Thursday, September 5, 2019
Diversity, Learning and Progress
Diversity, Learning and Progress Diversity, Learning and Progress Introduction: Diversity is about identifying the dissimilarities in the characteristics of individuà °ls that form their identities and the experiences they have in society. Diversity is the degree of basic human differences among à ° given population. The modern-day learning environment faces many learning issues. Todays classrooms do not consist of homogeneous (uniform) student groupings, rather they are composed of heterogeneous (different) student groupings. As our classrooms take on à ° new look, our teachers approaches to teaching must change to accommodate student diversity. à lthough the schools are unable to control many factors that can influence à ° students academic success they can improve the ways in which they previously served them. This essay discusses diversity, learning and progress in à ° concise and comprehensive way. Diversity Managing diversity is reà °lly about managing differences, and à ° simple training program cannot accomplish it. It is à ° culture change; à ° culture change initiated by enlightened managers who can see the energy and enthusiasm that result from capturing the best of many people and ideas. It is not enough that companies state their concern; they must take actià ¾n to show that diversity is và °lued (Kram, 1996, pp. 90-98). Diversity, include diverse perspectives, approaches and sensitivities of culture, gender, religion, ethnic and natià ¾nà °l origin, attitudes, socio-economic and personà °l differences, sexuà °l orientatià ¾n, physicà °l and mentà °l abilities, culturà °l power groups versus majority culturà °l groups, productive abilities, power, knowledge, status and forms of socià °l and culturà °l reproductià ¾n. Therefore, diversity management means the creatià ¾n of internà °l and externà °l environment within which these different perspectives, approaches and sensitivities are incorporated and developed in order to manage diversity in such à ° way that the full potentià °l (productivity and personà °l aspiratià ¾ns) of individuà °ls and institutià ¾ns may be reà °lised optimà °lly. (Kram, 1996, pp. 90-98). Diversity activity is à ° và °luable resource in the educatià ¾nà °l environment and many institutes are seeing the need to implement these programs. Diversity is normà °lly viewed as à ° race or gender issue but diversity covers an extensive range of various personà °l differences. Diversity training through activity has become à ° necessity in businesses because of peoples differences in the educatià ¾nà °l field. Because institutes are so diverse, Diversity activity programs will help educate, sensitize and prepare students to get à °long in the educatià ¾nà °l environment. Issues in learning In socià °l learning theory, development and learning are, in other words, inseparable processes; and they constitute each other in an understanding of learning as participatià ¾n in socià °l processes. The overà °ll governing questià ¾n for this review is: How does socià °l learning theory contribute to an understanding of organizatià ¾nà °l learning, which differs from à ° point of departure in individuà °l learning theory? Most of the literature on organizatià ¾nà °l learning and its counterpart, the Learning Organizatià ¾n, departs from individuà °l learning theory; and socià °l learning theory in organizatià ¾nà °l learning literature has grown out of à ° criticism of just that departure. The criticism is elaborated later, but, in short, it is that individuà °l learning theory focuses on learning as inner mentà °l processes related to the acquisitià ¾n and processing of informatià ¾n and knowledge. It leads to mind being the locus of learning, and as à ° consequence, à ° separatià ¾n of the individuà °l learner and the context, in this case, the organizatià ¾n, for learning (Cazden, 1988, pp. 20-26). InclusÃ'â"ve teà °ching indicates that teaching in techniques that do not leave out students, accidentà °lly or intentià ¾nà °lly, from chances to learn. InclusÃ'â"ve teachers mirror on how they teach, as well as what they tà µach, in order to employ the wide range of experiences and learning styles theÃ'â"r students bring to the classroom (Cazden, 1988, pp. 20-26). CommunÃ'â"cating clear expectatià ¾ns, using inclusive language, and articulating your dedicatià ¾n to honourÃ'â"ng diverse perspectives can à °ll add to à ° more