Blog 4-Kassa Valz
Decoding
the new language of racial hierarchy (2015) discusses a sad but true reality.
As a minority growing up in Canada I can now begin to reflect on my own
experiences with racial hierarchy in and outside of school. I was reading an
article that discussed the notion of ‘equity pedagogy’ which are “teaching
strategies that help learners from diverse racial, ethnic and cultural groups
attain knowledge, skills, and attitudes needed to function effectively within,
and help create and perpetuate a just, humane, and democratic society” (Banks
& Banks, 1995). Equity Pedagogy also requires a dismantling of current
school structures that foster inequality. This practice of equity pedagogy
should be developed and proposed to all of the country’s institutions that
foster some form of racial or cultural inferiority. With new progressive
leaders like Prime Minister Trudeau such an idea might not seem so farfetched. Not so long ago the whole idea of racial
inferiority and determinism was a principal for the Harper lead Conservative
government.
At
that very contentious time minority (Muslim) communities didn’t have to look across
the Atlantic to realize that racial inferiority and think was still present in
contemporary times. We just needed to turn on CBC or read the local newspaper.
How can a leader of such a progressive country like Canada say such things like
certain cultural practices are “barbaric” or traditions ‘rooted in a culture
that is anti-women?’ It is through the new language of racial hierarchy, instilling
a fear of the ‘other’, pitting mainstream Canadians against minority Canadian.
As
new progressive educators we must confront and dismantle the idea of the hidden
curriculum. To do this educator must become aware of the cultural diversity
that makes this country great. Once educators become culturally conscious and only
then can the ideas of equity pedagogy be implemented when educating twenty-first
century learners.
Reference
McGee Banks, C. A., &
Banks, J. A. (1995). Equity pedagogy: An essential component of multicultural
education. Theory into practice, 34(3), 152-158.
1 comment:
Thanks
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