Teaching a Diverse Student Body

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Transcription:

i Teaching a Diverse Student Body

iii Teaching a Diverse Student Body: Practical Strategies for Enhancing Our Students Learning A Handbook for Faculty and Teaching Assistants By Deandra Little Faculty Consultant Teaching Resource Center Adapted from a previous edition by Nancy Loevinger Graduate Student Associate, TRC 1992-93 A publication of the Teaching Resource Center, University of Virginia P.O. Box 400136 Charlottesville, VA 22904-4136 http://trc.virginia.edu

iv 1994, by the Board of Visitors at the University of Virginia. All rights reserved. Second edition, 2004. This handbook deals with topics that have legal implications, but the information contained in it is not intended as specific legal advice. If you need legal advice about specific situations, seek it from the appropriate University office, the Office of the General Counsel, located in Madison Hall. Designed and printed by University of Virginia Printing and Copying Services, Charlottesville, Virginia Cover photos by Michael Bailey, Bill Sublette, Bill Dennison, and Tom Cogill Cover Design by Kandy Harvey and Eric Cross, University of Virginia Printing and Copying Services

v TABLE OF CONTENTS Foreword... vii by Vice President and Provost, Gene Block Introduction... ix by Associate Dean Angela M. Davis and Professor Michael J. Smith, Co-Chairs of the President s Commission on Diversity and Equity Acknowledgements... x Preface... xi I. Teaching a Diverse Student Body... 1 Characteristics of Personal Identity... 2 Race or Ethnicity... 2 Gender... 3 Social Class... 3 Sexual Orientation/ Gender Identification... 4 Religion... 4 Creating an Inclusive Classroom Environment... 5 Teaching a Diverse Student Body... 6 General Principles... 6 Specific Teaching Strategies... 6 II. Gender Dynamics in the Classroom... 9 Classroom Dynamics... 9 Teacher and Student Behaviors... 10 Differences in Linguistic Styles... 10 Possible Effects on Female Students... 11 Teaching to Promote Gender Equity... 12 General Principles... 12 Specific Teaching Strategies... 13 III. Teaching International Students... 16 Strategies for Teaching International Students... 16 General Principles... 16 Students who Are Non-Native Speakers of English... 16 Cultural Differences for International Students... 18 V. Students with Disabilities... 24 Constraints... 24 Accommodations... 25 Accommodating Students with Physical Disabilities... 25 General Principles... 25 Accommodating Deaf/Hearing Impaired Students... 25 Accommodating Blind/Visually Impaired Students... 27 Accommodating Mobility/Coordination Impaired Students & Students with Medical Conditions... 27 Accommodating Students with Emotional or Psychiatric Disabilities... 28 Teaching Students with Learning Disabilities and ADHD... 28 Specific Characteristics... 28 Chart: Characteristics of Students with Certain Types of Learning Disabilities... 30 Identification and Referral... 30 Accommodating Students with Learning Disabilities and ADHD... 31 General Principles... 31 Specific Teaching Strategies... 31 Chart: Correlation of Specific Strategies with Specific Learning Disabilities... 32 Teaching Strategies Effective for All Students... 33 General Principles... 33 Specific Teaching Strategies... 33 Appendices... 36 I. Resources for Instructors and Students... 36 A. University Resources... 36 B. Student Organizations... 40 C. Religious Organizations... 40 II. Further Reading and Videotapes... 41 Works Cited... 45 IV. Dealing with Conflicts... 19 General Principles... 19 Specific Teaching Strategies... 20 Conflict Outside the Classroom: Harassment and Assault... 21

vii FOREWORD Jean-Francois Revel s book, Anti-Americanism, analyzes European attitudes and occasional hypocrisy towards the United States. In one of the later chapters Revel reflects on the remarkable success of American universities, why the world s brightest flock to American institutions. He points to the catalytic environment of American academies where close integration of teaching and research reinforce one another. The fast pace of research has provided new excitement for the classroom but also new challenges for faculty in their effort to translate increasing amounts of information into course content. Faculty today face other challenges as well. Technology in the classroom provides an opportunity for enhancing knowledge transfer through the capacity for both parallel and serial multi-media presentations within the classroom. However, used awkwardly, such technology can be disruptive to the coherence and cadence of the class and consequently detract from the learning experience. Other challenges arise from the busyness of today s students, who are accustomed both to a more rapid delivery of information from multiple media and to more scheduled, even overscheduled, lives. Perhaps some of the greatest opportunities and challenges for effective teaching arise from the changing dynamics of the student population. Within the working lifetime of some longserving U.Va. faculty, the student body has moved from primarily southern, white male domination to an ethnically and culturally diverse population with both national and international textures. Gone are the days when one could expect students to arrive with relatively homogenous experiences and views. Oftentimes students now absorb information in a language that is not native, place new knowledge into a wide-ranging set of cultural contexts, and respond to information with varied emotions. Students struggle for recognition of their place in our community as they are pushed to move out of their comfort zones and into our vital but challenging intellectual community. This process can be rewarding but stressful, and nowhere will sensitivities be more evident than in the classroom. An understanding and appreciation of the complexity of contemporary student experience will help faculty harness this tension in productive and creative ways. There is little doubt that the opportunities for profound learning by both students and faculty have never been greater. I am certain that you will find Teaching a Diverse Student Body a helpful tool as you work to create the best possible learning environment for your students. Gene Block Vice President and Provost Alumni Council Thomas Jefferson Professor of Biology

