Daddy & me

Daddy & me

Saturday, June 23, 2012

What I have Learned


The one hope I have while working with children and families who come from a diverse background is to be able to relate to them and to bridge any gaps in communication. I would like each and every person to feel comfortable in my classroom and with me.

One goal I would set for myself in relation to the early childhood field related to issues of diversity, equity and social justice is to teach children to love themselves and to respect other people that might be different than them.  I would like to teach children to detect stereotypes and biases and how to deal with such issues when confronted with them.

I would like to thank all of my colleagues for their participation is this course because I have been able to experience different viewpoints and have learned from each of you.  I wish you well in your future endeavors and hope that many of you are taking the same class that starts June 25th.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Week 7 Blog


Poem



Children’s Childhood is a time of innocence while they play and discover.

There are so many things that interfere with this wonderful time of growth that hinder and destroy children’s fragile beings.

Stereotypes and biases are absorbed from adults that don’t know any better that destroys the healthy development of our young citizens.

Children find themselves in circumstances that are devastating to their very survival.

What can we do to make a change so that children grow to be fair and just toward one another?

What can we do to change the traumatic situations that children face in the world today?

What can we do to change the circumstances of learning for children?

We as adults can search inside and remember our childhoods and find what injustices we experienced and witnessed and try and cleanse ourselves free of them.

We as a society can make the change to remove the difficulties that are faced by our children today.  

Then we will be in a better place to interact and teach the youth of today.

 We can teach the young to stand up against racism, sexism and all the” isms” that exist today making our world a better place.

If everyone would take a stand for social justice today we can restore to the children their innocence for tomorrow.

I will start with ME today.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Start Seeing Diversity Blog: We Don't Say Those Words in Class


One day I was in Walmart in the check-out line there was a mother and her two children in front of me.  The two children were laughing and pointing at the woman that was in front of their mother.  She was obese and was wearing a pair of shorts.  Their mother noticed them laughing and pointing and said to them to be quiet and stop it and shot them a very stern look.  The children stopped. 

I am quite sure the children realized that they should not laugh at people in public due to the way their mother responded to them.  I don’t know if she later sat down and had a conversation with them about the woman.  If I were their mother I would have talked to them about other people’s feelings and that giggling and pointing at someone could cause them to feel sad or it might make them cry.

If I were these children’s teacher I would have discussed with them about people having different body types and that each of us is different from each other. I would also have the children look in books and magazines and have them find people that are skinny, tall, short, big, etc.  I would have them identify their own body type and the body types of their family so that they are familiar with what body types mean.   I would have discussed treating everyone with respect because everyone deserves to be treated this way.  I would have discussed how the other person might have felt when they realized they were being laughed at.