Chapter 6
Achievement gaps between ethnic groups can lead to long-term opportunity gaps for many students of color, and ultimately to education gaps such as lower rates of school completion. In recent years, high school completion rates were highest among:
Asian and Pacific Islanders
According to the best-documented evidence concerning gender bias in teaching, which of the children will probably receive the least amount of attention from the teacher in class?
Cassandra, a high-achieving girl
Socioeconomic status (SES) and school achievement are often correlated. Which one of the following statements is NOT true regarding the relationship between SES and levels of achievement?
Children who are poor are no more likely to be kept back in school than children who are not.
Cole is about to finish the third grade. His mother, a single parent, lost her job during the school year, and Cole's grades subsequently plummeted. His mother has only been able to find part-time work and is relying on government subsidy to meet the most basic needs. Cole's teachers know he is bright, and he is rarely absent. What is the most likely reason that Cole is performing at a lower level?
Cole may be experiencing stress at home with the loss of economic resources.
Damon, an African American student in Diane Collins's math class, pushed his math test away after a few minutes and proclaimed, "This is stupid. I don't know why we even have to do this." What is Ms. Collins most likely to think?
Damon may be exhibiting performance-avoidance goals because he doesn't want to look dumb.
gender biases
Different views of males and females, often favoring one gender over the other.
Which one of the following statements best summarizes a key research finding about gender?
Even before going to school, children are more likely to encounter texts that over-represent males.
Culturally Relevant Pedagogy
Excellent teaching for students of color that includes academic success, developing/maintaining cultural competence, and developing a critical consciousness to challenge the status quo.
Ms. Nussbaum has students from many different cultural backgrounds in her sixth-grade class. Which of these assignments would be the best way for Ms. Nussbaum to promote multicultural education successfully in her classroom?
For the class unit on nutrition, ask students to bring a recipe for their favorite food traditionally eaten by their family.
The following teachers work with children in a school district that is composed predominantly of low-income families. Which teacher is most likely to develop caring relationships with the students?
Mr. Moreno uses inclusive language ("our class," "our rules").
Researchers argue that two strands of elements bind students to their classroom community: self-agency and connected relationships. Which of the following teachers is most clearly encouraging the academic self-efficacy component of the self-agency strand?
Mr. Abasolo, who has a diverse group of learners who regularly tackle challenging tasks, with his help
Which of the following teachers has the most culturally compatible classroom, based on the information given here?
Mr. Britt, who asks his students for anonymous suggestions to improve the classroom atmosphere through a suggestion box on his desk, and asks parents what values their family embraces during parent-teacher conferences.
Ms. Martin has decided that she will ask each of her fifth-grade students to interview a student in another class about a time when they felt left out or excluded because of their gender, age, race, or socioeconomic status (SES). Then, she will ask her students to share these stories, and she will lead a discussion about the everyday effects of discrimination. Which of the five dimensions of multicultural education posited by James Banks does this activity address?
Prejudice reduction
Mr. James has been assigned to teach second grade on a Native American reservation. Within his first 2 weeks of teaching, Mr. James is bemused because the group techniques he used with his students in Boston—who were mostly White and from the upper class—are not working with these particular children. He notices that the ways the children interact are different, and their social expectations for each other and for him seem to be different. Based on dimensions outlined by Tharp (1989), which dimension of his classroom should Mr. James modify to make it more culturally compatible?
Social organization
Jack is a high-achieving student from a family that is upper middle class. When the principal came to observe Jack's class in the middle of the semester, she noticed that the teacher gives Jack a tremendous amount of attention, often calling on him and praising him for correct answers. However, when the principal brought up the issue privately, the teacher said she had no idea she was favoring Jack. Which of the following choices would be best for the principal to do to help correct the situation?
Talk to the teacher about watching for any unintended biases in her classroom practices.
Educators often assume students are not bright because they have inadequate resources at home. This inadequacy manifests itself as a lack of familiarity with school-related activities. When this occurs, what is the likely outcome?
Teachers may have low expectations that have a negative impact on future academic success.
To avoid gender bias in his fourth-grade classroom, Mr. Bonner used gender-free language, provided positive role models, and ensured that all students had opportunities to engage in various activities by rotating classroom jobs and activities. His school was also experimenting with single-sex classrooms. Next year, Mr. Bonner thought he might opt to teach in one of those classrooms. Which of the following statements concerning single-sex classrooms is NOT true?
Teachers must use teaching strategies that are geared specifically for students of a particular sex.
Which of the following is involved in culturally relevant pedagogy?
Teaching that helps students develop a critical consciousness to challenge the status quo
Sociolinguistics
The study of the formal and informal rules for how, when, about what, to whom, and how long to speak in conversations within cultural groups.
Scores on standardized achievement tests in the last 30 years indicate that:
White students score better than both Black and Hispanic students, but the gap is narrowing.
