Abstract

Largescale movement of diverse groups of people continue to redefine the demographics of an increasing number of societies all around the world. Global migration has an impact on education as the shift in ethnic demographics profiles comes with dramatic demographic shifts in the student population worldwide as well. Situated within these current geosociopolitical realities, in this position paper we argue for the urgency of culturally relevant pedagogies as a response to the challenge of meeting the needs of increasingly diverse and multicultural science classrooms. In doing so, we first provide a definition of culturally relevant pedagogies alongside a historical overview of how the term has been framed and utilized in science education over the past two decades. Following on these theoretical underpinnings, we synthesize the findings of contemporary empirical research studies that are situated both in and out-of-school contexts. In doing so, we aim to respond to the question of what might be the value of adopting CRP in science education? As the synthesis of related literature shows, there exists a strong relation between CRP and multiple kinds of benefits related to students’ engagement in science, both in out-of-school and in school contexts. These benefits include the three tenets of CRP: increasing academic achievement, cultural competence, and sociopolitical consciousness. Other benefits refer to increasing students’ interest in science, motivation and engagement as well as self-identification with science. We end the paper by offering recommendations for future research based on identified gaps in existing knowledge base.

Highlights

  • Large-scale movement of diverse groups of people continue to redefine the demographics of an increasing number of societies all around the world

  • We aim to respond to the question of what might be the value of adopting culturally relevant pedagogy’ (CRP) in science education? More narrowly, in this paper we argue for the urgency of culturally relevant pedagogies as a response to the challenge of meeting the needs of increasingly diverse and multicultural science classrooms

  • We provide a synthesis of contemporary studies that have adopted CRP as a frame for the design of different kinds of interventions aiming to promote different kinds of outcomes in the context of science education both in-school and out-of-school contexts

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Summary

Global migration raises new challenges for science education

Large-scale movement of diverse groups of people continue to redefine the demographics of an increasing number of societies all around the world. Numerous studies have examined academic achievement of minoritized groups all around the world: Maori in New Zealand (Savage et al 2011), Mexican Americans (Meyer and Crawford 2015), African Americans (Ladson-Billings 1995a), American Indian, Native Hawaiian and Alaska Native (Castagno and Brayboy 2008) students in the United States, Indian Peoples and Blacks in Brazil (Gonçalves e Silva 2004) Syrian students in Turkey (Arar et al 2019), Turkish students in Germany, Muslim students in England and France, students from the Caribbean, Pakistan, and Bangladesh in Britain (Banks 2009a), Russian, Estonian, Kosovo, Somali, and Chinese students in Finnish schools (Acquah et al 2015) The findings of these studies are consistent and reveal that minoritized students continue to experience the commonly cited ‘achievement gap’. This is precisely where the value of culturally relevant pedagogies might be found

Defining culturally relevant pedagogy
Culturally relevant pedagogy
Studies situated in school contexts
Conclusions
CRP and religious diversity
CRP and sociopolitical consciousness
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