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Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty
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Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Dec 27, 2015

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Page 1: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty

Page 2: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Four Agreements Stay Engaged

Experience Discomfort

Speak Your Truth

Expect/ Accept Non-Closure

Page 3: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

What do you think of when you hear the word “race”?

Race is socially constructed meaning to a variety of physical attributes including but not limited to skin, eye color, hair texture, and bone structures of people

Page 4: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Racism is beliefs and enactment of beliefs that one set of characteristics is superior to another set ( e.g. white skin, blonde hair and blue eyes are more beautiful than brown skin , brown eyes, and brown hair).

Page 5: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Racist is anyone who has a hatred or intolerance of another race or other races.

Page 6: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Why must there be Passion, Practice and Persistence when discussing differences?

Passion is defined as the level of connectedness educators bring to anti-racism work and to district, school or classroom equity transformation.

Page 7: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Practice refers to the essential individual and institutional actions taken to effectively educate every student to his or her full potential.

Persistence involves time and energy. Persistence at the institutional level is the willingness of a school system to “stick with it” despite slow results.

Page 8: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Reflection

What can you recall about the events and conversations related to race, race relations, and/or racism that may have impacted your current perspective and or experiences?

Page 9: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Reflection

To what extent does being white impact your personal life?

Page 10: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Reflection

Consider your own affiliations, such as your workplace, religious institution, social club and recreational places that you frequent. What is the racial composition? If racial diversity exists, are tensions present due to race or racial differences? In what ways has this been addressed or not addressed? If little racial diversity exist, why is this the case?

Page 11: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Institutionalized Racism- Racism becomes institutionalized when organization remain unconscious of issues related to race.

Page 12: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Anti-racism can be defined as conscious and deliberate efforts to challenge the impact and perpetuation of institutional White racial power.

Page 13: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Educational Equity is raising the achievement of all students while narrowing the gaps and elimination the racial predictability and disproportionality of student groups.

Page 14: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Multi-racial in America

Multiracial in America - U.S. news - Gut Check -

msnbc.com

Page 15: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.
Page 16: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

• Poverty occurs in all races.

Key Point

Page 17: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

What are the poverty guidelines?

Personsin Family or Household

2008 2007

1 $10,400 $10,210

2 $14,000 $13,690

3 $17,600 $17,170

4 $21,200 $20,650

5 $24,800 $24,130

6 $28,400 $27,610

7 $32,000 $31,090

8 $35,600 $34,570

Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2008). The 2008 HHS Poverty Guidelines. http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/index.shtml

Page 18: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Does the percentage of children in low-income families vary by where the children live?

48% of children in urban areas—9.4 million—live in low-income families. 31% of children in suburban areas—9.9 million—live in low-income families. 47% of children in rural areas—5.2 million—live in low-income families.

Source: National Center for Children in Poverty. www.nccp.org/publications/pub_762.html

© National Center for Children in Poverty. Basic Facts About Low-Income Children: Birth to Age 18.

Type of Area

Page 19: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Understanding Differences

•It is essential to separate cultural issues of poverty from issues of race or ethnicity.

•People of poverty-irrespective of race- have their own unique set of behaviors, beliefs and ways of living that is transmitted from generation to generation.

•Educators must be willing to accept differences in learning readiness and preparation as well as behavioral and communication styles that students bring to school.

•Educators must not assume that all students should come with the types of behaviors values, social and material resources, and world views that may be the norm in middle class.

Page 20: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Acceptance of the Difference that Students Bring

•True acceptance recognizes that the behavior of some may be quite different from what is normally expected.

Recognize Middle Class Values

•It is helpful for educators who come from the middle class to recognize middle class values.

•Most teachers are females who are ethnically and socio-economically different from the students they teach in poor communities.

•Educators may be similar in ethnicity and may have come from the culture of poverty but adopted middle class values and sometimes have difficulty relating to students from poverty.

Page 21: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Reflection

How does your school ensure that all students have equitable opportunities to learn and achieve at the highest level possible?

Page 22: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Discussion Questions

What are your beliefs regarding children and families from the culture of poverty?

How do your beliefs impact your empathy for these children and your acceptance for the differences that may be frustrating?

Page 23: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.
Page 24: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Visualize the world from which your most difficult students come.

Select a student that you have now or in the past.

Draw a visual representation of that student’s world. Think about his home, his family structure, resources and support systems.

Page 25: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Accommodating Differences in the Approach to Instruction

The culture of poverty fosters a dependence on family and community

To respond…

•The wise teacher will nurture a family relationship in the classroom that encourages interdependence and collaboration among students.

•Educators foster positive relationships with the families of all students

•Accommodation involves going to families if they are reluctant to come to the school.

•Teachers provide meaningful activities that students can do at home.

Page 26: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.
Page 27: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

All Children Can Learn

•Teachers will succeed when they believe and know that all children can learn, no matter where they come from.

•There must be a match between how students of poverty function in the classroom with how they function in their world.

•Learning activities must build on the strengths of individual students.

Page 28: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Consider this….

Why is it important to affirm the strengths of students from poverty?

Affirming Differences

Affirming differences and recognizing strengths within children from poverty will bridge the gap to help boost them to higher levels of achievement in school

Do not place students at a disadvantage

Schools cannot close economic disparities, but they must ensure that differential preparation does not place some students at a disadvantage.

Page 29: Courageous Conversation about Race and Poverty. Four Agreements Stay Engaged Experience Discomfort Speak Your Truth Expect/ Accept Non-Closure.

Discussion Questions

How is it that schools are designed to benefit the HAVES and how they continue to make it difficult for the HAVE-NOTS?

How can schools make accommodations that affirm students who come from the culture of poverty?