Hedley CIS
Sunday, 28 April 2013
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Monday, 18 March 2013
Glossary
Culture: the shared values, history, customs etc of a people.
Diversity: differences e.g. race, gender, economic status, religion etc.
Cultural diversity: a multicultural society where it is
understood that each individual is different re. race, gender, economic status,
religion, physical abilities etc. When this occurs we have social harmony i.e. peaceful co-existence of people
from different backgrounds. In such a society there will be cross-cultural communication, where people from
differing backgrounds can communicate and avoid conflicts and can even adopt
aspects of other cultures i.e. acculturation. In
this type of society there will be a widely-shared belief in human rights, basic freedoms which belong to all
people regardless of colour, language, religion etc.
Bias:
Culture shock:
Demographics:
Discrimination:
Ethnic group:
Ethnocentricity:
Expatriate:
Stereotyping:
Tuesday, 5 March 2013
Blue-eyed v brown-eyed
We watched a short video, just over
an hour long, about a class reunion in Riceville, Ohio, in 1984. The class were
re-united with their 3rd grade teacher and together they watched a
film of lessons they had received from this teacher 16 years earlier.
In 1968, following the assassination
of Dr Martin Luther King, she tried an experimental lesson, dividing her class
into blue-eyed and brown-eyed children. On the first day she gave special
privileges to the blue-eyed children, at the same time imposing restrictions on
the brown-eyed children. On the following day she reversed the process,
favouring the brown-eyed children and discriminating against the blue-eyed.
The reaction of the children was
startling. Divisions, mistrust, resentment were all clearly evident in a
previously harmonious, cohesive and cheery cohort.
On the third day, the teacher got the
group back together, asked for their reactions and put across the point that
being discriminated against, for eye/skin colour, ethnicity or whatever, was a
deeply unpleasant experience.
As a teacher, I worried about the
possible effects of such (admittedly temporary) alienation on very young,
impressionable children. However, when the teacher got the class back re-united
on the 3rd day, they all seemed to agree with her about the negative
aspects of discrimination. When the adults, viewing themselves as children,
were asked whether the lesson they had learned had been worth the agony of the
learning experience, they unanimously said yes.
237 words
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