Culture: A View of the Self

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My ninth-grade Spanish students resisted my assignment to write about their cultures.

“My family doesn’t have any cultural traditions,” one said.

“My culture is that I’m just normal,” added another.

“I don’t have a culture,” said another.

I realized that most of my students had only learned about culture in terms of other people. For my students, culture was something exotic and foreign, the odd quirks that make “them” different from “us.” I remember the yearlong parades of cultural fanfare I experienced in high school—holidays, dances, costumes, foods—that marched along the periphery of the history or foreign-language curricula. How could I challenge my students to think differently and more deeply about how culture shapes us?  

I decided that if I wanted to initiate substantive conversations about culture in my classroom, I had to give my students a clear framework for thinking and talking about it. After a good deal of research and reflection, I settled on a few principles some drawn from the work of Gary Weaver, founder of American University’s Intercultural Management Institute, to help guide my students’ thinking and my own teaching about culture.

1. There is a difference between culture and cultural identity. Culture is a set of values, beliefs and behaviors shared by a group of people. Cultural identity is the unique way in which an individual person weaves together aspects of the multiple overlapping cultures to which he or she belongs.

2. Culture is like an iceberg. Some aspects of it are prominent, like the tip of an iceberg, but the bulk of it—the values and beliefs that shape who we are—exists beneath the surface.

3. Cultural identity is like a tapestry. Each of us pulls threads from multiple cultural contexts (school, church, neighborhood, country) to weave our cultural identities.  People within one culture are not all the same; they each have a unique sense of cultural identity.

4. Learning about culture is a two-pronged effort. We should reflect on our own culture at the same time as we explore another culture.

I now introduce these concepts at the beginning of Spanish 1, and return to them throughout the year as we consider other aspects of culture. I hope to teach my students to value their own cultures, craft cultural identities and become more adept at managing the varied cultural challenges that school and life present. 

In the diverse urban school where I teach, my students are multicultural. Not only do they come from a range of backgrounds, but each of them belongs to a range of cultural contexts, from their neighborhoods and families to their schools, churches and peer groups. I know that many of my students struggle to make sense of their diverse cultural worlds. 

In addition, most of my students hope to cross socioeconomic (and corresponding cultural) boundaries through education. They plan to go to college, where they will encounter new expectations, assumptions and practices. By teaching them to understand culture in a deeper way, I hope to equip them with tools that will help them interpret cultural phenomena and meet cultural challenges.  

If you’re interested in exploring culture with your students, Teaching Tolerance offers a range of rich resources, including the “What’s Your FRAME?” and “My Multicultural Self” activities.

Melville is high school English, Spanish and drama teacher in Pennsylvania.

Comments

Your motivations are laudable

Submitted by 1st Gen Parent on 28 July 2012 - 7:10am.

Your motivations are laudable for attempting to teach tolerance. However, if schools keep pegging kids to the countries "where they are from" I believe it does collateral damage to the non-white kids who are from the United States. Non-white kids are forever pegged in an ancestral hole and never gain any assumption of "American Citizen" status. They too are sick and tired of the "where are you from?" "Insert U.S. city here ________." "No really where are you from" exchanges. So are adults who are first, second and third generation non-whites. If the kids truly are from other countries, great, I think it's wonderful for them to share their multicultural experiences. But please stop pegging "minority looking" kids into an ancestral hole and forcing them to narrate on a culture(s) they never experienced. This further alienates them socially. I don't blame them at all for saying, "my culture is normal." I know exactly where some of them are coming from.

People are blind to their

Submitted by Joe on 29 July 2012 - 12:07pm.

People are blind to their culture like a fish is to water. It's difficult to get a true sense of one's own culture without significant exposure to other cultures