The Classroom as a Culture of Peace

doc

School

Grand Canyon University *

*We aren’t endorsed by this school

Course

ELM560

Subject

Anthropology

Date

Apr 3, 2024

Type

doc

Pages

4

Uploaded by ProfessorCrowMaster1016

Report
Running head: THE CLASSROOM AS A CULTURE OF PEACE 1 The Classroom as a Culture of Peace Bettina Bussey ECE605: Children & Families in a Diverse Society (MTH245DS) Professor Juliet Krummick December 2, 2012
The Classroom as a Culture of Peace 2 The Classroom as a Culture of Peace The classroom is the first actual setting that shapes multiculturalism for young children. This is where they feel that they are a part of a real setting with different people, ideas and resources to help them understand the world they live in. “It is important to recognize that providing multicultural activities and experiences is not a choice, but a right. The world is made up of diverse cultures and each culture should be accepted and celebrated in the way that they choose” (Giugni, 2008, p. 2). The curriculum attempts to incorporate this phenomenon into the lessons but the teacher must take an active stance to carry it out for further understanding. The teacher can extend the activities of how children in different cultures celebrate Christmas, religious holidays and even how families mourn the loss of a loved one. The curriculum ties in daily life with reflection on different cultures and how they live their lives. The cultures are seen in how students dress, address behavior problems and in the foods that they eat. “One of the great risks to meaningful work around multiculturalism and anti-bias work is ‘The Tourist Approach’. Instead of observing differences one should observe how people who work with children can meaningfully share cultural experiences, stories and ideas (Giugni, 2008, p. 15). Children play, interact and share stories regardless of their culture. This is how they learn facts and information about other cultures. Hands on activities that relate to a child’s cultural experiences and interests are books, toys, dolls and games. Play and interaction are considered hands on for children. “On one hand this might be looking at the ways children include and exclude each other, on another hand it may be participating in preparations of diverse community cultural events. Events could include how they celebrate life and death (Giugni, 2008, p.20). Children are very determined to make contact and interact with other children at an early age. Differences and culture are not necessarily a
The Classroom as a Culture of Peace 3 great part of their lives. They must be taught that differences are a good thing because it creates lots of knowledge and information to keep the world going. The Pre-K to Kindergarten curriculum explores differences and similarities in people through various goals developed such as: (Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning, 2011, p.39) Identifies similarities and differences among people a. Recognizes that classmates have hair, but it can be different colors, lengths, and textures Uses multicultural dolls/books/ materials. b. Materials should represent differing ethnicity, culture, ages, ability, and gender. Demonstrates an emerging awareness and respect for culture and ethnicity a. Learns some words of other languages b. Tastes a snack that a classmate from another culture brings to school Demonstrates emerging awareness and respect for abilities a. Reads a story about a child with a disability b. Includes children with disabilities in play/conversation The above goals with activities are examples of how the curriculum explores similarities in people for young children. Children are more visual and concrete when it comes to learning about how and why people are different. They tend to cross the cultural line and diffuse any barriers that exist to play and entertain each other. If adults perceived the world as children do the world would be a better place where all people are equal.
Your preview ends here
Eager to read complete document? Join bartleby learn and gain access to the full version
  • Access to all documents
  • Unlimited textbook solutions
  • 24/7 expert homework help
The Classroom as a Culture of Peace 4 References Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning. (2011). Georgia Pre-K program content standards. Retrieved from http://decal.ga.gov/documents/attachments/content_standards_full.pdf Giugni, M. (2008). Exploring multiculturalism, anti-bias and social justices in children’s services. Retrieved from http://www.cscentral.org.au/Resources/Exploring_Multiculturalism.pdf