Equity in Schools Begins With Changing Mindsets
Equity in Schools Begins With Changing Mindsets
A new book explores how school leaders can foster equity by building a
culture where teachers and students see their purpose and experience success.
The single variable that best predicts students’ sense of belonging is their
relationship with teachers. This is more important than their race, socioeconomic
status, academic achievement, and their relationships with peers. Strong
teacher-student relationships can mitigate the cumulative effects of misbehavior,
apathy, and failure due to poor teacher-student relationships. By improving
students’ motivation, engagement, academic self-regulation, and overall
achievement, teacher-student relationships offer schools continual opportunities to
support students’ learning.
Framing Equity
1. Create a space where people enjoy themselves and can do things that
interest them. For students, this means a variety of course options, multiple
extracurricular activities, and innovative, hands-on learning experiences. For
teachers this may mean variety in teaching assignments, autonomous
decision-making, and opportunities to develop new classes.
2. Keep your revised equity-focused vision and mission at the core of school
functioning. Clearly and consistently communicate your vision and explain how
every decision contributes to the realization of the vision. The key here is
transparency and honesty when explaining the utility of a particular assignment or
class to students, and a new policy to staff.
School Policies
This is especially true for English language learners (ELLs), who, after being
assessed in English, are frequently sorted into academic tracks that do not reflect
their true capabilities. Some multilingual students are mainstreamed into courses
with English-speaking students and are pulled out for intensive English instruction.
Others experience full English immersion and receive no English instruction. In
both cases, students are given far fewer OTLs because they are not receiving
instruction in their heritage language and, in the case of pull-out programs, are
missing content area instruction while receiving English language instruction.
References:
Whitaker, M. (2022, April 12). Equity in Schools Begins with Changing Mindsets.
Edutopia. Retrieved October 3, 2022, from
https://www.edutopia.org/article/equity-schools-begins-changing-mindsets