
-- the Forum Spring 1996 --
Methods for Infusing Diversity into the Curriculum
Cathy Della Penta, MCC
With all the talk of diversity being bandied about lately, do we have any idea
what is meant by the term? What exactly is diversity? Let me share with you one
student's definition of the term:
Diversity encompasses: age, life experiences, profession, race, region, nation,
lifestyle, social class, learning style, philosophy of life, orientations,
religion, personality, mental and physical challenges, customs, values, and
gender.
In other words, diversity encompasses all the ways we differ as human beings. In
one sentence, then, diversity includes anyone with a different perspective or a
different angle on reality. For the purpose of this article, I will use this as
my working definition.
So, where do we encounter diversity? In the workforce, in social and cultural
interaction, and in the democratic process.
The workforce is changing. "By the turn of the century, experts predict that 80%
of the American workforce will be made up of women, minorities, and persons from
other countries; currently, these groups make up 68% of American workers. Yet,
supervisors still communicate as though their workers are "mainstream" white
American males." (Basics of Intercultural Communication, p. 1)
Into the next millennium, as the demographics of the nation change, we will
encounter diversity more and more in social and cultural interactions. And, at
the heart of the democratic process is the airing of differing viewpoints in
order to reach a just and fair consensus.
Challenges for Educators
Diversity is a fact of life, so the teacher is left with several ethical issues:
- What am I doing to communicate with this changing and diverse student
population?
- What am I doing to prepare my students for the diverse workforce into which
they will eventually be thrust? and
- How do I honor differences among my students?
Answer: Either change the content of the course, or change the approach to the
content.
Change the Content of the Course
For the very ambitious:
- Change the content of the course. Change to a text that is more inclusive.
This requires countless hours reviewing books and many more hours in new
preparations.
- Keep the canon and supplement. Add articles by a few of the lesser known
voices -- i.e., women and minorities.
Change the Approach to the Content
- Keep the content the same, and change the approach. Is your discipline
left-brained? (e.g. science, math, philosophy) Try one lesson with a
right-brained approach.
- Move from the known to the unknown, from the familiar to the unfamiliar,
from the students' microcosm into broader, more expansive macrocosms. Give them
the words/vocabulary they need if there is a lot of "jargon" in your field, but
relate the esoteric terms to real life situations; otherwise, students will
forget them.
- Ask open-ended questions (when appropriate to the course content and the
subject at hand) that give students the opportunity to answer from their own
experiences or perspectives.
- Observe and analyze class discussion. Does any one group dominate?
Acknowledge participation and encourage more. Work toward balance, so that
students air as many different perspectives as possible.
- For class discussions, establish ground rules that come from the students
themselves and honor and respect all members of the class.
- Establish a safe environment in class for all members. (Are they all
speaking at once? Do they insult each other? Attack or call each other names? Cut
each other off? If so, it's not a safe environment.)
- Invite a colleague in to do a presentation/lesson/lecture/exercise. Try to
choose one whom you respect for his/her expertise, but one who has a very
different approach or delivery style from yours. You can then sit in the audience
and play the role of student along with the rest of the class. Do the exercises
along with the class. You may find you learn something, too!
- Consider people as living resources, as "walking books." Set up an
assignment or class project allowing students to present to the class for 15
minutes. Require all the intellectual rigor you would of yourself(outline/audio
visuals/documentation), but make the assignment such that the students learn to
celebrate each other. (Students do not learn just from us or the text. They also
profit from the exchange/interaction with each other.)
- Have students "shadow" an expert and report back to the class.
- Have students interview an expert and do a writing assignment.
- Have students talk about/present something on their own cultural background.
- Try role playing with a "case study" approach. Have the class analyze the
interaction afterwards.
- Do feedback sheets at the end of the semester and ask for suggestions.
Sometimes, students see things we don't even anticipate.
- Look at assumptions underpinning the course. Are the assumptions you have
as a teacher shared by the students? (For example, as an English teacher, I have
always assumed that students would read the text and be prepared to react to the
text and discuss in class. I have found that beginning students -- i.e., first
semester students -- many times are not prepared to discuss, don't know the
simplest rules for polite discourse, or expect me to "feed" everything to them!
Some don't even see what is to be gained from discussion of an assignment. I have
to teach them the purpose and the logistics of discussion/discourse.)
- Are you verbal? What are you doing in class that is visual?
- Allow students to challenge and correct you. Teach them to do this
politely. In addition, make sure that women and minority students feel free to
challenge the views of others.
Food for Thought
"There are compelling reasons for education to support cultural diversity; "the
need to respect cultural differences is rooted in part in the belief that all
human beings have intrinsic worth and that they should be treated as ends
themselves.'" (Pai in Knott, pp. 14-16+)
"Culture can influence different ways of thinking, processing information, and
communicating in the educational setting, and cultural diversity should increase
the range of learning styles and behaviors in learning situations." (Knott, pp.
14-16+)
"I have noticed people in the same country who seem to be living in very
different universes." (Pearson, p. 149)
Sources
"Basics of Intercultural Communication." Info-Line. Darrough, Barbara, ed.
American Society for Training and Development, Sept. 1990, Issue 9009.
Knott, Elizabeth. "Working with Culturally Diverse Learners." Journal of
Developmental Education. Vol 15, pp. 14-16+, April, 1991.
Pearson, Carol. The Hero Within: Six Archetypes We Live By. San Francisco: Harper
& Row, 1989.
The Labyrinth-Forum: Spring 1996
Maricopa Center for Learning and Instruction (MCLI)
Maricopa County Community College District
The Internet Connection at MCLI is
Alan Levine
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Comments to alan.levine@domail.maricopa.edu
URL: http://www.mcli.dist.maricopa.edu/labyforum/Spr96/spr96F3.html