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Culture of Honor

Culture of Honor. Sustaining a safe, joy filled classroom environment. Safe Classroom. Facilitates learning Is full of joy Joy brings freedom and peace Love casts our fear An atmosphere of grace is created by love. Put Love into Action.

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Culture of Honor

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  1. Culture of Honor Sustaining a safe, joy filled classroom environment.

  2. Safe Classroom • Facilitates learning • Is full of joy • Joy brings freedom and peace • Love casts our fear • An atmosphere of grace is created by love

  3. Put Love into Action We need to put love into action by creating a culture of honor and viewing each person as one of God’s creations. Each child is worthy of great respect, value and importance. • We need to speak to the treasure within the person • We need to restore • Offer an atmosphere of grace

  4. Honor • Is the result of intentionally living out a vision to encourage those around us • By honoring someone you are empowering them • Honoring someone will draw the goodness hidden inside them • Promotes the desire to learn • One does not honor someone just because they are like us. Honor is a sign of respect. • Even if honor is cultivated in each home there is no promise of it crossing over into the classroom where cultures are diverse. • Where there is honor there is life.

  5. Weapons of Dishonor • Sarcasm • Jealousy • Anger • Judgment • Racism • Insecurity • discrimination

  6. Acculturation • Acculturation is the process of becoming adapted and socialized to the host culture. There are many influences on the process. • Language proficiency • Age • Presence of PTSD • Rural vs. urban orientation • Educational background • attitude

  7. Acculturation is a process • The length of time the process takes is dependent upon the amount of time spent in the process • The quality and quantity of the interactions between the cultures also has an effect • The degree of difference between the ethnicity or nation of origin and host culture • The level of enculturation

  8. Stages of Acculturation • Stage One-Euphoria when excitement and expectations over being in new culture rule. • Stage Two- Culture Shock * when the reality of the struggle to acculturate has set in. Emotions of fear, anger, frustration, hostility may be present • Stage Three-Recovery-when the individual starts to feel comfortable in the new culture. Becomes acclimated to surroundings since adjustments have begun • *this is a key area for intervention

  9. Stages of Acculturation (cont) • Stage Four-Acceptance-when a relationship between two cultures is beginning to be build. Connections have begun to form. • Stage Five-Appreciation and Adaptation- when person has not only adapted to the new culture but appreciates the host culture. Person is “plugged in”

  10. Culture Shock There are many ways to alleviate culture shock *create a safe environment-communicate honor, respect, and sincere interest *honor the student by educating oneself on student’s culture *educate others about student’s culture *beware of stereotypical text books, visual aids etc. *encourage student to bring in some personal artifacts that represent his/her culture

  11. Culture Shock (cont) • Be mindful of the term “host” culture. We are to be welcoming • Help to bridge the gap during the acculturation process • Introduce the components of the host culture to the new student • Clearly discuss expected behaviors • Promote honor

  12. Welcome Parents • Parents welcome learning from younger people about the host culture (it may be less intimidating) • Will welcome communication from the teacher • May welcome a network of other parents in the acculturation process • Will appreciate teacher’s care and concern during the acculturation process

  13. Antidotes to Culture Shock • Teach the accepted behaviors, skills and norms needed to function within the culture • Highlight the favorable aspect of each child’s culture and express the positive value to whatever appears foreign to the host culture • Positive attitudes are transferable • Experience music, food,clothing, holidays and traditions of all the students • Help host culture appreciate positive aspects of the other students • Understand principles of communication

  14. Communication • Language is the primary way we communicate • Is more than words • Includes changes in voice pitch and rhythm • Includes eye contact • Direct and indirect responses • High or low context • Is body language

  15. Discernment • It is critical that the teacher monitor the acculturation process • Look for fear, depression,helplessness • Inability to communicate • Monitor students acceptance of new student • Dispel myths

  16. Myths • There should be a separate unified set of goals and curriculum for multicultural education • A student must melt into host culture and forget native culture to “fit in” • Being bi-lingual is a liability • Ignore the problem and it will go away

  17. Truth • It is important to acknowledge that everyone has a culture, not just those that appear different • Best curriculum for understanding America’s diverse cultures recognition, understanding, and acceptance of cultural diversity • Honor individual’s uniqueness

  18. Concepts to be Taught • Cultural pluralism • Inter-group understanding • Human relations • Activities should be accompanied by commentaries that explain their cultural context

  19. Teachers are • A source of cultural information • A resource informer • Arbiter that evaluates students understanding of the cultural information • Elicitor that asks students about their culture of origin. • Encouragers that teach students to be inquisitive • Guide and structure cultural exploration • Researchers that introduce the history and contributions of often excluded ethnic groups • Responsible to replace distorted and biased information about a group with more accurate information.

  20. Teachers need to • Encourage students to work together to understand one another • Develop conflict resolution skills-although views may conflict, encourage respect and honor for each other • Define rules of engagement • Encourage global thinking • Recognize students as individuals as well as integral parts of the whole group • Be sensitive to components of host culture that may be in conflict with students native culture

  21. Teachers need to (cont) • Acknowledge student’s strengths • Identify student’s learning style • Define student’s need for contextual support • Make efficient use of classroom time • Facilitate high level of student engagement • Discern students learning style( field-independent or field-dependent) • Develop effective classroom management • Understand the physiology of the brain

  22. The Brain • Brain’s physiology crosses all cultures • Brain’s cells (neurons) receive messages from other cells and passes the message on to other cells. A thought is conceived as an “action” takes place. • The axon is the sending part of the neuron and the dendrite is the catching part of the neuron • In between the axon and the dendrite is synapse where neurotransmitters are stored. The neurotransmitters help or inhibit the dendrite from receiving the message from the axon.

