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Research-based Classroom Strategies
to Improve
the Academic Achievement
of Diverse
Learners
Dear
Educator:
As you read these strategies, think about how
they might work in your school. Each educational situation is different. You
know your students and your needs, and I am confident that you will modify these
to best fit your students’ needs. Expand, elaborate, and enjoy!
If you want concrete examples of these
strategies and directions for implementing them, you can find them in the book,
How to Teach Students Who Don’t Look Like You: Culturally Relevant Teaching
Strategies (2006).
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Increase the Positive
Visibility of Every Student
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The Daily/Weekly Check-in
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Teachers greet their students at the door with a smile,
using students’ names.
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Everyone in the building has a designated student they
mentor.
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Teachers do an activity at the beginning of each class
to connect with each and every student (The Check-in is a great one).
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Pictures in the School Hallways (Role Models)
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Students see pictures throughout the school; these
pictures are of non-stereotypical role models as well as students in a
variety of roles.
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Culturally diverse photos of role models which
represent the cultures of the students as well as other cultures are posted
throughout the school.
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Team pictures in School Hallways
(Students/Teachers/Administration/Support Staff)
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Equitable Representation in School Activities
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Texts/Literature that reflect Students’ Lives/Cultures
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Student of the Week/Month
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Activity/Work Roles for Students
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Post Student Writing throughout the School
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Post Student Art/Projects throughout the School
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Hold Talent Shows, Poetry Slams, Project Displays
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Build
Relationships with Students
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Greet/Meet/Share
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William Glasser’s
Two-minute Strategy
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Building Community
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“I Care” Strategies
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Structure lessons to
include Students’ Lives/Interests
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Individual Conferences
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Build Relationships with
Caregivers/ Families / Parents
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Positive Call Home before
School Year Begins
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Family Resource Rooms
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School has a designated “family resource
room” where family members can read, talk, have coffee, and share in the
school community.
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Family Intervention
Strategies
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Understanding Family
Economic Cultures
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Understanding the Family
Racial/Ethnic Cultures
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Hold School Events that
Welcome Families such as Soul Food Dinners, Musical Events that Honor the
Cultures of your Students/Families
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Build the Relationships
among Staff to Model the Behaviors you Want from Students
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Staff socializes across
Race/Gender/Culture and Department lines
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Staff is visible at
cultural activities in the community
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Staff uses
interdisciplinary strategies to model work they want from Students
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Staff increases their
knowledge of other cultures
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Staff understands and
practices what respect looks like and means to all cultural groups in the
school, including understanding “greetings”
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Create Support Groups for
Students
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Homework Help/Tutoring
Programs after school
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Mentoring Opportunities
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College Visits
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Achievement Clubs
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Teach Cognitive Skills to
Students
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Plan Backwards; Sequence
Ladder, etc.
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Build Cognitive Frameworks
with Graphic Organizers such as KWL
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Set weekly project goals,
daily goals, and classroom goals—Use a 15-minute goal setting framework
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Teach Students Self-Talk
and Self-Assessment
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Set “Dream” Goals
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Agree upon and teach
School-wide Graphic Organizers
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Require that each student
use a daily Planner
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Increase Reading/Writing
Across the Curriculum
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Become a School of Readers
and Writers
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Start a Writing
Club/Reading Club
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Hold Writers’ Showcases
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Hold Teacher Book Study
Groups and Discuss with Students; Entire School reads the Same Book
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All Teachers carry a Book
with them/Same for Students
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Aggressively enter Student
Writing into competitions/publications, etc.
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Publish a Staff/Student
Literary Magazine
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Increase Staff Knowledge
about Body Language, Communication Styles, Cultural Differences, Gestures,
Economic Class
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Training on all the
“ism’s”
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Training in Cultural
Proficiency/Beyond Diversity
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Learn the Brain Research
on Instruction
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Learn about Cultural
Barriers/Challenges Between and Among Cultures
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Assess Student Achievement
Levels often
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Balanced Literacy
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Individual Assessments
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Critical Friends
model—Look at Student Work Using Protocols
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Reading Tests
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Compare Student Work with
Students from High-achieving Schools
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Understanding by Design--
Grant Wiggins’ Work
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Take a Professional and
Personal Journey as a Staff Member
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Actively participate in a
Professional Learning Community (PLC)
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Keep a Journal of your
Teaching/Interactions with Others
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Read Books that Stretch
you Intellectually, Emotionally, Spiritually
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Stay Physically Active
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Journal about a Student
who challenges you Consider sharing it with the student
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If you are White, engage
in Experiences/cultural events where you are in the Minority so that you can
have Minority Experiences
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Read the History of your
Student Cultural Groups
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Read the Literature of
your Student Cultural Groups and of other Cultures that differ from your own
Email me with your suggestions and comments
at the email or website listed above. If I can support your work in any way,
please contact me.
Check out my other books:
How to Coach Teachers
Who Don’t Think Like You: Using Literacy Strategies to Coach Across Content
Areas
(2008)
The Biracial and
Multiracial Student Experience: A Journey to Racial Literacy
(2009)
Thank you!

Bonnie M. Davis, Ph.D.
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