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5.4: The Culturally Responsive Lens

  • Page ID
    215074
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    You can also use the Culturally Responsive Strength-Based (CRSB) Framework, which is used by Head Start, to address diversity. This framework presents the big picture and identifies the program pieces that support the growth and development of all children.

    A graphic showing a hand holding a plant. The soil the plant is growing in is in the palm of the hand. 

The soil is labeled as Culture and Language. The stem is labeled as Positive & Goal Oriented Relationships. The leaves are labeled as Services, Systems, and Family Engagement. The flower is purple with a yellow center. It is labeled as Child and Family Outcomes.

There are six yellow boxes pointing to each element of the plant. They read as follows: 

CHILD AND FAMILY
OUTCOMES: the concrete observable markers of progress that children birth to five make towards school readiness and the goals that families achieve.

SERVICES: the elements of a child’s experience that derive from a learning environment and her/ his relationship with the adults
in that learning environment, including intentional and responsive teaching practices as well as health and other services to support school readiness goals.

CULTURE: the knowledge, rules, traditions, values, and beliefs shared through spoken language, behaviors, and practices. Revisiting and Updating the Multicultural Principles for Head Start Programs Serving Children Ages Birth to Five (MCP) provides a platform for a process of self-reflection that becomes the foundation for strengthening our collective effort to provide culturally responsive systems and services to all children and families.

FAMILY ENGAGEMENT:
the ongoing collaboration and relationship building between program staff and families that is reciprocal, culturally responsive, and supports family well-being, parent-child interactions, and on-going learning and development.

SYSTEMS: a group of interdependent and interacting components within a program that in turn support the program’s ability to operate smoothly and efficiently. The systems support child and family outcomes and school readiness goals.

POSITIVE & GOAL ORIENTED
RELATIONSHIPS: the intentional manner and process in which staff engage and develop relationships with families as the families make progress towards family engagement outcomes, child outcomes, and school readiness.

    Figure 16.3: The elements of the CRSB Framework. [265]

    Coupled with a culturally responsive approach, the CRSB Framework is a strength-based approach. The focus is on what children know and can do as opposed to what they cannot do or what they do not know. Cultural, family, and individual strengths are emphasized, not just the negative and proposed interventions to “fix the problem” that resides with the children, their families, and/or their communities.

    Quotes icon

    The strengths approach has a contagious quality and it intuitively makes sense to those who reflect a “cup half full” attitude in life. — Hamilton & Zimmerman, 2012

    If we ask people to look for deficits, they will usually find them, and their view of the situation will be colored by this. If we ask people to look for successes, they will usually find it, and their view of the situation will be colored by this. — Kral, 1989 (as cited in Hamilton & Zimmerman, 2012) [266]

    The CRSB Framework should be used with the understanding that children are influenced by many environments, as represented in a bioecological systems model. A bioecological systems model captures the variety of environments that impact individual development over the course of a lifetime. Young children do not live in a vacuum, but co-exist in many environments that affect their development, starting with the family, extending into the community, and reaching out into the economic and political spheres.

    Question Mark

    Think About It…

    There is also privilege surrounding socioeconomic status. How does the following excerpt change your perspective on future and current goals of children with different socioeconomic statuses? How will you as a teacher think about this?

    A study done by Dumais (2005) found that:

    • Parents from upper class backgrounds feel more comfortable in academic settings and feel education is an important part of their and their children’s lives.
    • Parents in the lowest socio-economic status (SES) were most likely to believe that being able to count, draw, be calm, and know their letters before kindergarten are very important or essential
    • More parents from the lowest SES (18%), than from the highest SES (7%), reported not being involved in their children’s schooling because they did not find anything interesting there
    • 10% of parents from the lowest SES reported not feeling welcome at their child’s school, versus just 3% from the highest SES

    56% of parents from the lowest SES expected their children will get a bachelor’s degree, while 95% of those from the highest SES expected the same [267]


    This page titled 5.4: The Culturally Responsive Lens is shared under a CC BY license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Krischa Esquivel, Emily Elam, Jennifer Paris, & Maricela Tafoya.