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What is Classroom Diversity

Empowering Formal and Informal Leadership While Maintaining Teacher Identity
A classroom with students of different races, genders, and socioeconomic backgrounds and abilities.
Published in Chapter:
Classroom Equity and the Role of a Teacher Leader: Making Classrooms Equitable to All Students
Kimberly G. Dove (Rockingham County Public Schools, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-6500-1.ch005
Abstract
Classrooms are filled with students from multiple backgrounds. Teachers see students of different races, genders, and socioeconomic statuses. Providing the best education for these students is a necessity to produce productive members of society. To do so, teachers must work toward classroom equity. The research collected in this chapter can help teachers move toward an equitable classroom environment. There are many factors that need to be considered in creating equity. Once these factors are contemplated, the ability to change can be easily instituted. Teacher leaders have the potential to initiate change, but there are circumstances within the school that can hinder or support this change. Once schools meet the necessary criteria to create change, the role of teacher leaders is imperative in making equitable classrooms a reality.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
More Results
Catering for Learner Diversity: Teacher Perceptions and Practices of Inclusion in Primary Classrooms in Mauritius
Classroom diversity refers to engagement with learners in the same class with different cognitive abilities and socio-economic and ethnic backgrounds.
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Translanguaging Practices in Early Childhood Classrooms From an Intercultural Perspective
The variation across groups of individuals in terms of their backgrounds and lived experiences in the multilingual/multicultural classroom, such as, race, ethnicity, gender, linguistic and cultural background, mental and physical ability, family structures, learning styles, immigration status, etc. It simply suggests that all students are unique in their own way and contribute in their very own way into the class work to strengthen the group’s potential for successful learning.
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