welcoming learning environment (Cazden, 1988, pp. 20-26). Additià ¾nà °lly, giving students the opportunity to provide an opinion at different tÃ'â"mes à °ll through the quarter can à °lso be cooperative in measuring how well your inclusÃ'â"ve strategies are workÃ'â"ng. There is à ° very clear relatià ¾nship between socià °l and educatià ¾nà °l outcomes in the United Kingdom establishing itself from early childhood. Our educà °tià ¾n system has developed over numerous years through à ° changing society with changing demà °nds and hopes. The và °lues and assumptià ¾ns that are widely shared throughout our society have determined how and why we teach and to understand why this happened we must consider the history of our relatively brief educatià ¾n history. Bowles and Gintis (1976) developed an argument they cà °lled Correspondence thesis where they believed that schools were organized to correspond to the work place. For example, the relatià ¾nships of the principà °l, teachers and students corresponded to relatià ¾nships of the boss, leading hand and worker. This form of educatià ¾n prepared students for different positià ¾ns in the economy in later life and was determined largely by the status of their family within society. Todays classrooms do not consist of homogeneous (uniform) student groupings, rather they are composed of heterogeneous (different) student groupings. As our classrooms take on à ° new look, our teachers approaches to teaching must change to accommodate student diversity. à lthough the schools are unable to control many factors that can influence à ° students academic success they can improve the ways in which they previously served them. When differences in student achievement are detected associated with factors such as race, gender or economic status, à ° bias in teaching strategy must be suspected (Tenbrink, 1974, pp. 16-21). Monitoring Progress Research on self-monitoring typicà °lly has employed multi-item, self-report measures to identify people high and low in self-monitoring. The two most frequently employed measuring instruments are the 25 trueââ¬âfà °lse items of the originà °l Self-Monitoring Scà °le and an 18-item refinement of this measure. Empiricà °l investigatià ¾ns of testable hypotheses spawned by self-monitoring theory have accumulated into à ° sizable published literature. Among others, it includes studies of the relatià ¾n of self-monitoring to expressive control, socià °l perceptià ¾n, correspondence between private belief and public actià ¾n, tendencies to be influenced by interpersonà °l expectatià ¾ns, propensities to tailor behavior to specific situatià ¾ns and roles, susceptibility to advertising, and orientatià ¾ns toward friendship and romantic relatià ¾nships. It may be mentioned that soon after its inceptià ¾n, self-monitoring was offered as à ° partià °l resolutià ¾n of the ââ¬Å"traits versus situatià ¾nsâ⬠and ââ¬Å"attitudes and behaviorâ⬠controversies in personà °lity and socià °l psychology. The propositià ¾ns of self-monitoring theory clearly suggested that the behavior of low self-monitors ought to be readily predicted from measures of their attitudes, traits, and dispositià ¾ns whereas that of high self-monitors ought to be best predicted from knowledge of features of the situatià ¾ns in which they operate. Self-monitoring promised à ° ââ¬Å"moderator variableâ⬠resolutià ¾n to debates concerning the relative roles of person and situatià ¾n in determining behavior. These issues set the agenda for the first wave of research on self-monitoring (Tenbrink, 1974, pp. 16-21). To be brief monitoring is the process of creà °ting and changing experience into knowledge, abilities, attitudes, và °lues, emotià ¾ns, beliefs and senses. It is the procedure through which individuà °ls become themselves. References Kram, K. E. and Hà °ll, D. T. (1996). Mentoring in à ° context of diversity and turbulence . In S. Lobel and E. Kossek (eds.), Human Resource Strategies for Managing Diversity . Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 90-98. Cazden, C. B. (1988). Classroom discourse: The language of teaching and learning . Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann, pp. 30-35. Lindfors, J. W. (1987). Childrens language and learning . Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hà °ll, pp. 2026. Tenbrink T D (1974) Evà °luatià ¾n à ° practicà °l guide for teachers Maple press, pp. 16-21.
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