  23. The Brain (cont) • There are many hormones in the synapse that are connected with one’s emotions. • When a person has had an experience it remains in the brain until an emotion is attached to that experience. If it is not a significant experience there will be little change in the brain. • Positive emotional experiences facilitate learning in the brain • The brain knows learning is an emotional, physiological and social activity. • Honor produces healthy hormones that facilitate the learning process.

  24. Acculturation vs. Enculturation • The degree of differences and similarities in the individual’s culture as compared to the host culture will effect the acculturation process. • Enculturation is learning one’s own culture. It is the process of socialization individuals undergo in their native culture. Understanding one’s cultures facilitates acculturation

  25. Culture • Is a set of common beliefs and values that are shared by a group of people that binds them together into a society • Affects the organization of learning, pedagogical practices, evaluation procedures, and rules of schools, as well as instructional activities and curriculum • Comes from the word “colare” - to build on, to foster, to cultivate

  26. Culture is • A set of accepted behavior patterns • Set of values • Common experiences • A defined social structure • Decision-making practices • Communication styles • learned • shared

  27. Culture Shapes • The way we think • The way we interact • The way we communicate • The way we transmit knowledge to the next generation

  28. Ethnicity • is the sense of identification that a cultural group collectively has, largely based on the groups common heritage. • Is a group of people, whose members identify with each other through language • Defines your place in an ethnic group • Influenced by your national origin • Gives one a sense of belonging to a cultural group

  29. Two levels of Culture: Surface and Deep Surface What we identify first Things we use our five sense to identify Examples * food, dress, manners, customs, religion, written laws, myths, legends, art, music ,tools, home decor

  30. Deep Culture • This level takes time to identify. • It is the beliefs that influence the way people think, act, and communicate • Presents the greatest challenge to acculturation • Examples • *Values, unspoken rules, knowledge, concept of self, morals, ideals, accepted ways of behaving

  31. Barriers to Acculturation • Ignorance of culture • Ethnocentrism-the belief that one’s ideas, beliefs and practices are the best and superior • Cultural Imposition-the belief that everyone should conform to the majority belief system • Stereotyping-involves assigning characteristics to a group of people without considering specific individuality

  32. Multicultural Education • This begins with the individual and prepares the person for life in a pluralistic society. • It will help promote appreciation of other cultures • Critical facet to a person’s education • Appreciates individual races, cultures, and religions • Promotes the “salad bowl” or “mosaic” analogy • Understands the different levels of acculturation

  33. Levels of Acculturation • Bicultural-maximum level of acculturation to host culture while maintaining a similar degree of acculturation to the previous culture. • Assimilated-maximum acculturation to the host culture, while resisting social, cultural or familial ties with native culture • Traditional-very low acculturation to the host culture. Maintains traditions of previous culture. • Marginal-Lost cultural contacts and practices from country of origin and also resists acculturation to host culture. There is a sense of “homelessness” at this level.

  34. Classroom is like a Garden • The weeds in a garden will inhibit a good harvest. Weeds are racism, aggression, bigotry, disrespect, and ethnic prejudice. We need to create a rich soil, a safe environment for the seeds (the children) to grow. Good fertilizer is tolerance and the celebration of diversity. We need to water the seed with wisdom, honor and respect. There needs to be an understanding that there are many kinds of seeds. Each seed needs to be nurtured. Some will require lots of water and sunshine while others will need shade and little water. We enjoy a variety of foods that come from different seeds. Let us rejoice in the variety and honor each and every seed created.

  35. Pennsylvania Academic Standards Checklist • 7. Geography 7.1 Basic Geographical Literacy A .Geographical representations B. Locations of Places and Regions C. Connections among Regions 7.3 The Human Characteristics of Places and Region A. Population, Culture and Settlement B. Economic Activity C. Political Activity 7.4 The Interactions Between People and Places A. Dependence on Physical Systems B. Modifications to accommodate environment

  36. PA Standards (cont) 8 Pennsylvania History 8.2 PA. History A. Political and cultural contributions of individuals and groups B. Primary documents, artifacts, and historical sites C. Continuity and change influence history D. Conflicts and cooperation among social groups and organizations

  37. PA Standards (cont) 9 Arts and Humanities 9.1 Production, Performance and Exhibition of Dance, Music, Theater and Visual Arts A. Elements and Principle in each Art Form B. Demonstration of Dance, Music, Theater, and Visual Arts C. Vocabulary within each Art Form D. Styles in Production, Performance and Exhibitions E. Safety issues in the Arts F. Community Performances and Exhibitions G. Traditional Technologies H. Contemporary Technologies

  38. PA Standards (cont) 9.2 Historical and Cultural Contexts A. Identification Chronologically and Geographically B. Analysis from Historical and Cultural Perspectives C. Vocabulary for Historical and Cultural Contexts D. Relationships in Style and Genre E. Differences and Traditions

  39. Pa Standards (cont) • 7.4 The Interactions Between People and Places • A Dependence on Physical Systems • B Modifications to accommodate environment

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