The purpose of the study was to identify and compare the learning style preferences of low-achieving and high-achieving young African-American males. According to many studies, African American males in the United States are at risk. In fact, African American males living in a large city and doesn’t attend college will be in the criminal justice system by the age of 25 (Jackson-Allen & Christenberry, 1994). So many African American males are successful, so the question is what factors led to academic achievements of the two group, high achieving, and low achieving black males. One suggestion was to design instruction to conform to their learning styles. Learning styles are patterns of "cognitive, affective, and physiological behaviors that
While Mrs. Moran is considering the socioeconomic status of Tyrel’s family, she should also be considering how gender, language differences, and family dynamics affect Tyrel. M. Baruth and L. Manning suggests that African American males tend to need an alternative education to address individual needs (2013). Taking time to know the individual student and his needs should be a major priority. Language differences may also create a barrier in Tyrel’s education. If parents are non-readers or undereducated, then the meaning of many words he may hear in a learning environment will differ dramatically from the words he is exposed to at home.
In many instances masculinity can be an avoided topic amongst African-American men. Black men are seemingly expected to show no signs of emotion, fear, and happiness. If so, black men will be categorized as feminine or weak. In American society, black men are deemed the providers and the leaders, so they must not possess any aspects that may be exemplify their fear and vulnerability. During the class on Week 9, LaShonda Coleman touched on many of these topics.
Psychology today can tell us that the environment in which we grow up in can have an important impact on a youth’s identity and future. Growing up in not only a state of poverty, but with additional social and economic disadvantages can have an overwhelming negative influence on student’s performance. In major cities across the United States schools that poverty stricken African American students attend are segregated, not in a legal sense, but because of location. Neighborhoods with soaring levels of poverty are limited to the oftentimes overpopulated, underfunded, and understaffed local schools. Creating a culture of multigenerational families isolated in their own poverty.
The majority of black men are not able to achieve traditional and hegemonic masculinity because instructional racism (Hatfield, E. F. 2010). The effect of the instructional racism on black man has product hyper-masculinity in black men. Black men are more willing to prove their manliness through the use of physical dominance and creativity. Black men are more likely to fight, display a lack of emotions and aggression. Addiction display of black men’s masculinity is through creativity such as speech, fashion, hairstyles and greeting (Majors, 1987).
If you were to look at a single culture, you would probably find so many differences between this culture and the one you consider yourself to be. Now if you consider that group only, and look at the individuals within it, would you find similarities across the board or would you find variation between people? The odds are that you would not find similarities across the board due to many different reasons. In order to illustrate this we will look at individuals within the African American culture as well as the culture in general to see if they are similar or if they are completely off based. We realize that studying everything about their culture would be very hard to do, therefore we are only going to collect evidence on the topics of marriage
There has always at least two groups of deaf people. You have the African Americans, then you have the “community”. This refers to everyone else. Black deaf students were always separated from the white deaf students. In the early 1950’s, there were thirteen states that had separate and segregated schools.
The tradition of education in the African American culture implies the cultural values of the better opportunities for the family. Education provides an efficient ways to avoid the struggles that other African American’s families had to endure to provide a stable life for their families. An understanding of your ethnic culture
This lead to black adults being less educated than the majority of white adults. “A white student who completed the eighth grade was almost certainly far ahead of the black child at the same grade level,” (Peter Irons). White students were taught more. The learning
Learning styles of the Hispanic culture Research on the Hispanic culture consists of an expanding body of affirmation that teaching and counseling students with interventions are congruent with the students' learning-style preferences result in their increased academic achievement and more positive attitudes toward learning. Research done on the learning styles of Hispanic-Americans have compared various ethnic groups of students in elementary school through college levels using a measure that identifies different elements of learning style grouped into subjective categories. These categories consist of environmental learning style, emotional learning style, psychological learning style, physiological learning style, and the sociological
Numerous factors dominate the articles presented, including socioeconomic status, racial discrimination, the environment, and educators. Each of the authors discusses the obstacles they had to overcome with their educational journey. There is a common theme in these readings. In that they have similar experiences, or experiences that are similar to what kids now have, Malcolm X was a victim of an improper schooling system, which inversely forced him to educate himself in a way he calls "homemade education." Johnathon Kozol discusses the disparities faced by minorities in the educational system.
Each student completed a task and self ranking report twice during their first semester, in the first two weeks and the last two weeks, and then were followed up with each following spring semester. In the study, there were 136 white students and 126 African American
However, with diversity comes inequalities that people of color face throughout their lives. A particular issue in the United States, specifically in education, is unequal opportunities and treatment in regard to race. Research shows that students from single-parent black families had a high chance of dropping out and participating in illicit behavior (Hallinan 54). While the issue of race is a complicated issue to breach for
According to VARK, learning styles describe all of the components that may affect a person’s preference in learning new incoming information. While there are several different variations of modalities, the main three are visual, auditory, and tactile/kinesthetic. Knowing your main learning style preference helps you to understand the best way to learn, identify certain strategies to aid in your learning process, and to know where your weaknesses are in regards to learning new information. There are several different tests that help you to identify what learning style you have. The three assessments I used to determine my learning style were the “What 's Your Learning Style?” from Educationplanner.org, the VARK questionnaire, and the Barsch Learning Style Inventory.
This essay explains how to develop learning, teaching and assessment strategies to support the student to achieve a successful outcome. Cassidy & Kreitne (2009) defines learning styles as a range of contested and competing theories that account for variations in a person 's’ education. There are three main learning styles, the visual learners, auditory and kinesthetic learners. Visual learners mainly learn through seeing. They exhibit visual skills that are demonstrated in writing, reading, painting, sketching, manipulating images, fixing, interpreting visual images, have a good sense of direction and also create visual analogies and metaphors.
The general goal of the model is to improve the effectiveness of instruction through the identification and matching of individual learning styles with appropriate learning opportunities. It utilizes complex elements such as environmental, emotional, sociological, physiological, and psychological which affect an individual’s learning. The use of the learning styles model requires teachers to reorganize the instructional environment and instructional procedures to change from lecture dominated methods of teaching to flexible classrooms that facilitate several simultaneous approaches to