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El. knyga: White Women Getting Real About Race: Their Stories About What They Learned Teaching in Diverse Classrooms

Edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: 208 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Jul-2023
  • Leidėjas: Stylus Publishing
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000975734
  • Formatas: 208 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Jul-2023
  • Leidėjas: Stylus Publishing
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000975734

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For many White women teachers and teachers in training – who represent the majority of our teaching force today – the issue of race is fraught with discomfort. It may challenge assumptions, evoke a sense of guilt, or give rise to a fear of making mistakes or saying the wrong thing.

This book presents the first-person stories of White women teachers who tell us not only how they have grappled with race in diverse classrooms, but how they continue to this day to be challenged by issues of color and privilege.

These are no stories of heroic feats or achievement of perfection, but stories of self-disclosure that lay bare their authors’ emotions, ideas, curiosity, vulnerability, and reflections as they engaged with race, and challenged practices of color blindness and empathetic distance. Avoiding abstract educational lingo, these teachers come clean about the emotional cost of dealing with racism, White privilege, and fear of being racist in our rapidly diversifying schools. Admitting their cultural mistakes, they hope their readers can find a safe place to use theirs for honest dialogue and positive learning.

In approaching chapter authors for this book, the editors asked the writers to ask themselves, “Will my well-being and sense of self be at risk if I tell this story?” Recognizing what’s at stake, they wanted writers who would be real with themselves.

The women in this book hope that their stories will resonate with readers, help them feel less alone, and give them courage to begin a dialogue with colleagues, friends, staff and administrators around race concerns.

Each chapter concludes with a few questions to prompt self-reflection at home, or for use as exercises to use in small groups or staff development training.

For many White women teachers and teachers in training – who represent the majority of our teaching force today – the issue of race is fraught with discomfort. It may challenge assumptions, evoke a sense of guilt, or give rise to a fear of making mistakes or saying the wrong thing.This book presents the first-person stories of White women teachers who tell us not only how they have grappled with race in diverse classrooms, but how they continue to this day to be challenged by issues of color and privilege. These are no stories of heroic feats or achievement of perfection, but stories of self-disclosure that lay bare their authors’ emotions, ideas, curiosity, vulnerability, and reflections as they engaged with race, and challenged practices of color blindness and empathetic distance. Avoiding abstract educational lingo, these teachers come clean about the emotional cost of dealing with racism, White privilege, and fear of being racist in our rapidly diversifying schools. Admitting their cultural mistakes, they hope their readers can find a safe place to use theirs for honest dialogue and positive learning.In approaching chapter authors for this book, the editors asked the writers to ask themselves, “Will my well-being and sense of self be at risk if I tell this story?” Recognizing what’s at stake, they wanted writers who would be real with themselves.The women in this book hope that their stories will resonate with readers, help them feel less alone, and give them courage to begin a dialogue with colleagues, friends, staff and administrators around race concerns. Each chapter concludes with a few questions to prompt self-reflection at home, or for use as exercises to use in small groups or staff development training.



This book presents the first-person stories of White women teachers who tell us not only how they have grappled with race in diverse classrooms, but how they continue to this day to be challenged by issues of color and privilege.

Recenzijos

The women writing the chapters of this volume are so different, one from the other, so intricate in their knowledge and understanding, and so open in describing their failures and mistakes, that they present us with a panoply of experiences. And from this panoply we take a selection of lessons learned. We extract from each chapter things we can take with us and incorporate into our lives and teaching.

Each of these women is a self-reflective person. Perhaps, more than anything else, the cumulative effect of being in the presence of such willing self-reflection and the innovation that comes from it, is the most important lesson to be learned here. It is through such reflective work that change is made, that progress happens. These White women show us how it can be done."

Julie Landsman, speaker and consultant, with extensive taeching experience in Minnesota Public School and Universities

Acknowledgments ix
Foreword xi
Julie Landsman
Introduction 1(4)
Judith M. James
Nancy Peterson
1 Human Error
5(12)
Bridget Christianson
2 For The Love Of Clowns
17(16)
Judith M. James
3 Look For Connections---They Are There Adrift
33(12)
Kathleen Tindle
4 Of Privilege, Approval, And A Savior Complex
45(12)
Kat Griffith
5 My All-American Birthright
57(12)
Rachel Stephens
6 The Screen Door
69(18)
Race Around an Ordinary Life
Nancy Peterson
7 "Saber Dos Lenguas Es Saber Dos Mundos"
87(14)
Thoughts From a White Bilingual Educator
Peggy Semingson
8 Piano Lessons
101(14)
A White Teacher Struggles to Share the Spotlight
Tara L. Affolter
9 Tap Dancing On Tile
115(14)
Sidestepping Failure at Guilford Elementary School
Kat Richter
10 A Question Of Balance
129(12)
My Journey of Cultural Evolution
Tabitha Dell'Angelo
11 The Myth Of The Lone Hero
141(14)
How a School in Brooklyn Taught Me to Stay With a Broken Heart
Sharon J. Barnett
12 Paying Attention To Racial Matters
155(18)
Personal and Professional Development
Terri A. Karis
Contributors 173(4)
Index 177
Judith M. James is a diversity consultant with her own company, Diversity Works. Her company facilitates the development of intercultural communications among different ethnic, racial, and cultural groups. Dr. James has worked in K -12 districts for over 20 years as a teacher, staff development trainer, and administrator. She has also worked in higher education for the last seven years teaching classes for educators and communication classes for students interested in becoming more interculturally competent. Beside her work in diversity, Judith is currently a test administrator for the University of Minnesota. Nancy Peterson who is now retired, taught early childhood special education (ECSE) in Minneapolis Public Schools for 30 years. She writes poetry and memoir and has been part of an interracial family for 33 years. She is working on racial awareness and social justice with groups in the organization she co-founded, Winds of Change. Julie Landsman has taught in Minneapolis Public Schools for 25 years. She has also been a visiting Professor at Carleton College in Northfield Minnesota, and an adjunct professor at Hamline University and Metro State University in St. Paul. She is the author of numerous books on race and education and a frequent speaker and consultant around the country and abroad. She can be reached through her website at jlandsman.com