Saturday, February 22, 2014

HD 25 ANTI-BIAS ACTIVITY

HD 25 ANTI-BIAS ACTIVITY

Passport to 
World Culture

Because young children form ideas about themselves and other people long before they start kindergarten, it is important to begin teaching anti-bias lessons early. If we reinforce these lessons, children will learn to appreciate, rather than fear, differences and to recognize bias and stereotypes when they see them. Children learn early on — from television, books, magazines, photographs, and, of course, interactions — how others view people like themselves. 

Uncomfortable reactions can alert children to the negative significance some people put on differences. In other words, the differences in eye or skin color can simply become a category of human variation — or those differences can take on a particular negative significance.

As professionals who work with families, our willingness to talk openly about identity and to help foster a positive sense of self in children can make an enormous difference in affirming the rich diversity of our human community and helping children make bridges across cultures and traditions. Some people fear that by affirming children's identities in terms of home cultures and traditions, we may be promoting separatism. That is not the case. The more that children have a solid grounding and understanding about who they are and where they came from, the more they learn to move with grace and confidence among communities different from their own, and the closer we get to building a world of respect, curiosity, sharing, and humanity.



ACTIVITY OVERVIEW:
Each center featured weekly will have 5 activities available for students to explore in groups of 5. This is a 6 week program. Country featured changes weekly for a duration of 6 weeks. Daily there are 5 children taking part in the center, during center time. The 5 children will alternate activities in the center for approx. 4-5 minutes for each activity, totaling 20-25 minutes daily. Each child will be given a passport with a page for each country and an area where they can get the activities stamped once completed “Hear Music, Try Clothing,  Play Instrument, Read a Book, and Try Food."  They will have five stamps on the country's page at the completion of one week, and 6 completed pages at the end of the series. By the end of each week, each child will have had a chance to participate.

The Anti Bias Goals:  

Acceptance of cultural differences; Each child will learn to express comfort and joy with human diversity. 

Nurture the Understanding of cultures of others and self; Each child will learn about demonstrating self-awareness, confidence, family pride and positive social identities.

Act with others or alone against prejudice and/or discriminatory actions; Through the understanding of each others differences and that of different cultures, children will learn to stand up for and demonstrate empowerment and their anti-bias skills.
(ABE, pg 4-5)

Supplies Needed:
Create a passport with 6 pages
5 different colored or different shaped stamps, one for each activity of each page
Music CD's of 6 different countries (Resource: Library)
CD Player & headphones
6 Books (Resource: Library, online)
Food items (ask for parent sign ups)
Clothing items (ask for parent participation, using a wish list..or find items on ebay,craigslist or at the thrift stores)
Musical instruments (either order online for plastic flutes & tambourines or ask for parent participation, using a wish list..or find items on ebay,craigslist or at the thrift stores. Some instruments will be made as craft projects in the classroom)

Description:

In this large center activity, there will be 5 stations, where one child can explore for 4-5 minutes at a time in each station. Once all the activities are completed by every student, their passport can be stamped 5 times on that countries page. The activities are:

-Listening to a music CD from the country.
-Try on traditional clothing of country represented.
-Play an instrument from the featured country.
-Look through a picture book from country represented.
-Try a sample of food from the country represented.

Example Week 1 Activites

COUNTRY: MEXICO


Musical Instruments: maracas, guitar


Clothing: Sombrero, poncho
Food-Tortilla chips with a traditional salsa or pico de gallo
Book-P is for Pinata-Tony Johnston

http://www.amazon.com/Pinata-Mexico-Alphabet-Discover-World/dp/1585361445/ref=pd_sim_sbs_b_1?ie=UTF8&refRID=0Y54PS5P9TRBCHEY6K3N

This is an A-Z picture book with lots of pictures from Mexican Culture.




Example of Week 2 Activites

COUNTRY: JAPAN



Koto, flute (shamisen), lute



Food Boiled Edamame (soybeans) Squeeze the beans out of the pods with the children.
Clothing: Kimono, Sandals (online or ask parents)

Book: "Suki’s Kimono"- Chieri Uegaki, Stephane Jorisch
This book would pair well with providing an actual Kimono, and shows a child’s journey to finding pride in her heritage.
Suki's favorite possession is her blue cotton kimono. A gift from her obachan, it holds special memories of her grandmother's visit last summer. And Suki is going to wear it on her first day back to school -- no matter what anyone says. When it's Suki's turn to share with her classmates what she did during the summer, she tells them about the street festival she attended with her obachan and the circle dance that they took part in. In fact, she gets so carried away reminiscing that she's soon humming the music and dancing away, much to the delight of her entire class! Filled with gentle enthusiasm and a touch of whimsy, Suki's Kimono is the joyful story of a little girl whose spirit leads her to march -- and dance -- to her own drumbeat.

Example of Week 3 Activities

Country: NATIVE AMERICA

Instruments: wooden drum, wooden flute, wooden rattle, make rain sticks (activity during week)

Clothing-Head dress, vest
Food-Corn on the cob (Maize)

Book-"D is for Drum"-Michael Shoulders
This is an A-Z picture book showing many snapshots of Native American Culture









Or "Corn is Maize" by Aliki

This book would pair well with providing corn as a snack, and describes all of the ways corn is used in Native American cooking, therefore depicting its importance Native American Culture.

 An additional activity as specified above would be to make rainsticks with the class during the week. 
Native American Rainstick - Kid's Craft Materials Needed:

Cardboard Tube - Paper towel rolls or wrapping paper rolls
Construction Paper
Aluminum Foil
Crayons, markers or paint
Dry goods - Rice, uncooked beans or uncooked popcorn
Ribbon or string
Beads, feathers and stickers (optional items)
Make a Native American Rainstick:
Source & instructions: 
http://voices.yahoo.com/make-kids-native-american-rainstick-craft-items-4685993.html?cat=25

Other countries that for example can be included in the 6 week program are:
Africa, Ireland, and India 

Additional Activities over the 6 week period: 
-You could also have the children have small concerts at the end of the series in groups of 5 where you choose 5 children to play all the instruments at the same time. Everyone would alternate and have a chance to play in their “World Concert”.
-Ask parents to bring in cultural or favorite music Cd’s they listen to as a family, including those in other languages. Or if any family members play a musical instrument or sing, ask them to do so in circle time, and perhaps even bring in musical instruments from their native lands for the children to play.
-Throughout the 6 week program, you could show online videos of traditional dances of these countries during circle time. Like this one:
(click on link) Native American Dance
You could teach some of the dance moves to the class during music and movement time.

-You could also talk about each student’s individual cultures, what types of music they listen to at home, what kinds of foods they eat at home and during holidays. Possibly have a finale where parents sign up to bring different foods from home.
- On Mexico week, you could have a taco making snack. Or other traditional food preparation with the children.
-You could make sitars (a traditional instrument of India)  in craft time: http://www.ehow.com/how_8706259_diy-homemade-sitar.html

An excellent book to share with the class to wrap up your Passport to World Culture Series is:
“Whoever you are” by Mem Fox


“Little one, / whoever you are, / wherever you are, / there are little ones / just like you / all over the world.” So begins the Australian author Mem Fox’s joyful picture book Whoever You Are, a celebration of the world’s diverse cultures, both our similarities and differences. Leslie Straub’s innovative, colorful, folk art–style oil paintings of children from all corners of the globe are bordered with photographs of hand-carved, bejeweled frames—and they all reflect Fox’s message that no matter where we come from, within our hearts “Joys are the same, / and love is the same. / Pain is the same, / and blood is the same.” 




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