Culturally Responsive Pedagogy recognizes the importance of including students’ cultural references in all aspects of learning.The significance of CRT is it provides a framework and practical approach to instruct, make meaning, and discuss information in a way essential to relevant learning. CRT is a critical factor in what John Dewey (1938) describes as progressive education."Traditional education did not have to face this problem; it could systematically dodge this responsibility. The school environment of desks, blackboards, a small schoolyard, was supposed to suffice. There was no demand that the teacher should become intimately acquainted with the conditions of the local community, physical, historical, economic, occupational, etc., in order to utilize them as educational resources. A system of education based upon the necessary connection of education with experience must.. take these things constantly into account. ... upon the importance of the participation of the learner in the formation of the purposes which direct his activities in the learning process, just as there is no defect in traditional education greater than its failure to secure the active cooperation of the pupil in construction of the purposes involved in his studying."
Without CRT, a teacher cannot effectively engage "the learner in the formation of the purposes" which is essential to “secure the active cooperation”. Moreover, without purpose, a teacher should/cannot expect intelligence or discipline. In that, as Dewey suggested, intelligence is the ability to strategize to execute a purpose, and discipline is the commitment to follow the strategy to execute purpose. Not only is "purpose" essential for intelligence and discipline, but it is also the core criterion for education. So much so, that Dewey warns that to not engage a student's sense of purpose the teacher is creating a slave (i.e. someone who is meant to execute the purposes of someone else).
Communication of High Expectations;
Active Learning and Teaching Methods;
Student strengths are Identified and Nurtured;
Inclusion of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse teaching strategies;
Cultural Sensitivity;
Supportive Learning Environment Reflecting the Cultures of all Children;
Small-Group Instruction.
Specifically, when working with African American students, to be Culturally Responsive Teacher (i.e. to use CRT strategies), one must use African-centered philosophies and techniques.
Intellectual humility – a demonstrated willingness to ask questions instead of make assumptions; particularly in regard to another person lived experiences. Intellectual humility requires active listening. It requires a willingness to be informed by another’s narrative and by the facts, rather than rely on one’s own opinions.
Cultural competency – The procession of specific knowledge of and the skills to engage a unique community of people. In particular, knowledge of intragroup and intergroup power and privilege dynamics. Furthermore, process the skills necessary to negotiate and strategize interaction between the aforementioned groups in order to promote and facilitate equity and social justice.
Authentic Voice - Opportunities to express lived experiences and perspectives. Moreover, expressions are possible in varied forms; and, such expressions inform pedagogy in policy and practice. Additionally, students have the opportunity to critique the prevailing narrative and its representative symbols of such narrative and transform and/or replace them.
Representation - The presence of people, images, symbols, and values of the heritage of the students; to include family, neighborhood, ethnic group, nationality, cultural, and the child him/her self. These people, images, symbols, and values must visible in the classroom and curriculum.
http://successfulacademics.com/BlackChildSEL/CRT.html
You cannot carry out fundamental change without a certain amount of prescience. In this case, it comes from nonconformity, the courage to turn your back on the old formulas, the courage to invent the future. It took the visionaries of yesterday for us to be able to act with extreme clarity today. I want to be one of those visionaries. We must dare to invent the future. - Thomas Sankara