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Ethnography in Education:
Teachers Learn the Culture of Education Some teachers thought The House that Crack Built might not be appropriate reading material for their elementary school students. But research presented at the recent Ethnography in Education Research Forum held at the University of Pennsylvania, suggested that the illustrated book by Clark Taylor -- as well as others about the Holocaust, racial bigotry and gender issues -- were more familiar and more welcomed by students than teachers imagined. Throughout sessions, researchers presented about 100 papers on a range of topics that focused on the effect of culture on education. All used ethnographic methods, meaning they studied smaller sample sizes and did qualitative, not quantitative research. The research largely focused on whether where learning takes place -- inside or outside of the classroom -- affects the learning process itself. "Learning is part of every practice," keynote speaker and University of California at Berkeley Professor Jean Lave said. "It's part of educational, institutional practice - (but) where we have a harder time seeing learning is as part of everyday practice. Learning is a part of all social procedure." The study of controversiaI literature for children focused on a different angle of learning. Researchers spoke not only about how children responded to multicultural literature, but also about how teachers reacted to the same works. "The teachers, we found, were very cautious,"Sage Colleges Professor Peter McDermott said. McDermott, along with other researchers, questioned teachers before and after playing recordings of student's reactions to the books. "(There was a) switch from broad ideas to a social, emotional and personal response that (the teachers) didn't show the first time they responded to the stories," Sage College Professor Kim Baker added. "We think it got teachers thinking about diversity themselves -- the teacher has to be a mediator between children and literature." Teachers, like the professors who presented papers, came to the conference to gain a better understanding of how culture impacts the ideas and aptitude children bring to the classroom. "I think it's really important to examine relationships between students and teachers, and teachers' knowledge and capacity," said forum attendee Stephanie Spencer, principal of Hampton Elementary School in Lutherville, Md. "When students' results go up everyone is happy, but the question is why (they go up). It's not just what you know, but teacher relationships, discourse," Spencer continued. "These are the things that I am looking to bring back to my teachers. How can I better support them in the work they do every day?" (C) 1999 Daily Pennsylvanian
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