Leadership magazine Jan/Feb 2016 V45 No 3 | Seite 17
Being a
Culturally
Proficient school
leader is not an
option, but rather
a necessary and
welcomed requirement
The United States of America is in
the midst of a cultural seismic shift. Around
the time the 2020 United States Census is
conducted, more than half of the nation’s
children are expected to be part of a minority race or ethnic group. This proportion
is expected to continue to grow so that by
2060, just 36 percent of all children – people under age 18 – will be single-race nonHispanic white, compared to 52 percent
reported in the 2015 census.
With recent incidents in our nation shaping our societal perspectives, along with
significant decisions by the U.S. Supreme
Court, it’s not only our population’s demographics that have and will continue to
shift. This shift also includes the migration of cultural attributes that are counter
to the current mainstream culture. This
transformation will need to be absorbed as
soon being the macro culture of our country.
Essentially, what the census is telling us is
that the people who are the fabric of those
cultures will soon be the composition of the
larger culture in our country.
We, as educational leaders, are responsible for ensuring that an environment for
teaching practitioners is conducive to cultivate college, career and life ready students
and citizens. It is imperative, even morally
imperative – and a social justice – that we
acknowledge the importance of identifying
this cultural shift. We must create genuine,
authentic learning opportunities that will
foster an acceptance, appreciation and an
embracement for all cultures.
Hopefully it is duly noted that I did not
state that we need to “tolerate” differing cultures, but there needs to be a distinction that
we must be accepting, appreciative and embracing of all cultures that are not congruent
with our own.
The key to being a
culturally proficient
school administrator is
having the realization
that accepting,
appreciating and
embracing differing
cultures is an ongoing
way of being.
By LaDay Smith
January | February 2016
17