Preparing culturally responsive teachers: a systematic review
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Miller, Rhonda D. (Author)
- Gerzel-Short, Lydia (Author)
- Kelly, Jerae H. (Author)
- Uphold, Nicole (Author)
- Hsiao, Yun-Ju (Author)
- Hovey, Katrina A. (Author)
- Wei, Yan (Author)
Title
Preparing culturally responsive teachers: a systematic review
Abstract
As the world continues to ponder issues of equity and diversity, U.S. public schools face an expanding demographic divide between teachers and students. While diverse groups of public school students show an increase in population, the teaching workforce in the U.S. remains overwhelmingly White. The purpose of this systematic review is to examine how preservice teachers (PST) are being prepared to be culturally responsive. A total of 26 studies published between 2006 and 2020 were reviewed. The results indicate that PSTs’ learning experiences are varied and tend to be stand-alone approaches focused on changing the attitudes and beliefs of PSTs. Findings also bring to light the vagueness of terminology used in the research to define cultural groups of students, the conspicuous absence of studies related to LGBTQ+ populations, and the lack of study replications. Implications for future research are discussed.
Publication
Multicultural Learning and Teaching
Publisher
De Gruyter
Date
2023-05-18
Citation Key
millerPreparingCulturallyResponsive2023
Accessed
12/5/23, 5:28 PM
ISSN
2161-2412
Short Title
Preparing culturally responsive teachers
Language
en
Library Catalog
License
De Gruyter expressly reserves the right to use all content for commercial text and data mining within the meaning of Section 44b of the German Copyright Act.
Citation
Miller, R. D., Gerzel-Short, L., Kelly, J. H., Uphold, N., Hsiao, Y.-J., Hovey, K. A., & Wei, Y. (2023). Preparing culturally responsive teachers: a systematic review. Multicultural Learning and Teaching. https://doi.org/10.1515/mlt-2023-0004
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