Culturally responsive pedagogies in the classroom: indigenous student experiences across the curriculum

Reference

Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2011, 39 (3), pp. 183 - 198 (16)

Degree Grantor

Abstract

There is agreement that teaching practices should be responsive to the cultural identities of their students, but less clarity regarding both the specifics of culturally responsive pedagogies and effective strategies for implementing them in classrooms across the curriculum. A mixed-methods research approach evaluated the impact of teacher professional development to instil culturally responsive pedagogies in secondary classrooms. Results are reported based on systematic observations of over 400 classrooms at 32 mainstream schools across different subjects and interviews with 214 indigenous Māori students. The majority of teachers showed evidence of culturally responsive practices, and students were able to describe examples of teachers caring for them as culturally located individuals. Implications are discussed for teacher professional development designed to impact student achievement including the limitations of relying on teacher change alone for school reform to make a difference for students.

Description

DOI

10.1080/1359866X.2011.588311

Keywords

culturally responsive pedagogy, indigenous students, secondary student classroom experiences, teacher professional development

ANZSRC 2020 Field of Research Codes

Collections

Rights

Copyright: Routledge / Taylor & Francis