Kids /coloradan/ en Embracing Culture with After-School Mentoring Program /coloradan/2022/11/07/embracing-culture-after-school-mentoring-program Embracing Culture with After-School Mentoring Program Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 11/07/2022 - 00:00 Categories: Campus News Tags: Boulder Culture Kids Students

For three years, an after-school cultural mentoring program in 欧美口爆视频 Boulder鈥檚 School of Education has paired two dozen predominately Latinx fifth graders from University Hill, a diverse bilingual elementary school across the street from the 欧美口爆视频 Boulder campus, with underrepresented university student mentors. 

Together, mentors and mentees explore family and community histories that are often suppressed in mainstream U.S. curricula, including ties to loved ones across borders. 

鈥淲e have been holding a rare space for reflecting on cultural identity, migration and belonging, and what it means to be Latinx or transnational in Boulder,鈥 said Andrea Dyrness, Costa Rican-born associate professor of educational foundations, policy and practice who developed the partnership when her daughter was attending the school. 

Activities are designed by 欧美口爆视频 Boulder mentors, mostly education and ethnic studies students, to build community and provoke reflection and dialogue around cultural identity. 

鈥淭he resulting interactions reveal a wealth of cultural knowledge, skills and abilities that are often not visible to the public or in daily life in U.S. schools,鈥 Dyrness said. 

Deb Palmer, 欧美口爆视频 professor of equity, bilingualism and biliteracy and Dyrness鈥 research partner, led professional development with teachers to inspire continuous inquiry into students鈥 lived experiences and to counter deficit views of Latinx communities. 

The team continues to learn about the knowledge that transnational students bring to schools, and they hope others can learn from linguistically and culturally diverse families. 鈥淚 think parents should be proud of the cultural wealth that they are providing for their children 鈥 bilingualism, biculturalism, economic understandings and transnational understandings,鈥 said Jackquelin Bristol (PhDEdu鈥25), who helped publish a report on the partnership called 鈥淏ilingual in Boulder.鈥 

Daniel Garz贸n (PhDEdu鈥23), who grew up in the U.S. with ties to Colombia, was a mentor and research assistant in the program. 

鈥淚 wish I had this opportunity growing up,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 could have learned to appreciate my home language and culture much sooner.鈥 

Story condensed and edited. Parts of this story appeared in Anthropology News, 鈥,鈥 by Andrea Dyrness on July 29, 2022, and in Voices magazine by Hannah Fletcher at colorado.edu/education

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Photo by Hannah Fletcher 

欧美口爆视频 Boulder student mentors and University Hill fifth graders embrace their family and community histories.

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NOW 鈥 Summer 2019 /coloradan/2019/10/01/now-summer-2019 NOW 鈥 Summer 2019 Anonymous (not verified) Tue, 10/01/2019 - 00:00 Categories: Gallery Tags: Kids STEM

If it鈥檚 icky, slimy or smelly, it鈥檚 fair game.

鈥淕rossology,鈥 a five-day 欧美口爆视频 Boulder camp for elementary school-age children, explores all things 鈥済ross鈥 through experiments with slippery, messy things 鈥 including dissected animal organs 鈥 and lessons in natural happenings, such as how cavities form and what causes skunks鈥 odor.

The camp is part of 欧美口爆视频 Science Discovery, a program founded in 1983 to offer STEM-focused K-12 summer camps, after-school programs and teacher trainings.

Photo by Glenn Asakawa 

If it鈥檚 icky, slimy or smelly, it鈥檚 fair game.

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