheses
  • Policy briefs
  • Public service announcements
  • Research-based articles
  • On Points for Practitioners
  • Virtual Professional Development Modules
  • Activities and curricula for culturally
    responsive practice
  • Web-based Data Maps
  • Virtual State-wide campuses
  • Meta-tagged Library

5
  • Mission
  • Supporting state education agencies and local
    school systems to assure a quality, culturally
    responsive education for all students.
  • Value Added
  • NCCRESt supports the implementation of the
    Individuals with Disabilities Education Act as it
    extends the goals of the No Child Left Behind Act
    of 2001

6
Key Activities
  • Determine status for each state in collecting
    data required in Section 618(c) of IDEA.
  • Develop a web-based sensitive and responsive
    continuous improvement cycle for each
    participating SEA.
  • Synthesize culturally responsive research-based
    practices that support learning and development
    for all students
  • Assist SEAs in developing plans to address
    disproportionality that focus on widespread
    screening and effective early intervention,
    literacy, and positive behavioral support.
  • Link change impact to specific PD and improved
    teacher quality
  • Engage sites in examining patterns in impact of
    change efforts.
  • Evaluate impact of change efforts on stakeholders
    and organizations

7
What are Culturally Responsive Educational
Systems?
  • Culturally responsive educational systems are
    grounded in the belief that students from
    culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds
    excel in academic endeavors when
  • their culture, language, heritage, and
    experiences are valued and used to facilitate
    learning and development and
  • they are provided access to high quality
    teachers, programs, curricula, and resources.

Culturally responsive educational systems are
concerned with instilling ethics of care,
respect, and responsibility in the professionals
who serve culturally and linguistically diverse
students.
  • Culturally responsive educational systems benefit
    all students.

8
Assumptions About the Causes of Disproportionate
Representation
What it is not
Intrinsic or family-based deficits
9
  • Disproportionate representation is caused by much
    more than the existence of intrinsic or
    family-based deficitschildren are perceived as
    disabled due to a complex weave of widely varying
    beliefs, policies, and practices at all
    levelsfamily and community, classroom, school,
    district, state and federal government, and the
    society at large.
  • The genesis of disproportionate representation is
    located beyond the borders of special education
    and requires a solid understanding of the
    intersection of culture, learning, disability,
    and the socio-historical constitution of
    educational processes and outcomes.

10
Contributors
  • Policies

11
Unequal Educational Opportunity
  • Tracking and Instructional Grouping (Oakes, 1990
    Hallinan, 1996)
  • Physical facilities and school resources (Kozol,
    1991 Oakes, 1990)
  • Curriculum representation (Anyon, 1997 Sleeter
    Grant, 1991)
  • School discipline
  • Instructional quality

12
Intersections
13
NRC Biological and Social/Environmental Factors
  • Biological
  • Low birth weight
  • Nutrition and development
  • Alcohol, tobacco, drugs
  • Lead
  • Social/Environmental
  • Quality of parent management
  • Parenting with respect to language
  • Maternal depression
  • Quality and availability of child care

14
SES and Poverty Interact
  • At every SES level
  • AA students more likely to be labeled ED, MR and
    placed in self-contained, SPED classrooms
  • AA students less likely to be labeled learning
    disabled or communication disordered and placed
    in general ed classrooms
  • As wealth and better schooling increase, AA males
    are at greater risk of being labeled MR
  • As the non-minority pop increases, AA are also
    at increased risk for MR and ED identification

Oswald, Coutinho Best (2002). Community and
School Predictors of minority children in special
education. In Racial Inequity in special
education.
15
NRC The Influence of Schooling
  • Differential resources
  • Fewer well prepared teachers
  • Poorer facilities
  • Teaching differences
  • Lower expectations
  • Cultural differences in behavioral expectations
  • Differential opportunity for parental
    participation in SE assessment may increase risk

16
Socio-cultural Contexts
17
Complexities of Disproportionality
18
Background Assumptions about Learning and
Development
Individual agency
Contextual factors
19
  • Childrens learning and development are
    influenced by the many contexts or nested
    ecological systems in which they live and
    interact, including family, community, school,
    and the larger society (Bronfenbrenner, 1979).
  • Variations in learning and development cannot be
    explained solely by these ecological systemsboth
    individual agency and contextual factors are
    important (Spencer, 1995).
  • Meaningful learning is situated in the context of
    everyday teaching/learning settings and
    activities that vary by culture, SES, and other
    factors (Diaz, Moll, Mehan, 1987 Moll, 1990
    Vygotsky, 1986).

20
Conceptual Framework for Understanding
Disproportionality Beliefs, Policies, and
Practices
  • Society at Large
  • FEDERAL AND STATE POLICIES

Disability
  • School District Policies and Practices

Culture
  • SCHOOLS
  • Teachers
  • Families and
  • Sociopolitical Context
  • Legal Context
  • STUDENTS
  • Communities
  • High Stakes Testing

Learning
21
Background Assumptions about the Solutions to
Disproportionality
  • Improved general ed instruction

22
  • Disproportionate representations multifaceted,
    complex nature requires that solutions be
    grounded in clear theoretical understandings
    about
  • The notion of culturally responsive educational
    systems
  • The intersection of culture, learning, and
    disability
  • The sustained use of research knowledge in
    professional practice and
  • The means to support teacher learning and enhance
    students opportunities to learn.
  • Improved general education instruction in
    classrooms and through alternative programs
    (e.g., Title I) will presumably change the number
    of culturally and linguistically diverse students
    referred to and placed in special education
    programs.

