Start Seeing Diversity Blog: "We
Don't Say Those Words in Class!"
I
can recall greeting my Hispanic neighbor Maria about a month ago with my 5 year
old niece Haidyn in tow. Neighbor
stopped down and in a friendly manner she greeted Haidyn and said “Hi! How are
you doing?” Haidyn remarked “I can’t understand
what she’s saying because she talks funny”.
Maria explained to Haidyn that she was not talking funny and that she
was speaking English. I was so embarrassed
and shocked at that moment but I did correct Haidyn and I told her that what
she said was inappropriate and not nice.
Haidyn had a puzzled look on her face because she felt that she was just
being honest but now she realized that she did something wrong but really had
no explanation of why what she said was wrong.
In
retrospect I guess I should have shared with Haidyn different examples of
various people who speak English with different accents explaining the beauty
of diversity. According to Harro’s "Cycle of Liberation" there is a continuous
cycle that we endure when we are trying to break down our stereotypes and
trying to rid ourselves of oppression (Harro, 2008). As an anti-bias early childhood educator the
teacher needs to listen to children and when they voice stereotypes it is
helpful to address the issue right away and supply the student with resources
(books, movies, recordings) that will help children to analyze the issue
(Laureate Education, n.d.). If a group
of Caucasian girls announce that they are excluding an African American girl
from playing with them because they feel she is not pretty enough. The anti-bias teacher needs to step in and
show them pictures of multicultural children playing together and do role play
with persona dolls of various cultures in order to show these girls the correct
way to welcome children that may not look like them. Teacher’s can utilize read-alouds in the
classroom to promote cultural diversity by selecting books that represent
different cultures in the classroom and beyond because children really pay
attention to what books teachers select (Hall, 2008).
References
Hall, K. W. (2008). Reflecting on our read-aloud practices: The
importance of including culturally
authentic
literature. Young Children, 63(1), 80–86. Retrieved from the
Walden Library
using the Education Search Complete database.
http://ezp.waldenulibrary.org/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=ehh&AN=28334270&site=ehost-live&scope=site
http://ezp.waldenulibrary.org/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=ehh&AN=28334270&site=ehost-live&scope=site
Laureate Education (Producer). (n.d.). Start seeing diversity:
Race/ethnicity [Video file].
Retrieved from
https://class.waldenu
Thank you for your post! Children say the most amazing and sometimes embarrasing things! They often say what we are thinking. When my girls say things inappropriate I try to teach them why its wrong and how important it is to respect others. Thank you for your post.
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