If It's Not Worth Saying in English, It's Not Worth Saying at All
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.11575/jet.v42i3.52430Résumé
As a Teacher's Assistant at university and a sponsor of student-teachers, I have learnt that teacher education programs do include discussions and activities around diversity and social justice. What remains untapped are teachers' abilities to recognize their own prejudices. This paper starts as an autobiographical piece. It tracks my teaching experience in a multicultural school where nearly 40% of the student population is identified as English as a Second Language. It shows that language can be a factor more prevalent in triggering discrimination than skin colour and that all five senses can prompt prejudice. For example, speaking Cantonese or Mandarin even in the hallways has become unacceptable for some staff members. The second half of my paper makes recommendations on how new teachers can address their own hidden prejudices by involving their students in classroom activities and community projects that focus on social justice.
Téléchargements
Publié-e
Numéro
Rubrique
Licence
The Journal of Educational Thought retains first publication rights for all articles. The Journal grants reproduction rights for noncommercial educational purposes with the provision that full acknowledgement of the work’s source be noted on each copy. The Journal will redirect to the appropriate authors any inquiries for further commercial publication of individual articles. All authors wishing to publish in JET will be asked to fill in and sign a Consent to Publish and Transfer of Copyright agreement.
Authors must affirm that any submission to JET has not been and will not be published or submitted elsewhere while under considration by JET.