As an educator it is important to realize that we take ourselves into the classroom. With that we also take our biases with us. Though we may not realize it they are apart of us that help process our decision-making. As an educator we progress every day with our professional experiences, but often not it is our personal and social identities that can influence our teaching. As fresh out of college teacher our knowledge is limited with the curriculum that our school places on us, so we learn alongside the students. However, as we teach and gain knowledge over the years, we start to use our bias on the knowledge that is gathered throughout those years and start to question and feel discouraged on how much knowledge our students really know. Some will say knowledge is power but sometimes that power can cause harm to our students. We start to question their ability to fundamentally understand the information that is placed upon them and that makes them feel discouraged on wanting to learn. As teachers and educators, we need to learn that just because we know the knowledge from teaching that information over there years, we ourselves have to understand that the students coming into the classroom on that first day do not have the knowledge or the understanding of that material.
To the students everything is new so we must have patience and understanding that it will take time for them to understand the material in a way that we understand it. With that our experiences of being a student can bring in nostalgia as we teach something that was once taught to us. There is nothing wrong with wanting to feel nostalgic about teaching a certain curriculum or topic, but if we give into that nostalgia, it can harm the students and become counterproductive. We become trapped in what seems like a loop of feelings because one previous class had such excellent work, but the current class doesn’t meet that kind of expectations. That is when nostalgia becomes deadly because then we start to focus on what the current students lack instead of what their strengths are. We need to understand that not every class is going to be the same and not every sibling, cousin, or family member related to each other that comes into your classroom is going to act the same way.
There are so many ways biases can impact the way we teach and interact with our students. I, however, do not want my biases to impact the way my students learn. Each person has their own biases and their own experiences that they bring into that school building and into that classroom. I am aware that my biases make me naive in certain aspects of life. What I do have control over, and you as well, is how we use our knowledge on what we do know and what we don’t know. When it comes to my teaching in the English Language Arts, I want all my students to know that I will bring in knowledge that represents them. Reflecting and becoming aware of your biases is the first step in becoming a great teacher and educator for your students.
To help with teaching the impact I will have on my students it all comes down to what exactly I teach. Changing the texts every few years to get new insight on how students think will keep me in the position of a learn alongside my students. Implementing texts that resonate with students of all backgrounds can help improve their overall experience in the classroom, and it teaches other students about those experience creating new ones. Keeping work from students of previous years can help show students that not everybody thinks alike, and each one had their own opinion on the information that was given. It also shows them that they have that kind of ability within themselves as well. We need to understand that our own experiences can affect the way we teach and interact.
Ebarvia, T., Cherry-Paul, S., Johnson, A., Osborn, A., Parker, K. N., & Silvas, T. (2024). Get free: Anti-bias literacy instruction for stronger readers, writers, and thinkers. Corwin, a SAGE Company.
Thanks for your post, Bec! You’ve made some great points about the ways biases can impact our teaching—and the ways we can take an antibias stance in our curriculum design and interactions with students. You also highlight the necessity of adopting an asset-based stance, rather than a deficit perspective. Yes! And kudos for articulating a strong argument for books as mirrors, windows, and sliding glass doors.
ReplyDeleteMy only recommendation for this post would be to actually name the common teacher biases Ebarvia describes. For example, you discuss the curse of knowledge bias but don’t actually name it. And be sure to cite pages numbers in the text, so your readers can go to that part of the text to explore further.
You do name the nostalgia bias (excellent!), and you reflect on how it can manifest in our teaching and relationships with students. Nice work!