Friday, October 25, 2013

Professional Hopes and Goals

 
 
While taking this course, I have established support and trust through my colleagues and professor. Without my classmates, I would not further my knowledge as deep as I did. I have learned so much about them and what they have learned about diversity. There are so many perspectives on what diversity is. I feel this course has broadened my understanding of how complex every individual social identities are. One hope that I have when I think about working with children and their families who come from diverse backgrounds is taking it as a journey and be optimistic to growth and change. I feel that every child and family needs to have a voice to make things more easier in and out of the classroom. One goal that I would like to set for the early childhood field to issues of diversity, equity and social justice is experience them together. I hope that myself and others can be honest with one another and need to show knowledge to help each other understand and accept each other. I would like to thank all my colleagues! You all have helped me in someway for this course! Good luck in your future studies and in the field of early childhood education! Study on!!

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Welcoming Families From Around the World

This week for our blog we were asked to think about these two statistics...
  • About 195 different countries exist in the world today.
  • According to the U.S. census bureau, the United States’ population includes individuals and families from 150 different countries.

Then we are asked to think about this scenario...







"You are working in an early childhood setting of your choice—a hospital, a child care center, a social service agency. You receive word that the child of a family who has recently emigrated from a country you know nothing about will join your group soon. You want to prepare yourself to welcome the child and her family. Luckily, you are enrolled in a course about diversity and have learned that in order to support families who have immigrated you need to know more than surface facts about their country of origin."





The early childhood setting that I would choose is a child care center. In hopes one day that I will be running my own day care or center. The name of the families country of origin that I would choose is Asia. I do not know much at all about this country. If I had a child in my center that is emigrating from a country I would first do research online to find more about their culture and the origin of Asia. I would then look at opportunities to experience how to show a fair chance with this family to ensure they are receiving equity. I would look to more into their social identities and what their family believes in and incorporate into the classroom. I would also prepare myself into seeing the inclusion of  their culture and how they deal with diversity.  I would also need to look more into how children learn in Asia. How is the achievement gap? Are they reading and learning about mathematics at the same level we are in the States. The last way that I would find ways to be culturally responsive to this family is finding distinctive and defining characteristics about families in Asia. Do they have the same systems and issues that we encounter in our child care center? I feel that these ideas would help myself, children and their families. Being educated and prepared to address diversity in the child care center provides everyone to be at ease and comfortable. I feel that even with diversity in our center everyone will know each other's background and what they believe in. This will allow everyone to accept each other's differences. Therefore everyone will be benefited.

Friday, October 11, 2013

The Personal Side of Bias, Prejudice, and Oppression

What memory do you have of an incident when you experienced bias, prejudice, and/or oppression, or witnessed someone else as the target of bias, prejudice, and/or oppression? Keep in mind that one can encounter such incidents in real contexts, including online environments, as well as in fictional ones, such as movies, books, television shows, and the like.
 
 
A memory I had that I have experienced prejudice and/or oppression was with the only African American boy in my class. Even though most of us did not treat him differently, I can see now the microaggressions that this boy faced. He was the only African American until middle school. We all knew that he was different because of his color. I feel that he faced oppression because he had to deal with being different from the other children. He was inferior to all of us just by the way he looked. Every day in class, he was faced with biases from other people and this made it hard for him to feel accepted. 
 
 
 
In what way(s) did the specific bias, prejudice and/or oppression in that incident diminish equity?
 
I feel that due to this incident and being the minority that this had diminished equity. The equity is lessened not only in the classroom, but in the community as well. If children keep picking and not showing growth into diversity of individuals, how is he going to adjust to the classroom setting. He will feel harmed due to the fact that he is a minority. Especially since the other children view him as being different.
What feelings did this incident bring up for you?

Looking back to this incident, as a child I feel that my classmates and I were too young to see the oppression that he faced. I feel now that no single child should be treated differently just by the way he/she looks like or believes in.
What and/or who would have to change in order to turn this incident into an opportunity for greater equity?

The teacher is the person that needs to turn this incident into an opportunity for greater equity. The teacher is the one who runs the classroom and needs to make sure that each child is getting treated the same. As long as he or she is open to discussing diversity and equity with all, young children and their families will open up to treating one another the same.