Studyspark Study Document

Cultural Identity in Schools Whether Term Paper

Pages:4 (1162 words)

Sources:4

Subject:Other

Topic:Cultural Identity

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#5550056


Therefore, the selection of historiographies used to create school curricula and to inform pedagogy should be carefully selected and from as many perspectives as possible. Cultural identity does not have to be created in opposition to others. Too often, cultural identity is based on boundaries and borders rather than on commonalities.

Relying on singular interpretations of potentially biased historians is particularly problematic when issues of power and social control are taken into consideration. American public schools should be especially aware of how knowledge, power, and social control are closely interwoven. Even teachers of young children can become more aware of differential access to social and cultural capital: the means by which the rich become richer. Public schools should promote a cultural identity that is keenly aware of the problems with traditional pedagogy, traditional definitions of "culture," and traditional ways of disseminating culture.

Giroux (1999) notes that educators may need to question the very notion of what constitutes culture: why some works of art, literature, and music are labeled as "high" culture and others as "popular" culture and why the latter is valued more highly by the institutions responsible for creating cultural norms. In fact, public schools should become more self-reflective and self-critical, willing "to provide a better understanding of how power works in and through such contexts while simultaneously opening up imagined possibilities for changing them," (Giroux 1999). Public schools have exempted themselves from this critical role to the detriment of children and the entire society. By taking a more active role in cultural identity construction, educators can encourage their students to become more critical consumers, more media literate, and more in control of their identity formation.

Gender, although not a feature of cultural identity per se, is definitely a facet of every culture. How cultures construct, view, and politicize gender lays the foundation for cultural identity. Public schools should help their students understand how gender is constructed, how gender is not rooted in biology, and how gender is related to economic and political power. Even if these weighty issues are not embedded into public school curricula, they can inform pedagogy. Educators can promote cultural identities that are egalitarian and humanistic.

If constructivism explains how cultural identity is formed, then humanism offers the goals toward which educators should strive. Assuming their critical role in cultural identity construction, educators begin to promote "a fundamental respect for all humans by virtue of being endowed with freedom of will, rational thinking, moral conscience, imaginative and creative powers," (Aloni 1999). Humanism can inform pedagogy on all levels, permitting dialogue that eliminates antagonism, bias, and all forms of inequity. The cultural identity that public schools promote is one that celebrates intelligent and critical debate. Open-mindedness can and should be a core feature of the American identity, which has been traditionally built on high ideals such as freedom, liberty, equality, and justice. Finally, culture "plays a central role in producing narratives, metaphors, and images that exercise a powerful pedagogical force over how people think of themselves and their relationship to others," (Giroux 1999). Educators can engage students, and vice-versa, to collectively create a better society.

References

Aloni, N. (1999). Humanistic education. Encyclopedia of Philosophy of Education. Retrieved Mar 24, 2007 at http://www.vusst.hr/ENCYCLOPAEDIA/main.htm

Giroux, H.A. (1999). Cultural studies as public pedagogy. Encyclopedia of Philosophy of Education. Retrieved Mar 24, 2007 at http://www.vusst.hr/ENCYCLOPAEDIA/main.htm

Mazzotti, T.B. (1999). Constructivism. Encyclopedia of Philosophy of Education. Retrieved Mar 24, 2007 at http://www.vusst.hr/ENCYCLOPAEDIA/main.htm


Sample Source(s) Used

References

Aloni, N. (1999). Humanistic education. Encyclopedia of Philosophy of Education. Retrieved Mar 24, 2007 at http://www.vusst.hr/ENCYCLOPAEDIA/main.htm

Giroux, H.A. (1999). Cultural studies as public pedagogy. Encyclopedia of Philosophy of Education. Retrieved Mar 24, 2007 at http://www.vusst.hr/ENCYCLOPAEDIA/main.htm

Mazzotti, T.B. (1999). Constructivism. Encyclopedia of Philosophy of Education. Retrieved Mar 24, 2007 at http://www.vusst.hr/ENCYCLOPAEDIA/main.htm

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Cultural Perceptions of Time in Africa Time

Pages: 15 (6951 words) Subject: Literature - African Document: #52859355

Cultural Perceptions of Time in Africa Time is a foundational factor in every culture. The perception of time is different for most cultures and the determining factor to those differences is often based on the means of production. "Most cultures have some concept of time, although the way they deal with time may differ fundamentally." (Kokole 1994, 35) Tracing the perception of the concept of time in Africa can be seen

Studyspark Study Document

Cultural Priorities

Pages: 2 (965 words) Sources: 2 Subject: Business - Advertising Document: #86992966

Cultural Priorities Affect Marketing Cultural Priorities - Marketing Author's note with contact information with more details on collegiate affiliation, etc. How Cultural Priorities Affect Marketing A key to any marketing strategy for any product or service is to know the target demographic very well. What is the use of marketing a product or service to a group of people about which one knows nothing? There is none; it is a waste of time,

Studyspark Study Document

Cultural Adaptation Following Hurricane Sandy Cultural Psychology

Pages: 4 (1072 words) Sources: 3 Subject: Weather Document: #82875508

Cultural Adaptation Following Hurricane Sandy Cultural Psychology and Adaption During Hurricane Sandy The objective of this study is to examine Hurricane Sandy and the adaptation of the population through the lens of the psychological cultural adaptation model. Cultural adaptation holds that evolutionary forces shape "innate genetically determined behaviors." (Boyd and Richerson, 2002) Stated specifically is the following: "Culture profoundly alters human evolution, but not because culture is learned. Rather, culture entails a novel evolutionary

Studyspark Study Document

Cultural Diversity Interview Narrative Cultural

Pages: 15 (4850 words) Sources: 4 Subject: Teaching Document: #8522541

While in high school, she worked as a waitress at a local diner. Most of the population was black, therefore there was little contact with white customers or employees. Margaret feels that she was socially isolated until the 1950s. She was not exposed to white culture; it was foreign to her. She was only exposed to black culture of the time. They were not allowed in certain stores, restaurants,

Studyspark Study Document

Identity Construction in Literary Texts

Pages: 30 (9748 words) Sources: 35 Subject: Literature Document: #59996303

Chokshi, Carter, Gupta, and Allen (1995) report that during the critical states of emergency, ongoing intermittently until 1989, a low-level police official could detain any individual without a hearing by for up to six months. "Thousands of individuals died in custody, frequently after gruesome acts of torture" Those who were tried were sentenced to death, banished, or imprisoned for life" (Chokshi, Carter, Gupta, & Allen, ¶ 6). The enactment

Studyspark Study Document

Cultural Differences of Adolescent in the United States

Pages: 10 (4157 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Sports - Drugs Document: #66223470

Cultural Differences of Adolescent in the United States The United States, ever since the time when its history began, has been an accumulation of different cultural patterns who took refuge here for independence in expressing the thoughts. Resiliency or adaptability is featured as a phenomenon of fruit yielding adaptability in spite of difficult or intimidating surrounding. In this paper we shall analyze the cultural differences among adolescents in the country. In

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".