23
(No Transcript)
24
Culturally Responsive Practice
25
  • The cornerstone of NCCRESt is the assumption that
    disproportionate representation should be
    addressed through the creation of culturally
    responsive educational systems.
  • Culturally responsive educational systems are
    grounded in the belief that culturally
    and linguistically diverse students can excel in
    academic endeavors if
  • their culture, language, heritage, and
    experiences are valued and used to facilitate
    their learning and development and
  • they are provided access to high quality
    teachers, programs, curricula, and resources.
  • Culturally responsive educational systems are
    concerned with instilling ethics of care,
    respect, and responsibility in the professionals
    who serve culturally and linguistically diverse
    students.
  • Culturally responsive educational systems benefit
    all students.

26
Federal and State Policies
Legal requirements at federal and state levels
concerning the determination of eligibility for
special education.
Teacher and administrator quality indicators and
procedures for working collaboratively with
universities and school districts to improve
preparation and professional development programs.
Governmental policies and mandates related to
school financing and the allocation of resources.

Re-examine Revise
Accountability measures, including how high
stakes testing results are used to evaluate
schools.
27
  • Federal and state policies and practices should
    be reexamined and revised to promote culturally
    responsive educational systems. These include
  • Legal requirements at federal and state levels
    concerning the determination of eligibility for
    special education.
  • Governmental policies and mandates related to
    school financing and the allocation of resources.
  • Accountability measures, including how high
    stakes testing results are used to evaluate
    schools.
  • Teacher and administrator quality indicators and
    procedures for working collaboratively with
    universities and school districts to improve
    preparation and professional development
    programs.
  • Early intervention programs should be provided to
    all children in high poverty areas early
    screening for reading difficulties should be
    administered to all, with follow up support.

28
District Level Policies and Practices
Collaboration and Partnerships
  • PRIORITIES
  • Curricula
  • Tracking
  • Testing
  • Discipline
  • Resource Allocation
  • Hiring

Community Agencies
Special General Ed
Local leaders
Teacher education programs
29
  • Policies and practices related to curricula,
    tracking, testing, discipline, resource
    allocation, and hiring should focus on
    advancing culturally responsive practice
  • Priority should be given to assigning and
    retaining highly qualified administrators,
    teachers, and support personnel in schools with
    high-poverty culturally and linguistically
    diverse students.
  • Collaboration and partnerships at various levels
    should be promoted
  • Between special education and general education
    administrators, to assure that special educators
    play a role in developing effective intervention
    models designed to reduce inappropriate referrals
    to special education
  • With community agencies and local leaders, to
    build on local assets and promote culturally
    responsive practice.
  • With teacher education programs, to provide
    relevant coursework and quality field experiences
    in high-poverty culturally and linguistically
    diverse schools.

30
Professional Development
Top- down
Bottom-up
31
  • On-going professional development, with support,
    is key to the promotion of
    culturally responsive practice.
  • Professional development must be supported at
    multiple levels, with everyone on the same
    pagewe advocate top down support for bottom up
    reform (Darling-Hammond McLaughlin, 1995).
  • Yet change can be difficultpractitioners work in
    complex cultural milieus and, thus, the
    acquisition of new research knowledge requires
    that they change what they think and do and
    transform the contexts in which they work.
  • Teacher beliefs, feelings of self-efficacy,
    attitudes, and perceptions all affect the extent
    to which they try new strategies and persist in
    using them even when confronted with challenges
    (Artiles, 1996 Sparks, 1988).

32
School Leadership
33
  • Strong leadership is an essential component of
    effective culturally responsive schools.
  • School principals beliefs, values, educational
    philosophies, and interpersonal as well as
    management skills have a great influence on the
    climate and culture of a school.
  • Successful principals exemplify a sí se puede
    (it can be done) attitude.

34
Culturally Responsive Teachers
35
  • Culturally responsive teachers
  • Are cultural organizers, cultural mediators, and
    orchestrators of social contexts (Gay, 2000)
  • Are caring, committed, and respectfulthey
    believe in their students abilities and desire
    to learn
  • Validate, affirm, facilitate, liberate, and
    empower
  • Are experts in instruction and management and
    know how to challenge and support their students
  • Explicitly teach skills and cultural capital
  • Feel a strong sense of responsibility for all
    students, including students referred for or
    already placed in special education.

36
Quality Literacy Instruction
37
  • Reading instruction should be multifaceted and
    include direct instruction in the alphabetic
    code, vocabulary development, and reading for
    meaning, with frequent opportunities to practice
    reading with a variety of rich materials and in
    meaningful contexts.
  • There must be an emphasis on cultural relevance
    and building on students prior knowledge and
    interests.
  • Students who struggle should receive early
    supplemental, intensive reading instruction in
    phonological awareness, fluency building,
    comprehension and vocabulary development, and
    word study.

