Teachers
College, Columbia University
by Wendy Schwartz
Arab
Americans in U.S. schools represent more than 20 countries in
the Middle East and Northern Africa. They share many similarities
with other immigrant groups seeking to establish an ethnic identity
in a heterogeneous country, but they also face additional challenges.
These result especially from negative stereotyping; racism and
discrimination; widespread misinformation about their history
and culture; and, for the majority who are Muslim, the need
to find ways to practice their religion in a predominantly Judeo-Christian
country (Jackson, 1995).
Some
Muslim Arab American parents send their children to private
Muslim schools so they can receive an education consonant with
the family's religious beliefs, but most opt for public schools
(Zehr, 1999). As the number of Arab American students in public
schools has increased, so has the array of strategies and materials
for successfully integrating them. Still, many schools have
not yet acknowledged Arab culture and history or counteracted
Arab stereotyping (Suleiman, 1996). This digest reviews the
resources available to provide Arab Americans with a supportive
school environment and all students with an accurate and unbiased
education on the Middle East.
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School Climate
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School
policies and practices largely determine how welcome Arab American
students feel. Schools can:
Represent
the Middle East, Arabs, and Muslims accurately, completely,
and fairly in the curriculum and school activities.
Ensure that Arab American students are treated equitably and
without prejudice by teachers and peers, and that teachers respond
to incidences of racism and discrimination strongly and quickly,
with attention to both the perpetrators and the victims.
Respect the customs of the native culture and religion of Arab
students.
Inclusion of Arab Culture
Although Arab Americans may be one of the smaller minorities
in schools, they should be represented in multicultural courses
and activities to validate their culture and educate all students
about the Middle East. Field trips can include visits to Arab
community institutions, assembly speakers can include Arab American
leaders, and film series can include Arab contributions, for
example. Schools can involve Arab American families to familiarize
students with the various groups' celebrations, foods, and history
(ADC, 1993a).
Elimination
of Prejudice and Discrimination
Because prejudice against Arab Americans increases when political
events involve Arabs, or are even speculated to involve them,
educators need to be prepared to respond to possible harassment
of Arab American students resulting from negative news reporting,
and to invoke school policies against hate crimes and discrimination
as appropriate (Suleiman, 1996).
Administrators
and teachers should correct erroneous information when confronted
with it, such as popular myths that all Arabs are "...wealthy...barbaric
and backward, and...have harems" (Farquharson, 1988, p.
4). They can help students understand that Arab Americans should
not be held personally accountable for events in the Middle
East (ADC, 1997). They can confront scapegoating by allowing
students to air their views and helping them understand why
such judgments are inaccurate and hurtful (ADC, 1997).
Schools
can take care not to discriminate against Muslims. They should
not enforce dress codes or showering requirements that violate
the Muslim tradition of modesty or require Muslim students to
engage in coed physical education classes. Educators should
ensure that girls are not ridiculed for their head covering.
They should not schedule tests on major Islamic holidays and
should allow fasting students to go to the library instead of
the cafeteria during Ramadan. Federal law permits students to
organize prayer services, and schools should accommodate such
requests from Muslims (Council on American-Islamic Relations,
1997). Muslims across the country are now petitioning schools
to label cafeteria food containing pig products, and some schools
are already doing so (Zehr, 1999).
Staff
Development
Schools can provide professional development training and make
available to their staff accurate resource materials about the
Middle East, Islam, the various Arab groups in the U.S., and
the nature and extent of anti-Arab sentiment. Middle East organizations
and centers at local colleges offer schools a range of services,
including training, often at no cost. For example, the American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) has produced a substantial
Middle East bibliography for educators (1993b) and a guide for
helping Arab parents serve as a resource for teachers (ADC,
1993a). Followers of Islam in particular (Arab Americans as
well as other Muslim communities) want to feel respected, and
providing teachers with information about the religion promotes
understanding. Several groups, such as the Arab World and Islamic
Resources and School Services, conduct workshops; others, including
the Council on American-Islamic Relations (1997), have published
materials for educators.
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Curriculum
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Course
Content
Arab references can be infused across the curriculum to familiarize
students with Middle East culture and dispel myths: Arab music,
Arab art, photographs of Arab countries, American words with
Arab roots, notable Arab Americans, etc. (ADC, 1993a). Courses
in religious tolerance need to include Islam. Anti-racism training
(for educators and students) should cite Arab Americans as a
group targeted by bigots. Schools can also offer Arabic as a
foreign language, an option available to Fairfax County, VA,
students (Zehr, 1999).
To
promote critical thinking skills by analyzing news reports,
teachers can ask students to evaluate stories for biases, unsubstantiated
accusations, or uneven treatment of Arabs and Jews that promote
racism. To identify stereotyping, teachers can ask students
to critique their textbooks, television programs, movies, books,
and news reports for negative portrayals of Arabs; indeed, many
studies document pervasive anti-Arab attitudes in the entertainment
media, including cartoons (ADC, 1997; Wingfeld & Karaman,
1995).
Textbooks
A scholarly evaluation of texts covering Middle East subjects
and Islam (Barlow, 1994) has documented that many of them are
"deficient" and "inaccurate" (ADC, 1993a,
p. 9). Further, children's fiction that portrays Arab and Jewish
children together is also frequently biased against Arabs (Kissen,
1991). Therefore, educators need to evaluate materials in use
and discard those with misinformation or biases. Then they can
work with school districts and the state to ensure that new
books are more accurate (ADC, 1993a; Council on American-Islamic
Relations, 1997).
