Opinion
Education Letter to the Editor

Anti-Bias Training for Early Educators Should Be a Common Thread

November 01, 2016 1 min read
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To the Editor:

Regarding “Yale Study Probes the Complexity of Bias in Preschool,” we believe it is important to keep in mind that early educators need support in understanding the family and community context of young children’s lives, as this context may relate to childhood behaviors—especially when the teacher and child are of a different race. This is why we at the National Louis University, in Chicago, thread culturally relevant pedagogy through all of our coursework, supporting our teacher-candidates through deep reflection that focuses on both the academic and social-emotional learning of young children.

In teacher-preparation programs, it’s important to develop new teachers’ cultural competence as a way to acknowledge the home and community cultures of both teacher-candidates and the children they will soon be teaching.

Guiding teacher-candidates to examine their philosophies and belief systems about teaching and learning helps them become self-aware, nonjudgmental, and inclusive of the cultural diversity of their future students. It is possible, for example, for preschool teachers to become aware of their biases and to conquer them as they work to create child-centered environments that respect diversity and communicate high expectations to all young learners.

As part of this process, we need ongoing professional development for all early educators that addresses cultural competence and anti-bias teaching approaches to ensure that the youngest students grow in all areas of their development.

High-quality teachers can make a difference in children’s early years; the impacts of successful teaching during a student’s first five years in the classroom may last a lifetime.

Ayn Keneman

Associate Professor

Program Coordinator

Early Childhood Program

Teri Talan

Michael W. Louis Endowed Chair

McCormick Center for Early Childhood Leadership

National Louis University

Chicago, Ill.

A version of this article appeared in the November 02, 2016 edition of Education Week as Anti-Bias Training for Early Educators Should Be a Common Thread

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