reaching and teaching students in poverty: strategies for erasing the opportunity gap

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Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap by Paul C. Gorski [email protected]

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Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap. by Paul C. Gorski [email protected]. How I Know “The Poor” Are Not “The Problem”. * * *. How I Know Educators Can Be a Big Part of the Solution. * * *. Starting Assumptions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

by Paul C. Gorski [email protected]

Page 2: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

How I Know “The Poor” Are Not “The Problem”

* * *

Page 3: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

How I Know EducatorsCan Be a Big Part of the Solution

* * *

Page 4: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

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Starting Assumptions

1. Poor people bear the brunt of almost every imaginable social ill in the U.S.

2. All people, regardless of class status, deserve access to basic human rights

3. Inequities in our society mean all people don’t have this access

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Starting Assumptions (cont’d)

4. It is not every individual teacher or administrator’s responsibility to eradicate global poverty

5. However, if we don’t understand poverty, we cannot understand families and students in poverty

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The Most Practical Note

If we start with the belief that poor people are poor because poor people are deficient, we already have lost. The single most practical strategy for every one of us:

Let go of the stereotypes…

99% ideological, 1% practical

Page 7: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Part II:

Stereotypers Are Us:

Stereotypes of Low-Income People and Other Cognitive Barriers to Progress

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Stereotypers Are Us

Brainstorm all the stereotypes you know about low-income people◦And note where they come from

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Stereotypers Are Us

Stereotype: Laziness

Ah, but: A vast majority of poor people do work (CDF, 2008). According to the Economic Policy Institute (2002), poor working adults spend more hours working per week on average than their wealthier counterparts.

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Stereotypers Are Us

Stereotype: Don’t Value Education

Ah, but: Low-income parents have the exact same attitudes about education as wealthy parents (Compton-Lilly, 2003; Lareau & Horvat, 1999; Li, 2010; Leichter, 1978; Varenne & McDermott, 1986).

(More on this later…)

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Stereotypers Are Us

Stereotype: Substance Abuse

Ah, but: Alcohol abuse is far more prevalent among wealthy people than poor people (Galea, Ahern, Tracy, & Vlahov, 2007; Humensky, 2010). And drug use equally distributed across poor, middle class, and wealthy communities (Saxe, Kadushin, Tighe, Rindskopf, & Beveridge, 2001).

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Stereotypers Are Us

Stereotype: Bad Parents

Ah, but: Research has continued to show that low-income parents care just as much about their children, and work just has hard—or harder—to advocate for their children, as wealthier parents.

Page 13: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Part IV

Considering the Popular Perspectives: the “Culture of Poverty” and Deficit Ideology

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The ‘Culture’ or ‘Mindset’ of Poverty

What is it? Who made it up?What the research saysWhy it’s dangerous

Silliness: My grandma and Somali children

Page 15: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Deficit View Is…A perspective that explains outcome

inequalities as resulting from supposed moral, intellectual, and cultural deficiencies in disenfranchised communities and individuals.

If your teachers are roughly representative of the US public, they, on average, believe this. Unfortunately, research shows you can’t believe this and be an effective teacher for low-income students.

Page 16: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Deficit View:A Micro-Example

Page 17: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Begin with a Stereotype

“Low-income families do not value education.”

Page 18: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Use that Stereotype to Explain & Justify an Outcome Inequality

“Low-income students do not do as well in school as their wealthier peers because they do not value education.”

And

“If only low-income families cared more about education, the economic achievement gap would not exist.”

Page 19: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Ignore the Fact that This Is Untrue

See, for example:

Compton-Lilly, 2003Lareau & Horvat, 1999Leichter, 1978

Page 20: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Gather Evidence Selectively

Conveniently forget:Funding disparitiesChoice disparitiesCurricular & pedagogical disparitiesAnd so on…

Or even:The scarcity of living wage jobsLack of access to healthcareAnd so on…

Page 21: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Develop Educational Strategies through the Lens of This Ideology

Parenting classes for low-income families

Mentor programs for low-income students

Tutoring programs for low-income students

And so on…

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Never Address (or Acknowledge) Underlying Inequities

No reflection on what we’re doing or the biases or inequities in our schools and classrooms…