A
variety of resources are available to facilitate this process.
The American Forum for Global Education (Kelahan & Penn,
1996) has produced an extensive bibliography of materials on
Arab history that can be used by curriculum developers, and
the Arab World and Islamic Resources and School Services (Shabbas,
1998) has issued a large notebook for secondary school teachers
to use as a basis for a multifaceted curriculum. In Michigan,
which has the largest Arab American community in the U.S., parents
work with the school system to produce a high quality and accurate
curriculum (ADC, 1993a).
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Communicating with Arab American Students
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Arab
Americans from different countries differ from each other in
culture and socioeconomic status, as do Muslim and Christian
Arabs, and newly-arrived and second and third generation Arabs.
To accommodate the individuality of Arab families, it is important
for teachers and counselors to take the lead from students and
their parents when approaching them about school and other related
issues, and to be knowledgeable about Arab culture as a whole
(Adeed & Smith, 1997). In general, though, recent immigrants
may experience culture shock, and feel insecure and lonely;
all Arab Americans may feel alienated because of perceived prejudice
and ridicule of their rituals, and they may express negative
feelings as a defense (Jackson, 1997).
The
counselors of Arab American students need to respect both traditional
Arab attitudes toward usual counseling practices and the Arab
communication style in all interactions. Jackson recommends
first meeting with the student outside the counseling office
to build rapport. Group counseling should be considered because
it "reflects the Arab value of collectivism," and
the group should be single sex. Also, a cognitive approach may
help allow students to honor their reluctance to discuss personal
feelings with strangers. Finally, Arab clients are more comfortable
sitting very close to the counselor than are members of other
groups (Jaclson, 1995, p. 49).
Family
life and harmony are crucial to Arabs, so educators need to
demonstrate respect for the sanctity of the nuclear and extended
family and the familial role of elders. Nevertheless, when Arab
American students seem troubled, it may be productive to determine
whether their problems stem from intergenerational differences
within their family or another source. Inviting family participation
in the counseling process regardless of the nature of the student's
problem can be useful (Jackson, 1995; 1997). Because Arabs are
very sensitive to public criticism, teachers should express
concerns to Arab American students in a way that minimizes "loss
of 'face' " (Adeed & Smith, 1997, p. 505). Finally,
helping families cope with varying levels of acculturation,
language differences, and conformity to tradition can enable
students to develop a positive identity that is both personally
satisfying and respectful of their heritage.
References
Adeed,
P., & Smith, G. P. (1997). Arab Americans: Concepts and materials.
In J.A. Banks, Teaching strategies for ethnic studies. Needham
Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon.
American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee. (1993a). Educational outreach and
action guide: Working with school systems. Washington, DC: Author.
American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee. (1993b). Teachers' resources on
the Middle East. Washington, DC: Author.
(ERIC Abstract)
American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee. (1997). 1996-97 report on hate
crimes & discrimination against Arab Americans. Washington,
DC: Author.
Barlow,
E. (Ed.). (1994). Evaluation of secondary-level textbooks for
coverage of the Middle East and North Africa (3rd ed). Ann Arbor,
MI/Tucson, AZ: Middle East Studies Association/Middle East Outreach
Council.
Council
on American-Islamic Relations. (1997). An educator's guide to
Islamic religious practices. Washington, D.C.: Author.
Farquharson,
M. (1988, March). Ideas for teaching Arab students in a multicultural
setting. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Teachers
of English to Speakers of Other Languages, Chicago, IL.
(ERIC Abstract)
Jackson,
M.L. (1995). Counseling youth of Arab ancestry. In C.C. Lee (Ed.),
Counseling for diversity (pp. 41-60). Needham Heights, MA: Allyn
& Bacon.
(ERIC Abstract)
Jackson,
M.L. (1997). Counseling Arab Americans. In C.C. Lee (Ed.), Multicultural
issues in counseling (2nd ed., pp. 333-352). Alexandria: American
Counseling Association.
Kelahan,
B., & Penn, M. (Eds.). (1996). Spotlight on the Muslim Middle
East-Crossroads. A student reader and teacher's guide. New York:
American Forum for Global Education.
(ERIC Abstract)
Kissen,
R.M. (1995, June). The children of Hagar and Sarah. Children's
Literature in Education, 22(2), 111-20.
(ERIC Abstract)
Shabbas,
A. (Ed.). (1998). Arab world studies notebook. Berkeley, CA: Arab
World and Islamic Resources and School Services.
Suleiman,
M.F. (1996). Educating the Arab American child: Implications for
teachers. Unpublished manuscript, Fort Hays State University,
College of Education, Hays, KS.
(ERIC Abstract)
Wingfield,
M., & Karaman, B. (1995, March-April). Arab stereotypes and
American educators. Social studies and the Young Learner, 7(4),
7-10.
(ERIC Abstract)
Zehr,
M.A. (1999, January 20). Guardians of the faith. Education Week,
XVIII(19), p. 26-31.
This
brief was developed by the ERIC Clearinghouse on Urban Education,
Institute for Urban and Minority Education, Box 40, Teachers College,
Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, (800) 601-4868. Erwin
Flaxman, Director. Wendy Schwartz, Managing Editor.
This Digest was developed by the ERIC Clearinghouse on Urban Education,
with funding from the Office of Educational Research and Improvement,
U.S. Department of Education, under contract no. ED-99-CO-0035.
The opinions in this Digest do not necessarily reflect the position
or policies of OERI or the Department of Education.