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Concepts

Culturally Appropriate Education: Insights From Educational Neuroscience

Jiaxian Zhou

Corresponding Author

School of Psychology and Cognitive Science, East China Normal University

Address correspondence to Jiaxian Zhou, School of Psychology and Cognitive Science, East China Normal University, No. 3663 North Zhongshan Road, Shanghai 200062, China; e‐mail:

jxzhou@psy.ecnu.edu.cn

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Kurt W. Fischer

Harvard Graduate School of Education

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First published: 14 November 2013
Cited by: 3

ABSTRACT

Culturally appropriate education focuses on educational competence needed in a global world and respect for different world views of learners and teachers from different cultural contexts. The relationship between gene, brain, and culture is complex and dynamical. Cultural experience and learning sculpts the anatomy and function of the human brain and shapes human behavior. This neuroplasticity is the basis of educability in human beings. Education reform should reflect cultural diversity and embed teaching practices into the cultural history of a nation and should promote positive inclusion of minority and indigenous history so as to maximize successful adoption by teachers and parents. This tenet is at the core of the concept of “culturally appropriate education.” Successful educational reform and pedagogy require that teachers become culturally and neuroscientifically literate.

Number of times cited: 3

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