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What is Culturally Responsive Education

Supporting Students’ Intellectual Freedom in Schools: The Right to Read
A theory created by Gloria Ladson-Billings—Educators using an appreciation of their students’ assets to support students in academic success, cultural competence, and sociopolitical consciousness.
Published in Chapter:
Supporting Preservice Teachers to Explore School Censorship and Teacher Advocacy
Heather Pule (University of Houston-Clear Lake, USA) and Macie Kerbs (Independent Researcher, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-6684-9655-8.ch011
Abstract
This study combined experiential, authentic literacy instruction with scenarios of censorship preservice teachers (PTs) will encounter in their future classrooms. By presenting these questions and scenarios through authentic literacy practices, PTs were able to think critically and discuss the issues of challenges to culturally responsive texts, and the possibilities of teacher advocacy. The class context and design are presented in this chapter along with the results of this mixed-methods study to determine how successful the classroom environment and literacy instruction was for preservice teachers to discuss the issues and challenges to culturally responsive texts and to explore how these preservice teachers viewed their role as advocates following that discussion. Implications and future research directions for teacher education are also discussed.
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Unpacking Teachers' Growth in Culturally Responsive Teaching Differentiating for English Learners
Education recognizing and affirming the diversity that students bring with them, including sociocultural identities, languages, cognitive applications, academic backgrounds, and learning differences, among others.
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Care and Cultural Responsiveness of Online College Courses: Preliminary Criteria and Best Practices
An approach to education that involves caring, teaching practices, and pedagogy designed to meet the needs of students from diverse cultural backgrounds.
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Biography-Driven Instruction: Disrupting Monocultural Pedagogy for Emergent Bilingual Learners
Education recognizing and affirming the diversity that students bring with them including sociocultural identities, languages, cognitive applications, academic backgrounds, and learning differences among others.
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This Is How I Learn: Co-Creating Space for Students' Voices
Culturally responsive education helps students to develop more than just academic skills; it also helps students develop social consciousness, cultural integrity, a stronger sense of self-worth and ability, and a value in community ( Gay, 2010 ).
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Timeless Traditions as a Culturally Responsive Approach in a Third Space: Honoring the Herder Curriculum in Mongolia
An educational approach where students’ cultural background, knowledge, experiences, and perspectives are used to teach them more effectively. The approach provides a bridge to or makes relevant academic content, instruction, school procedures and functions.
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