Ethnicity
a cultural heritage shared by a group of people
Minority Group
a group of people who have been socially disadvantaged - not always a minority in actual numbers
growth mindset
a personally held belief that abilities are unstable, controllable and improvable
Race
a socially constructed category of people who share biologically transmitted traits that members of a society consider important
When students are in situations that provoke stereotype threat, they tend to:
adopt performance avoidance
Sexual orientation is an important part of most individuals' identities, especially if it is not heterosexual. Research suggests that adults with homosexual or bisexual orientation often report that:
as adolescents, they recognized attractions toward same-sex peers and felt unsure or confused.
gender roles
behaviors and characteristics that the culture stereotypically associates with being male or female.
Aspects of self-agency that help students to develop a strong sense of classroom community and experience academic success include all of the following EXCEPT:
caring teacher-student relationships.
The knowledge, values, and attitudes that guide the behavior of a group of people make up its:
culture
multicultural education
education that promotes equity in the schooling of all students
Abeer is a smart third-grader in a class where she is the only student of color. Her teacher is experienced and open-minded about diversity and so goes out of her way to call on Abeer more often than she might if Abeer were White, even when her hand is not raised. The teacher is best described as:
engaging in discrimination
By the time they are grade-school age, children's gender schemas typically include their:
expectations about appropriate gender-conforming behaviors.
Resistance culture
group values and beliefs about refusing to adopt the behaviors and attitudes of the majority culture
Rani has just moved to the United States from a Middle Eastern country where most women remain at home, serving their husbands and taking care of their children. She seems confused when she is asked to perform the same school tasks as her male classmates. Rani's confusion likely reflects:
her gender schema.
Arrow is a student in Mr. Simms' 10th-grade biology class. Arrow is transgender, and although originally raised as a girl, Arrow currently dresses like a boy and prefers to use "they" as his personal pronoun. Mr. Simms notes that Arrow is frequently the target of teasing, which often crosses the line into bullying. He meets with the school principal to ask what sorts of policies can help protect Arrow. The most accurate reply that the principal can give is that current U.S. law regarding transgender students:
is not very clear, with some states challenging laws designed to prevent discrimination.
LGBTQ
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning
When Guang, a Chinese American high school senior, met his calculus teacher, the teacher said, "I bet you'll be the best in the class." The teacher intended his comment to be a compliment. Guang recalled that his precalculus teacher said the same thing when she met him at the beginning of his junior year. These stereotypical comments are likely to make Guang feel:
like a perpetual foreigner
Research suggests that tracking students into different classes based on achievement or expected future plans leads to:
lower achievement of low-track students and higher achievement of high-track students.
Intersectionality
overlapping, intersecting social identities
Cultural intersectionality refers to the idea that:
people have multiple, overlapping social identities.
If a person has rigid, irrational beliefs and negative feelings about a particular category of people, researchers describe the person as:
prejudiced.
"A socially constructed category of people who share certain physical characteristics that members of a society have considered important" is the way researchers define:
race
Experimentally controlled research suggests that children in single-sex classrooms are most likely to:
recognize and reinforce gender differences.
stereotype
schema that organizes knowledge or perceptions about a category
When teaching in a classroom with a high percentage of students who are living in poverty, teachers are well advised to:
set and maintain high expectations.
Kana works hard and spends a lot of time studying to earn high grades in physics. But she anxiously believes the other students think she received high grades because she is Asian American. Kana's anxiety is representative of a student who carries the additional "emotional burden" of:
stereotype threat
Researchers have suggested that some students with low SES may become part of a resistance culture in which:
students refuse to adopt the behaviors and attitudes of the majority culture
Cultural discontinuity is a term used by researchers to describe a process in which:
the cultural values that a child learns at home are not reflected in the school culture.
Stereotype threat
the extra emotional and cognitive burden that your performance in an academic situation might confirm a stereotype that others hold about you
Participation Structures
the formal and informal rules for how to take part in a given activity
sexual orientation
the gender(s) that a person is attracted to emotionally, physically, sexually, and romantically
Culture
the knowledge, skills, rules, norms, practices, traditions, self-definitions, institutions, language, and values that shape and guide beliefs and behavior in a particular group of people as well as the art, literature, folklore, and artifacts produced and passed down to the next generation.
On average, children living in low-income families differ in educational achievement from those living in middle-income and high-income families. The factor that likely contributes the most to this "gap" in achievement is:
the resources available to the child's family.
Pragmatics
the rules for when and how to use language to be an effective communicator in a particular culture
gender identity
the sense of self as male or female as well as the beliefs one has about gender roles and attributes
The primary reason that young children develop prejudiced views is that:
they learn beliefs and values from their cultural group
In a metaphor comparing culture to an iceberg, what aspects of culture could be described as the visible tip of the iceberg?
traditional dress and holiday costumes
Discrimination
treating or acting unfairly toward particular categories of people
socioeconomic status (SES)
variations of wealth, power, control over resources, and prestige
Researchers determine a person's socioeconomic status based on a combination of factors, including:
wealth, power, and prestige.