Kaleidoscopic in their diversity, today’s public schools need teachers to create inclusive classrooms that recognize and celebrate differences.
And to create those safe and welcoming environments, educators must first recognize diversity’s many facets. The National Education Association offers the following list of some of the many dimensions of diversity: race; ethnicity; color; national origin; language; geographic location; religion; gender; sexual orientation; gender identification; age; physical ability; size; occupation; and marital, parental, or economic status.1
Honoring diversity and creating inclusive classrooms are central themes for students in Walden University's BS in Elementary Education (Teacher Licensure) online degree program. In the course Social Studies and the Arts K–6: Instruction and Assessment, for example, teaching degree candidates receive a valuable collection of best practices for creating inclusive classroom environments from the website Understanding Prejudice.
If you’re interested in becoming an elementary school teacher, or are an educator looking to add new teaching strategies to your tool kit, join Walden bachelor’s degree students in learning how you can support and promote inclusion in school settings with this excerpt from a required reading:2
Creating an Inclusive Environment
- Make sure that classroom posters, pictures, books, music, toys, dolls, and other materials are diverse in terms of race, ethnicity, gender, age, family situations, disabilities, and so on. Varied representations are not only important for making diverse student populations feel included; they are important for teaching homogeneous student populations about the world beyond their classroom.
- Avoid having only one or two tokens of a particular group, and vary the roles depicted for each group. For example, show women and men doing jobs both inside and outside the home. Likewise, show different family configurations, including single-parent families, extended families, multiracial families, adopted families, and families with lesbian and gay parents.
- Make sure your school library, corridors, and other public spaces are also diverse and inclusive, either by buying new materials that show people from a variety of backgrounds and situations, or by adding people to existing materials (e.g., by having students paint them in).
- Try to involve other supportive teachers, administrators, and staff members so that you are not the only one modeling a concern for inclusive classrooms and school settings.
- If biased materials remain visible, use them as opportunities to teach children to think about issues of bias. For example, you might ask students to tell you how the item in question would make a target of bias feel, or you might use the item to explain how to identify instances of bias.
- Make a special effort to use language that is unbiased, inclusive, and does not divide students unnecessarily. For example, “Okay, everyone ...” is less likely to reinforce gender divisions than “Okay, boys and girls ...”
- Be careful not to unwittingly contribute to gender discrimination. If girls are complimented on appearance and boys on achievement, girls will soon learn that female achievement is of secondary importance.
Addressing Children's Questions and Concerns
- When children ask a question related to prejudice or group differences, be sure to answer directly rather than side-stepping the question or changing the topic. Otherwise, children may infer that they should not ask about these issues, and that there is something shameful to avoid. Instead, reinforce children's natural curiosity, and explain the distinction between noticing social differences and being prejudiced.
- Do not minimize or pretend not to see differences in race, religion, disability, or other attributes. Acknowledging obvious differences is not the problem—placing negative value judgments on them is. For example, color-blindness is vitally important when it comes to educational opportunities, but color-blindness does not mean ignoring an attribute that students may see as important to their identity.
- If children mention social differences, do not criticize or discourage their observations. Rather, talk to them about their observations and answer any questions they have.
- If a student's question makes you uncomfortable, do your best to answer it on the spot, but then take time later to reflect on what made you uncomfortable. If you suspect yourself of harboring biases or you still aren't sure how best to handle the situation, seek feedback from trusted colleagues, friends, and family members.
- Keep parents involved and informed. Tell them what types of questions their children are asking and what answers you are giving. This will lessen the chances that children receive mixed messages from school and home.
Integrating Children's Own Experiences
- Use whatever diversity exists among your students to model inclusiveness. For example, if students are about to do an activity that is difficult for a disabled student to do, invite students to help adapt the activity so that everyone can participate. Under the right circumstances, such an approach can establish a norm of inclusiveness and reward students for valuing each other's participation.