ix INTRODUCTION In the aftermath of racial incidents at the University during the spring of 2003, President John T. Casteen III and Gordon F. Rainey, Jr., the newly elected rector of the University s Board of Visitors, created two groups charged with evaluating University initiatives that address diversity and identifying action steps and policy changes. The Special Committee on Diversity of the Board of Visitors and the President s Commission on Diversity and Equity are currently working in concert to create a vision and action plan to achieve a more welcoming community for every individual. The President s Commission specifically is charged with assessing the quality of the student experience within the University in all of its aspects, with special attention to experiences unique or generally germane to women and minority students. We divided the Commission into four main subgroups: Student Life and Climate; Faculty and Staff Recruitment and Retention; Curriculum; and Community and Business Models. We are working diligently gathering current data, following up on recommendations from prior reports, considering the merits of a wide range of proposals and studying best practices here and elsewhere. We are operating as a working commission by engaging members of the University community in focused discussions about all of these issues and when possible working with appropriate offices to put recommendations into place now instead of waiting until the final report. Our final report will acknowledge the Teaching Resource Center as the home and source of many of the best practices to be found anywhere across the nation. The TRC has consistently provided services and resource materials designed to enhance the teaching abilities of faculty and teaching assistants at U.Va. Teaching a Diverse Student Body has been an invaluable resource guide since 1994. The editor of this handbook has revised it to keep in step with U.Va. s increasingly diverse student population. TRC staff understand the importance of embracing diversity within our classrooms because of the opportunities it creates for teaching and learning. They are in step with current research which informs us that students who interact with peers of different backgrounds or who take courses with diversified curricular content show greater growth in their critical thinking skills than those who do not do so, and they also tend to be more engaged in learning. * We highly recommend Teaching a Diverse Student Body. We encourage you to embrace its principles: keep it close at hand, refer to it often, and try out its teaching strategies. Your effort will certainly be rewarded both in the quality of your classroom dynamics and in meeting the challenge of preparing all our students for the diverse world of the 21 st century. * Jeffrey Milem, Why Race Matters, Academe: Bulletin of the American Association of University Professors, Volume 86, Number 5 (September- October 2000). Co-Chairs of the President s Commission on Diversity and Equity Angela M. Davis Associate Dean of Students Director of Residence Life Associate Professor of English Language and Literature, General Faculty Michael J. Smith Thomas C. Sorensen Professor of Politics Director, Interdisciplinary Program in Political and Social Thought

x ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We would like to thank the many individuals and organizations who enriched this edition of the handbook, Teaching a Diverse Student Body. Though a complete inventory of those who provided invaluable support and information would be too numerous to name here, among them were administrators, friends, and colleagues who willingly offered their expertise, their suggestions, and a keen editorial eye. We gratefully acknowledge all these contributions, direct and indirect. Any errors are, of course, our own.

xi PREFACE This handbook serves as a supplement to the Teaching Resource Center publication Teaching at the University of Virginia. Though some material will necessarily overlap that in the other handbook, Teaching a Diverse Student Body expands upon issues of diversity in a series of interrelated chapters. At the end of the book, you ll find appendices listing relevant university and community offices and organizations as well as additional print, web, and video resources to consult for further information. Please note that the handbook is meant to be a helpful source of ideas based on current research and not a doctrine insisting upon certain correct procedures or beliefs. The handbook chapters can be read separately: the table of contents and lists of chapter sections will help you locate specific topics. Because some will prefer to read a chapter at a time, particularly effective teaching strategies may appear in more than one chapter. Overall, though, the chapters are meant to build upon one another to form a general scheme for responsive and inclusive teaching. Since students vary in their backgrounds and learning preferences, these suggestions taken as a whole should prove helpful in recognizing and addressing the individual learning styles of all our students, not just those who fit into specific categories. Recognizing and responding to the increasing diversity of our student body can help us become more effective teachers, enriching our classrooms in the process. Nearly 30% of the entering Class of 2007 were students from underrepresented groups (9% African American, 11% Asian American, 3% Hispanic American, and 5% international). Over half were women. Racial, ethnic and gender differences account for only a part of our students diversity, however. U.Va. students vary in many other ways as well, including religious values, sexual orientation, fluency in English, cultural background, and types of physical ability. Although knowing these details helps us become more aware of the differences among our students, [n]aming patterns is like charting the prevailing winds over a continent, which does not imply that every individual and item in the landscape is identically affected (Frye 180). As Marilyn Frye suggests, while it is sometimes useful to recognize patterns of differences, we must also remember that these general patterns will not apply to every individual student and that many students fall into more than one category. Terms such as female student, African American student, or Asian American student can encompass vast differences in cultures, educational backgrounds, psychological types, and learning preferences. The suggestions in this handbook are meant to help faculty and teaching assistants recognize some broad ways in which students may differ from one another and from each of us and to examine what effect these differences may have on our students learning and our teaching. The most effective ways we can recognize and teach this diverse student body are by following the same general principles good teachers use: making our students comfortable in the classroom recognizing differences in their reactions and learning preferences teaching in a flexible manner varying the ways our students participate in the classroom responding to students equitably and inclusively. We hope this handbook will help you to enact these principles in your classroom. Please let us know what you think by contacting us at trcuva@virginia.edu.