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Multicultural Reflection

Decent Essays

In elementary school, middle school and in high school, I found myself questioning a lot of the material that was being taught. There were many instances, where I felt like I did not belong and I did not find myself engaged in the material being taught. In my primary years, most of the lessons that were taught to me were not multicultural, but Eurocentric. I found myself not learning a lot of the material that was taught. However, there is one positive experience that I had when I was in grade three. My grade three teacher read the book “Whoever You Are” by Mem Fox, which sent out a very strong message that we are all part of the same world. The book illustrates differences such as people may be different than you, live in different places, speak different languages and go to different schools. My teacher got us to do an activity sheet where she asked us where we were born and if we spoke multiple languages. I remember being one of the only students’ in the whole entire class who had parents who immigrated from Pakistan and one of the only students’ who spoke different languages. I remember my teacher formed a tally chart on the board and created a bar graph with everyone’s background and the languages they spoke. Being one of the only students with a different background and language I could share my family background. To further push our thinking my grade three teacher put us in pairs and told us to come up with other questions we would ask someone to get to know them more. This activity taught me and my classmates how as humans we are all the same, but unique in our own ways. This was a positive experience for me because I could find myself in the lesson plan being taught. As mentioned before, I struggled to find myself in the lessons being taught when I was in my primary and junior years. Therefore, this positive experience was very different from other moments in my learning, which were mostly negative. McCarthy (2015) argues that children and teens need the curriculum to be presented in a meaningful way. For example, showing real-world relationships in lessons, but also allowing students to think about their own reality. My grade three experience was special to me because I felt meaningful connection

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