And so on

Page 23: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Part V:

Understanding the Challenges of Low-Income Families

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Pre-SchoolLess accessWhen they have access, it’s to

lower-quality pre-school

According to brain research, this is critical because of the cognitive development that happens during pre-school years (Duncan, Ludwig, & Magnuson, 2007)

Page 25: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

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PollutionAir and water in low-income

neighborhoods more pollutedMore likely to live near hazardous

production and storage sites (Walker et al, 2005)

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Neighborhood FactorsLow-income neighborhoods more

likely to have lower-quality social, municipal, and local services; greater traffic volume, fewer playgrounds; less green space (NCTAF, 2004)

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HealthLess access to health care (Koenig,

2007)Less access to preventive measures

(Pampel et al, 2010)Less access to prenatal care (Temple et

al, 2010)Higher levels of chronic stress and

depression (Wadsworth et al, 2008)Less access to healthy foods (Pampel et

al, 2010)

Page 28: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

In School, the “Great Equalizer”:

This opportunity gap is characterized by the lack of access to: Quality preschool Adequately funded schools School nurses, counselors, and other

school support services Affirming school environments

(bullying) High academic expectations Higher-order, engaging pedagogies Opportunities for family engagement

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Also:Safe and affordable housingAn affirming societyRecreational opportunitiesAnd on and on and on

Part of the problem with the “culture of poverty” model is that it is largely silent on these conditions—it distracts us from them…

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Thoughts…These are the reasons for outcome inequalities, not cultural deficiencies (Depere et al, 2010):

“Thus, children raised in advantaged neighborhoods appear to receive higher quality child care and to attend more advantaged schools, even when family characteristics, such as the quality of the home environment, are held constant. In turn, access to advantaged institutions may explain why children in comparatively advantaged neighborhoods tended to have higher vocabulary and reading scores than their peers in less advantaged neighborhoods” (p, 1241).

Page 31: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Part VI:

Equity Literacy Approach

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Principles to Remember

Poor people are diverse—they do not share a culture

◦They don’t share a learning style or communication style or world view or behaviors or attitudes or…

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Principles to Remember

We cannot understand the relationship between poverty and education without understanding biases and inequities experienced by people in poverty.

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Principles to Remember

What we believe about people in poverty, including our biases and prejudices, informs how we teach and relate to people in poverty◦So we must begin by shifting our view

about poverty and poor people

* * *

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Things to Do

Rid ourselves of the stereotypes and prejudices and misinformation, then help our colleagues do the same

◦Name deficit ideology when you see it◦Remember, any strategy that is based on

fixing low-income families is, at best, incomplete and, at worst, offensive and alienating

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Things to Do

Take stock of, and then eliminate, any example of unequal distribution of resources (e.g., the most effective teachers, the newest science labs, the best sports fields, the highest-order pedagogy) within schools and between schools

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Things to Do

Adopt higher-order curricular and pedagogical models at all schools

Keep physical education and arts programs in all schools

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Things to Do

Refuse to charge money for any school-related activity (extracurriculars, field trips)

Review policy carefully to find implicit ways low-income people are targeted and disadvantaged

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Things to Do

Partner with local agencies and organizations when possible to add needed services to your school (medical, nutrition)

Advocate for smaller class sizes

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Things to Do

Resist the imposition of high-stakes testing, which is having the most devastating impact on the most marginalized students (while helping a few test-development companies like Pearson make a lot of money)

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Things to Do

Make opportunities for family involvement accessible to low-income families

(and, if you haven’t thought about it, ask yourself why you haven’t thought about it)

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Things to DoRemember that many low-income

parents experienced school as a hostile environment when they were students. That’s not their fault. So what we can do about it?

◦Persistence◦Patience◦Humility

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Final ReflectionThe research points most ferociously at one conclusion:

If you believe that poor people are poor because of their own deficiencies and not because of systemic barriers, you are likely to contribute to the very inequities we’re here to eliminate. Our attitudes about poor families is the most critical single variable affecting the schools we are creating for them.

But no pressure.

Page 44: Reaching and Teaching Students in Poverty: Strategies for Erasing the Opportunity Gap

Thank you.

Paul C. [email protected]://www.EdChange.org