Learning Modules
Our teacher learning modules and assessment-focused communities include videos and links to research, briefs, and worksheets from our Resource Hub.
Culturally Responsive Instruction for Native American Students
Welcome to this professional learning series on culturally responsive instruction for Native American students. This series provides a framework for instruction that emphasizes experiential, active, and student-centered learning. It supports all teachers in creating culturally responsive instruction for their Native students. If you are already familiar with your students’ cultures and communities, you should be ready to dive into implementing this framework. If you are not yet familiar, this series will guide you on your journey to become more knowledgeable. We do not provide lessons or curricula on particular cultures, histories, or languages. Instead we provide the pedagogical principles to support you in creating (or adjusting) lessons and curricula informed by and integrating your students’ cultures. Implementing this process will pave the way for your students’ to achieve success, both in and out of the classroom.
If your role is to support teachers and advocate for Native students, this series is right for you as well. It can help you know what to look for in classroom observations, guide your feedback to teachers and schools, and inform your recommendations to improve programs for Native students.
The series was developed by education researchers Barbara Jones and Joan Herman through a review of the literature on culturally responsive instruction for Native American students, and through regular consultation, feedback, and contributions from David Sullivan, member of the Kiowa Nation and Special Programs Director at Anadarko Public Schools in Oklahoma. Feedback was also provided by Georgina Owen, Title XI State Coordinator at the Colorado Department of Education, who also helped organize the pilot study for these training materials with Title XI Coordinators in Colorado. This project was created through a collaboration between CRESST and WestEd, with funding provided by a grant from the U.S. Department of Education.
This series addresses the following questions.
- What is culturally responsive instruction?
- Why is it important for Native American students?
- How does culturally responsive instruction connect to traditional Native American educational approaches?
- What are specific guidelines for providing culturally responsive instruction for Native students?
- What does culturally responsive practice look like in different subject areas?
- What are the steps to take to develop a culturally responsive practice?
Working Together!
We recommend that if possible, you work through this professional learning series together with peers in a professional learning community (PLC). This PLC can be in-person at your school site, or a video/phone conference-based community, e.g., across rural schools in a district.
Our vision for using these materials involves:
- Individuals, on their own time, completing one section of the professional learning series at a time. This includes watching the course video and any additional material, such as completing any handout or inventory activities that go along with the section. To support productive meetings, we’ve included a document on establishing meeting norms below.
- After completing the section activities, individuals come together and meet with their PLC and discuss:
- What they’ve learned through the videos and application activities
- Questions that have come up
- Experiences/reflections related to culturally responsive instruction in their classrooms
- Goal setting for each participant
Linked below is a sample meeting agenda for these meetings.
- Additionally, teachers may come together for Video Study Groups (VSG). These are more targeted meetings to provide peer feedback to one another based on video recordings teachers take of their classrooms. To support this effort, we’ve included a sample initial meeting agenda and an agenda for follow up VSG meetings.
Let’s get started!
The series of videos and tasks are presented in sequential lessons and build on each other. Follow the steps to complete each lesson before moving on to the next video.
Additional Resources
Literature on Culturally Responsive Instruction for Native American Students
Review this list of references and tools that informed development of this Spotlight.
Formative Assessment for Improving Native American Student Learning and Language Development: A Series of Professional Learning Modules
This series addresses formative assessment implementation with Native students across content areas with a focus on language development, including academic English and Native language. Students’ levels of prior content knowledge and language development vary greatly from one to another. It is important that instructors know where each student is on their learning pathway, and then target instructional experiences that are matched to their levels. With formative assessment, teachers have the tools to do this work. It is only in connecting with students where they are on the pathway, that they are able to progress towards meeting their Learning Goals.
Formative Assessment in Action
The Formative Assessment in Action Spotlight aims to provide educators with resources that support learning about the formative assessment process. The spotlight includes classroom videos that showcase formative assessment in action, and opportunities to deepen learning about formative assessment with video viewing protocols. Educators can use the opportunities to analyze others’ practice with an eye towards incorporating new learning into current instructional routines. Note: you’ll see some of the same classroom videos that are in this professional development program, plus many more!
High-Leverage Principles of Effective Instruction for English Learners
New college and career ready standards (CCRS) have established more rigorous expectations of learning for all learners, including EL students, than what was expected in previous standards. A common feature in these new content-area standards is their emphasis on students’ use of language to articulate and convey understanding of the content. The heightened role that language plays in CCRS presents new challenges for EL students and their teachers by calling for improved instructional strategies that simultaneously address language and content-area learning.
The purpose of this resource is to provide teachers of EL students with effective, high-leverage learning and teaching principles that can be incorporated into daily instructional plans and routines.