Suppose you were applying for a job in a community mental health center. How would you respond to these questions during the interview: (1) Many of our clients represent a range of diverse cultural and ethnic backgrounds; to what degree do you think you will be able to work with them? (2) How would you explain your own acculturation process? (e.g., your own process of being a product of your culture; how the culture to which you belong affects your thinking, etc.). How will this help or hinder you in working with our clientele? (3) What will be your biggest challenge in forming trusting relationships with clients who are culturally different from you?
analysing Standard 1, classrooms will consist of a diverse set of children from differing backgrounds, who may have different needs, from dyslexia or Autism spectrum disorders to physical difficulties. We must take these differences into account when managing classroom behaviour .A pupil’s needs may lead a teacher to believe they are being “difficult” or disruptive or not making an effort to understand, when this is not in fact the case (Goepel et al. 2014) Frustrated pupils who lack support are less likely to meet the high expectations of behaviour we have set. Therefore, we must remove barriers to learning. I observed several ways of doing this to provide an inclusive classroom, such as offering a variety of ways of recording their work. Not every child is happy with writing; for children with dyslexia, writing can be a frustrating task. The teacher offered the class options such as drawing, poster creation, making diagrams, or working in pairs where one child writes and the other dictates orally, to be delivered as a joint oral and written presentation. This is known as differentiation or personalisation of assessments. Other strategies to manage a diverse classroom are provided by Evans (2007):
All these tools help with better learning outcomes, but Standard 7 is concerned with high expectations of good behaviour. The link between the two is as follows. Maslow (1943) states that when students are pre-occupied with their basic physical well-being or safety, or their needs are not being met, children may act out their anger, resentment or frustration at not having their needs fulfilled. Therefore, failing to differentiate and identify appropriate strategies for supporting each individual in class directly correlates with increased disruption and poor standards of classroom behaviour.