38
Behavior Supports
39
  • School-wide behavior supports should be proactive
    and promote a positive, culturally responsive
    climate that is conducive to learning by all.
    Teachers, administrators, and support staff
  • Understand that perceptions of behavioral
    appropriateness are colored by cultural
    expectations and that what is perceived as
    inappropriate varies across cultures
  • Connect with their students in ways that convey
    respect and caring
  • Explicitly teach rules and expected behaviors
    within a culture of care
  • Provide a continuum of support and
  • Involve families and the community.

40
Early Intervention
  • What is
  • considered
  • to be
  • Special
  • Education
  • Intensive assistance,
  • as part of
  • General Ed
  • support system

Quality instruction in General Ed Classroom
41
Families and Communities
42
  • Students families and communities represent rich
    and varied funds of knowledge upon which
    learning experiences should be built (Moll,
    1992).
  • Schools that successfully make a positive
    difference in the lives and learning of
    culturally and linguistically students work
    closely with families and communities as valued,
    respected partners.
  • Professional development is needed to change a
    pervasive negative attitude towards high-poverty
    culturally and linguistically diverse families
    and a propensity to think of difficulties as
    within the child and caused by their family
    circumstances.

43
Students
44
  • Children are at the heart of our conceptual
    frameworkeverything we do is to improve outcomes
    for them.
  • Our focus is on childrens potential and promise,
    not risk factors, emphasizing students strengths
    and amazing abilities to be resilient and to
    overcome adversity. Children want to learn and
    start school ready to learn (though not
    necessarily in the ways teachers expect). All
    kids have potential.
  • Culturally and linguistically diverse children
    living in poverty come to school with a variety
    of background experiences and from complex
    circumstancesstudents backgrounds are assets
    that students can and should use in the service
    of their learning.

45
Activity Arenas
Networking and Dissemination
46
  • Ideally everyone, at all levels of society,
    should be searching for solutions to the
    widespread underachievement and disproportionate
    placement in special education experienced by
    culturally and linguistically diverse students.
  • Through four core teams, our work will focus on
  • Continuous improvement, increasing knowledge and
    understanding through the evaluation of current
    practice, change efforts, and their impact.
  • Research and development, synthesizing and
    expanding research-based practices in Culturally
    Responsive Pedagogy, Literacy Instruction,
    Positive Behavior Supports, and Early
    Intervention.
  • Professional development, leveraging the
    continued improvement of schools through
    collaboration with existing technical assistance
    networks, local asset mapping, and leadership
    academies.
  • Networking and dissemination, engaging in a
    national discourse across local, professional
    practice, and policy communities on improving
    educational outcomes for culturally and
    linguistically diverse students.

47
Whos on Board?
  • Leonard Baca, Bueno Center
  • Kayte Fearn, Council for Exceptional Children
  • Ronald Felton, Miami-Dade County Public Schools
  • Beth Harry, University of Miami
  • Judith Heumann, The World Bank
  • Asa Hilliard, Georgia State University
  • Stephanie Hirsh, National Staff Development
    Council
  • Dixie Jordan, Parent Advocacy Coalition for
    Educational Rights
  • Joy Markowitz, Project Forum, National
    Association of State Directors of Special
    Education
  • Festus Obiakor, University of Wisconsin at
    Milwaukee
  • James Patton, College of William and Mary
  • Delia Pompa, National Association of Bilingual
    Education
  • Kristin Reedy, Northeast Regional Resource Center
  • Virginia Roach, Teachers for a New Era
  • Anthony Sims, Illinois State Board of Education
  • Brenda L. Townsend, University of South Florida
  • Stanley Trent, University of Virginia
  • Edward Lee Vargas, Hacienda La Puente Unified
    School District

48
NCCRESt Personnel
  • Principal Investigators
  • Alfredo J. Artiles, Vanderbilt University
  • Janette K. Klingner, University of Colorado at
    Boulder
  • Elizabeth B. Kozleski, University of Colorado at
    Denver
  • Cheryl A. Utley, Juniper Gardens Childrens
    Project, University of Kansas

Project Officer Grace Zamora Durán, Office of
Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of
Education
Project Staff Carolyn Ottke-Moore,
Materials Event Developer Rhona
Jackson, Project Administrator Steve Kennedy,
Policy Analyst Jennifer Quinlan, Web
Master Carolyn Jefferson-Jenkins,
Professional Development Coordinator Jenn Light,
Instructional Technology Heraldo Richards,
Researcher
Project Coordinator Shelley Zion University of
Colorado at Denver
Director, Networking and Dissemination David P.
Riley, Education Development Center, Inc.
Continuous Improvement Data Analysts David
Gibson, VIMST Michael Knapp, VIMST
Support Staff
  • Alexandra Schroeder
  • Aimee Wride
  • Laura Barletta
  • Ayanna Brown
  • Kristy Martinez

49
Reference List
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Reference List Continued
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51
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