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“Roma culture”, school education and teacher training Calin Rus Intercultural Institute Timisoara, Romania www.intercultural.ro Structure 1. Key assumptions concerning the relationship of school and “Roma culture” 2. “Roma culture”? 3. Impact of teachers / parents acculturation orientations 4. Teacher training Key assumptions school can and should do something to take into account "Roma culture" teachers should know more about “Roma culture” Roma culture in school and educational process Potential benefits Make school a friendlier environment for Roma children Build self-esteem of Roma children Stimulate positive attitudes towards Roma children Enhance chances of successful learning Obstacles School structures, rules, curriculum Teachers have little knowledge Hard to find support within the Roma community Teachers and “Roma culture” Many teachers want to learn about Roma culture: Curiosity Understanding the behaviours of Roma children and their parents Search for easy solutions and ready-made recipes “Roma culture” Diversity and complexity Risk of a simplistic essentialist perspective; culturalism; traditional / modern culture; culture of poverty and social exclusion? How to relate to the currently ongoing identitybuilding process Identity dynamics and heteroidentification Understanding “Roma culture” / Understanding Roma reality (situational and contextualised) Instead of understanding “Roma culture”, a pragmatic approach focused on what is educationally productive for Roma children Consequences of discrimination Social, economical and psychological A very destructive consequence: internalisation of the negative image of Roma and adoption of negative behaviours that confirm the prediction of the negative stereotype and generates a vicious cycle that affects deeply the individuals Consequences for learning: Lower teachers expectations Stereotype threat 7 Strategies to maintain a positive social identity Individual strategy – leaving the group, refusing Roma identity, assimilation into another group Collective strategies: o o o Social creativity – identify criteria that put Roma in a favourable situation Redefining characteristics – redefining stereotype characteristics to put them in a positive light Social competition – public requests for a process to change the overall relationship between groups 8 Majority / minority relations Intercultural Communication ASSIMILATION INTEGRATION Cultural Identity MARGINALISATION Adapted from J. Berry SEGREGATION / SEPARATION Interactive Acculturation Model Majority Minority Integration Assimilation Segregation Exclusion Individualism Integration Assimilation Separation Anomie Individualism R. Bourhis Interactive Acculturation Model Integration Assimilation Separation Anomie Individualism Integration Consensual Problematic Conflictual Problematic Problematic Assimilation Problematic Conflictual Conflictual Problematic Problematic Segregation Conflictual Conflictual Conflictual Conflictual Conflictual Exclusion Conflictual Conflictual Conflictual Conflictual Conflictual Individualism Problematic Problematic Problematic Problematic Consensual 1. Teachers and change: a misleading model TRAINING Teaching practice reproducing or ignoring inequalities and oppression Oppressive policies or policies deliberately ignoring events, groups… + social conformism Teaching practice promoting egalitarian values and acknowledging the shameful past Affirmation of egalitarian values, public acknowledgment of the shameful past reflected in policies + personal values and opinions 1. Teachers and change Agreement with values of social justice and antidiscrimination Convinced but ineffective teachers (share the values but, for various reasons, fail to implement) Committed and effective teachers (believe in what they do and do what they believe) Resistant teachers (various strategies of avoiding implementation based on non adherence to value system) Superficial compliance or « organized hypocrisy » (implement changes but do not believe in them) Implementation of required changes 4. Consequences for training Agreement with egalitarian values Convinced but ineffective teachers (share the values but, for various reasons, fail to implement) Committed and effective teachers (believe in what they do and do what they believe) Resistant teachers (various strategies of avoiding implementation based on non adherence to value system) Superficial compliance or « organized hypocrisy » (implement changes but do not believe in them) Implementation of required changes 6. Conclusions Culture is important but the perspective teachers have on culture is crucial Teachers need general historical and cultural background information Delivering anthropological and historical content does not necessarily generate changes in attitudes and in teaching practice Balance is needed between background knowledge and skills to adapt to the specific situation awareness of psychological mechanisms which can block or enhance learning and positive social relations