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Culturally Responsive Practices. Inservice February 18, 2013. Wauwatosa School District Mission Statement.
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Culturally Responsive Practices Inservice February 18, 2013
Wauwatosa School District Mission Statement United with parents and the community, the Wauwatosa School District delivers an outstanding education that equips and inspires our students to conquer their challenges now and in the future.
Wauwatosa School District Belief Statements We believe all students can learn and excel. We believe in respecting and promoting diversity. We believe in continuous improvement. We believe that positive relationships are a foundation of successful schools. We believe everyone has the right to emotional and physical safety. We believe their is an essential unity between between the community and its School District. We believe in excellence.
Wauwatosa School District Belief Statements We believe all students can learn and excel. We believe in respecting and promoting diversity. We believe in continuous improvement. We believe that positive relationships are a foundation of successful schools. We believe everyone has the right to emotional and physical safety. We believe their is an essential unity between between the community and its School District. We believe in excellence.
We believe in respecting and promoting diversity. What does this really mean? How is diversity related to culturally responsive practices?
Implications Wauwatosa School District District Development Plan ’12-13 1. Ninety-five percent of all students and subgroups of students to include ELL, ethnic groups, students with disabilities, and economically disadvantaged will meet or exceed proficiency in all content areas on the WCKE.
Implications Wauwatosa School District Development Plan ’12-’13 2. Eighty percent of all students taking the MAP assessment will meet or exceed typical, expected growth in all content areas.
Achievement Aggregate/Total achievement vs subgroup data----No Child Left Behind Ethnicity English Proficiency Ability Socio-economic Status (SES)
Culturally Responsive Practices Culturally responsive practices account for and adapt to the broad diversity of race, language, and culture in Wisconsin schools and prepare all students for a multicultural world. Wisconsin Response to Intervention: A Guiding Document
Culturally Responsive Practices at the Center of Wisconsin’s Vision of RtI
Why Culturally Responsive Practices? • Nationally, race has been a predictor of success in schools for decades. • Called “the achievement gap,” “the opportunity gap,” “the equity gap”―all phrases speak to the long-standing educational inequities in our system. • Both national data and Wisconsin state data show that in nearly every measurable area―academic achievement, discipline, gifted and talented placement, and graduation rates―students of color have statistically significant lower rates of success as compared to their white peers. Wisconsin Response to Intervention: A Guiding Document
Why Culturally Responsive Practices? • Wisconsin students are increasingly diverse. Our curriculum, instruction, and supports must reflect this diversity and be intentionally inclusive of the many cultures in our communities. • Culturally responsive practices make a difference. In Wisconsin, school districts have changed race-based patterns of success and failure through attention and intention. • Third, RtI is a systems change model. Need to reflect on: -Who is successful…who is not (academics & behavior) -Monitor success of interventions…and challenges -Interventions/practices that succeed with subgroups of students Wisconsin Response to Intervention: A Guiding Document
Enrollment Think about the past 10 years.... Estimate: -What was our minority enrollment in ‘00-’01? Percentage of total enrollment? -Current minority enrollment? -Trends in minority students as Chapter 220, Open Enrollment, and District Resident status
Enrollment ‘12-’13 African-American 16.1% Asian 4.5% Hispanic 3.7% Native American/Native Hawaiian .52% 2 or More 7.1% White 68.1%
Implications... “Suburban Schools: The New Multicultural Learning Environment?” Dr. Thandeka Chapman --UWM
Scratching the surface... Who are “they” Who are “we” Who am “I” How do those impact the learning experiences of each and every child in our district?
How Do You Become Culturally Responsive? CREATE Wisconsin • Develop cultural self awareness • Appreciate the value of diverse views • Avoid imposing your own view on others • Accept your own naivete (know what you don’t know) • Learn what you can about various cultures www.createwisconsin.net
How Do You Connect with Students (in five easy ways)? Richard Milner—Vanderbilt University Author of Start Where You Are, But Don’t Stay There -Interview your students -Give assignments that allow students to share their experiences and interests -Encourage classroom discussions that let students be the center of attention -Attend extracurricular activities featuring your students -Visit a site in your students’ community
How Do You Become a More Equitable Educator? EdChange On color-blindness: “As painful as it may be to admit, I know that I react differently when I’m in a room full of people to share many dimensions of my identity than when I’m in a room full of people who are very different from me. I must be open and honest about that because those shifts inevitably inform the experiences of people in my classes…..” Paul Gorski: 20 (Self-) Critical Things I Will Do to Be a More Equitable Educator at www.edchange.org
Perspectives Educational Leadership November 2010 “Leaving Nothing to Chance” “Another Inconvenient Truth: Race and Ethnicity Do Matter”
Inclusive Practices Welcoming Understanding Equity Access Proportionality
How Do You Become a More Equitable Educator? Pacific Education Group RaceTalk webinar viewings in the district. [Meal provided.] February 25, 2013-Examining Whiteness Without Judgment, Fear, or Shame 5:00pm-6:30pm at Fisher (Conference Room A)March 25, 2013-Systemic Racism: A View From Inside: Developing District and School Plans Through The Lens of Equity5:00pm-6:30pm at Fisher (Conference Room A)April 29, 2013-So Many Feelings, So Little Time...What To Do? Navigating the Feeling Corner of the Compass5:00pm-6:30pm at Wauwatosa West High School (The Steiner Center) www.pacificeducationalgroup.com
District Efforts PAACT –School Counseling Grant Professional Learning Communities Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports (PBIS)
How Do You Access Resources Related to District Efforts? http://lrpdiversity.wikispaces.com/
Questions…. Additional thoughts…