Exploring teachers’ perceptions and practices of intercultural education in an international school
Sommier Mélodine; Roiha Anssi
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042821612
Tiivistelmä
This article examines teachers’ perceptions and experiences of
intercultural education. The participants (n = 11) were teachers who
work in the Primary Years Programme (PYP) of an International
Baccalaureate (IB) school in the Netherlands. The school was chosen as
the context for this study due to the emphasis on intercultural
understanding in IB education. The data were collected through a closed
and open-ended survey in 2019 and complemented by an ethnographical
method. The results showed that the teachers mostly drew on
cultural-differentialist approaches in their definition of intercultural
education. They considered intercultural education to be important for
the pupils’ future but felt insecure in implementing it. All teachers
reported implementing intercultural education in their teaching at least
to some extent, however with some limitations. The teachers focused
predominantly on national cultures and traditions to address
interculturality in class. Despite the overall trend, a few teachers
expressed more critical views on interculturality and expanded their
perceptions of it to ‘small cultures’. The findings of this study speak
to the importance of paying attention to pre-service teacher training to
provide teachers with tangible tools to implement a type of
intercultural education that departs from solely essentialist views of
culture.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]