What is Multicultural/Diverse Perspective Instruction?
The United States is becoming an increasingly pluralistic country. The traditional
numerics of "majority" and "minority" are rapidly changing (Hodgkinson, 1985). Many
educators, sensitive to the needs of students who must be able to function emotionally and
academically in our pluralistic society, recognize the need to expose students to
instruction based on multicultural/diverse perspectives - that is to say, instruction that
is not limited to an Anglo-American perspective (Duff & Tongchinsub, 1990).
According to Banks (1990), multicultural/diverse perspective instruction is comprised
of three different and important dimensions. The three dimensions are related to content
integration, knowledge construction, and an equity pedagogy. A brief description of each
dimension follows:
Content Integration
Sensitive, accurate, and non-biased content representing a variety of cultures and
groups should be used to illustrate key concepts, principles, generalizations, and
theories.
Knowledge Construction
As students construct knowledge about the content, they must be helped to view
concepts, issues, and problems from diverse cultural perspectives. The mainstream-centric
perspective is only one of several perspectives from which concepts, issues, or problems
are viewed.
An Equity Pedagogy
To ensure equity for all students, teachers must modify their teaching in ways that
will facilitate the academic achievement of students from diverse racial, cultural,
gender, and social-class groups.
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