Weblog 7
Education in a Multicultural Society: Our Future’s Greatest Challenge
By: Lisa D. Delpit
This article written by Lisa Delpit is very insightful toward future teachers. She divides her thoughts into five different sections: 1.) The cultural clash between students and school, 2.) Stereotyping, 3.) Child-deficit assumptions that lead to teaching less instead of more, 4.) Ignorance of community norms and the “Messiah Complex,” and 5.) Invincibility. The purpose of these five groups is to provide details of multicultural problem in schools and how to fix them.
I found one quote in particular that stuck in my mind. “A primary source of stereotyping is often the teacher education program itself. It is in these programs that teachers learn that poor students and students of color should be expected to achieve less than their ‘mainstream’ counterparts.” (p. 241) After reading her section on stereotyping I began to see how easy it was to do. This particular section proved to me that the teachers have a large part in how students act and participate in class and it is very easy for teachers to overlook that they are the one creating the problem, not the student. We should be taught throughout our educational career on how to deal with these issues and what to expect.
Another part I thought was very strong about her article was bringing parents and members of the community into the classroom. By getting to know the parents it lets you get to know and understand the students better. Also teachers will know what the parents will be expecting out of their children and give the teacher a guiding way to teach. A teacher should always take what parents have to say very strongly.

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