Cultural Incongruities and Inequities of Schooling: Implications for Practice from Ethnographic Research?
- 1 November 1987
- journal article
- other
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Teacher Education
- Vol. 38 (6) , 9-15
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002248718703800602
Abstract
Ethnographic studies, like all research studies, provide no easy answers about what teachers should do. Zeuli and Floden support that general point by showing the complexities surrounding issues of cultural congruity. Although ethnographic studies sometimes reveal ways in which incongruity contributes to inequity, the research does not imply that teachers should always promote cultural congruity. Unless teacher educa tors understand the problems underly ing endorsements of cultural congruity, they may contribute to the miseducation of future teachers and their students.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Empowering Minority Students: A Framework for InterventionHarvard Educational Review, 1986
- The role of rhetoric in changing teachers' beliefsTeaching and Teacher Education, 1985
- What is Irrational About Knowledge UtilizationCurriculum Inquiry, 1985
- School Literacy, Reasoning, and Civility: An Anthropologist’s PerspectiveReview of Educational Research, 1984
- The Use of Research Knowledge in Teacher Education and TeachingAmerican Journal of Education, 1984
- Education Equals ChangeAnthropology & Education Quarterly, 1984
- Students' Misconceptions Interfere with Science Learning: Case Studies of Fifth-Grade StudentsThe Elementary School Journal, 1984
- The development and use of culturally appropriate curriculum for American Indian studentsPeabody Journal of Education, 1983
- Can Ethnographic Research Go Beyond the Status Quo?Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 1983
- Social Organizational Factors in Learning to Read: The Balance of Rights HypothesisReading Research Quarterly, 1981