- Be sure not to single out minority students or call on them unsolicited to represent their group. When discussing families, cultures, lifestyles, and social groups, vary the focus and the order of presentation to avoid implicitly conveying an order of importance (e.g., use "she or he" as well as "he or she").
- Avoid a "tourist approach" to multiculturalism that limits diversity to holidays, special events, and history months. Instead, integrate various cultures and backgrounds into the everyday life of the classroom, and invite students to enrich discussions with their own ethnic traditions and experiences.
- If you notice gender or racial segregation during play times, reorganize the activities or play area to foster integration and reduce stereotypes. For example, if girls gravitate toward playing house and dressing up, relocate woodworking tools near the house for home repairs, and include dress-up props such as a doctor's bag, police badge, tool belt, or hard hat.
Dealing With Discriminatory Behavior
- Do not ignore discriminatory behavior. Avoiding the problem will not make it go away, and your silence may even give the appearance of tacit approval. Instead, make it clear that you will not tolerate racial, ethnic, religious, sexual, or other offensive jokes, slurs, or behaviors, and explain why. If you cannot respond at the time the incident takes place, respond as soon after as possible before the problem worsens.
- Do not expect deep-seated problems and conflicts to disappear immediately. Unlearning prejudice and developing social awareness is a lifelong process, and it is unrealistic to expect instant results with young children. Nonetheless, if you use cases of bias as a vehicle for education, it is quite possible to reduce students' prejudice over time.
- Do not humiliate prejudiced students who make mistakes or behave badly. Humiliating students is not only unkind, it often deepens their feelings of resentment and rivalry without addressing the underlying causes of prejudice. The best approach is a compassionate effort to understand what went wrong and what might be done to avoid similar episodes in the future.
- Make empathy training as central to your lesson plans as reading, writing, and arithmetic. Empathy can be taught effectively with role-playing and role-reversal exercises, and research suggests that greater empathy is significantly associated with reductions in prejudice, aggression, and interpersonal conflict.
- Be a role model who walks the talk and takes a stand for social justice. Reflect and practice inclusive multicultural values in all aspects of your life, not just while class is in session. Demonstrate that you respect and value the knowledge, talents, and diversity of all people.
- Look to improve yourself as well as your students. Learn more about prejudice and social justice—not only the forms of bias that affect you most directly, but the forms that affect other groups as well.
Become a Teacher, Change Lives
Walden’s online BS in Elementary Education degree program can help you blaze a path to a fulfilling career in elementary education. This bachelor’s degree program focuses on teaching math, science, reading, and other core subjects to children in grades K–6. On your educational journey to teacher licensure, you’ll learn strategies proven to help young students build confidence and excel in today’s diverse classroom environments.
As a Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP)-accredited institution, Walden is committed to enhancing educator effectiveness. That’s why expert educators will guide you through cutting-edge curriculum. You’ll have the opportunity to review test preparation materials so that you are well-equipped to pass the licensure exams that lead to teacher certification.
And as a working professional, you can also count on world-class student support while you earn your teaching degree. Walden designs its online degree programs with working professionals in mind and provides the kind of support you need, when you need it. You’ll find 24/7 technology support; a research-rich online library; the Academic Skills Center, where you can find tutoring, courses, and workshops; and so much more.
With a BS in Elementary Education, you can prepare for an online teaching job in elementary education, or for a wide range of in-person teaching roles that may include elementary school teacher, kindergarten teacher in a preschool, or sixth grade teacher in a middle school.
Wherever your teaching degree takes you, you’ll be academically prepared and have a tool kit full of tested ideas and teaching strategies. And you’ll be ready to help students learn in a supportive, inclusive classroom.
Walden University is an accredited institution offering a BS in Elementary Education (Teacher Licensure) degree program online. Expand your career options and earn your degree in a convenient, flexible format that fits your busy life.
1Source: www.nea.org/tools/diversity-toolkit-introduction.html
2Source: https://secure.understandingprejudice.org/teach/elemtips.htm
Walden University is accredited by The Higher Learning Commission, www.hlcommission.org.