Transcript Document

The Dreamkeepers: Successful
Teachers of African American
Children
By: Gloria Ladson Billings
Objectives

Understand culturally-relevant pedagogy in theory and in
practice.

Learn the tenants of Gloria Ladson Billing’s philosophy of
culturally-relevant pedagogy.

Examine examples of how teaching through the lens of culturallyrelevant pedagogy influences lessons, curriculum, and teaching.
On cultural relevancy:
Uses student culture in order to maintain it and to transcend the negative
effects of the dominant culture (the ignoring of black culture by the
mainstream);
The aim is to assist in the development of a culturally relevant
“personality” that allows black students to choose academic excellence
yet still identify with black culture;
It is a pedagogy that empowers students by using cultural referents to
impart knowledge; it moves between two cultures but recognizes each as
legitimate (17-18);
It is the antithesis of assimilation; it aims at a level of excellence;
emphasizes sharing responsibility (23) – a successful culturally relevant
teacher is viewed as a “coach”
On cultural relevancy:
One willing to work with others and will collectively work toward a
collective goal (24);
Establishes strong and caring relationships with all students
When looking at current teachers, Billings notices that teacher
perceptions of black students have a significant impact on student
learning.
Such perceptions can lead to negative associations with black culture
and low expectations; teachers may only value students that
demonstrate mainstream behavior;
They may be attempting to “correct” this behavior in order to make
students “fit” into a particular category;
Or teachers may not believe that minority students can act in a
certain way, thus react with sympathy.
Seeing Color, Seeing Culture
“I have a dream that my four children will one day live in a nation
where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the
content of their character.” -Martin Luther King, Jr. August 28,
1963
“…the journey toward acknowledging and valuing differences. "
"dysconsciousness“
"I don't really see color”
“I just see children" or "I don't care if they're red, green, or polka
dot, I just treat them all like children."
…these attempts at colorblindness mask a "dysconscious racism," an
"uncritical habit of mind that justifies inequity and exploitation by
accepting the existing order of things as given.” This is not to suggest
that these teachers are racist in the conventional sense.
They do not consciously deprive or punish African American
children on the basis of their race, but at the same time they are not
unconscious of the ways in which some children are privileged and
others are disadvantaged in the classroom.
Conceptions of Self and Others
Culturally Relevant
 Teacher sees herself as an artist. Teaching as an art.
 Teacher sees herself as part of the community and teaching as giving something
back to the community.
 Encourages students to do the same.
 Teacher believes all students can succeed.
 Teacher helps students make connections between their community national, and
global identities.
 Teacher sees teaching as "pulling knowledge out"-like "mining."
Assimilationist
 Teacher sees herself as technician teaching as a technical task.
 Teacher sees herself as an individual who may or may not be a part of the
community; she encourages achievement as a means to escape community.
 Teacher believes failure is inevitable for some.
 Teacher homogenizes students into one "American" identity.
• Teacher sees teaching as "putting knowledge into" -like "banking."
Social Relations
Culturally Relevant
•Teacher-Student relationship is fluid, humanely equitable, extends to
interactions beyond the classroom and into the community.
•Teacher demonstrates a connectedness with students.
•Teacher encourages a "community of learners."
•Teacher encourages students to learn collaboratively. Students are
expected to teach and help others and be responsible for each other.
Assimilationist
•Teacher-student relationship is fixed tends to be hieryarchica1 and
limited (to formal classroom roles).
•Teacher demonstrates connections with individual students.
•Teacher encourages competitive achievement.
•Teacher encourages students to learn individually, in isolation.
Conceptions of Knowledge
Culturally Relevant
•Knowledge is continuously recreated, recycling and shared by teachers and
students; it is not static or unchanging.
•Knowledge is viewed critically.
•Teacher is passionate about content.
•Teacher helps students develop necessary skills.
•Teacher sees excellence as a complex standard mat may involve some postulates but
takes student diversity and individual differences into account.
Assimilationist
•Knowledge is Static and is passed in one direction, from teacher to students.
•Knowledge is viewed as infallible.
•Teacher is detached, neutral about content.
•Teacher expects students to demonstrate prerequisite skills.
•Teacher sees excellence as a postulate that exists independently from student
diversity and individual differences.
In The Dreamkeepers, Ladson-Billings defines CRT as
possessing these eight principles:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Communication of High Expectations
Active Teaching Methods
Teacher as Facilitator
Inclusion of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse
Students
Cultural Sensitivity
Reshaping the Curriculum
Student-Controlled Classroom Discourse
Small Group Instruction and Academically-Related
Discourse
Teachers Who Practice
Culturally-Relevant Teaching:
View teaching as a “art,” not a “technical skill.”
 View themselves as a part of the community in
which they teach.
 View themselves as giving back to this
community.
 See a “connectedness” between themselves and
their students.
 Foster a “community of learners.”
 “…believe that knowledge is continuously recreated, recycled, and shared by teachers and
students alike.”

According to Ladson Billings, Culturally Relevant
Teaching (CRT) is:
“An approach that empowers students intellectually,
socially, emotionally, and politically by using cultural
referents to impact knowledge, skills and attitudes.”
Objectives

Understand culturally-relevant pedagogy in theory and in
practice.

Learn the tenants of Gloria Ladson Billing’s philosophy of
culturally-relevant pedagogy.

Examine examples of how teaching through the lens of culturallyrelevant pedagogy influences lessons, curriculum, and teaching.