Levels Of Culture For Culturally Relevant Teaching

“Culture Gap” = “Achievement Gap” 

Culturally relevant teaching involves understanding a student’s culture. Research shows that it is an integral part of the learning process. I would argue that it is the most significant part.

We have endless discussions about how to deal with achievement gaps. The “culture gap” between students and their teachers contribute to “achievement gaps”. But we have very few conversations about that. Why is that?

Many of these conversations don’t happen because adults make statements like “Well, I don’t see color.” That in itself is an issue. You SHOULD see color. Check out the Color Blind Or Color Brave? Ted Talk.

Sometimes I think the people that make those statements make it so they get a societal gold star. A gold star that reads “I’m not racist because I’m color-blind”. Sorry my friends, that’s not how it works.

 

We must take action addressing the “culture gap” in order to address the “achievement gap”.

Culture And It’s Impact On Teaching

Culture is the way we make sense of the world. That is why it’s essential to include it in our teaching.

We want students to make sense of math. “The brain uses cultural information to turn everyday happenings into meaningful events.” (Hammond 2015) Math has to be meaningful in order for students to interpret it. Culturally Responsive Teaching Books

The Three Levels Of Culture

As an educator, make it a point to understand the three levels of culture. Reflect on how you are currently using it and what you could be work on. The three levels are surface culture, shallow culture, and deep culture.

This is observable such as a person’s or community’s food, clothes, music, holidays and etc. This has the lowest impact in your classrooms because it has little emotional impact on trust. Could you incorporate some of these things into your lessons? Sure. A county flag could be used as a fraction lesson. It’s just not as helpful for students to turn everyday experiences into meaningful events.

An iceberg. The part above the water level says surface culture which includes food, holidays and literature.

2. Shallow Culture

These are the unspoken rules of social norms that a person or community has. They include the attitudes towards elders, concepts of time, personal space, rules about eye contact and etc.
Sometimes we see particular behavior as disrespectful when it is, in fact, a part of the person’s culture. In my culture, we have minimal eye contact out of respect for the person speaking to us (especially an elder). I remember teachers making me look at them in the eyes when they were talking. I felt like I was in trouble. (I still see teachers making the same demand.) Here is where a teacher might see it as disrespectful and a student might see it as the teacher being mean. It wasn’t until I was older that I realized, that my own situation, was just two different social norms in conflict. Shallow culture has a high emotional impact on trust. A teacher that understands the students’ social norms can help them turn everyday experiences into meaningful events.

An iceberg. The part on sea level says shallow culture which includes concepts of time, eye contact and ways of handling emotion.

3. Deep Culture

This is the most important form of culture because it has an intense emotional impact on trust. It controls how we learn information. This form of culture manipulates our everyday behaviors and helps us make sense of our world. This would include decision-making, preference of competition or cooperation, gender roles, and etc. Knowing if a student prefers teamwork over individual competition is important when creating activities for the class.

An iceberg. The deepest part of the iceberg below the water says deep culture which decision-making and world view.

Cultural Norms And Beliefs Matter

In my experience, most teachers would read this and say “I don’t have time to learn everyone’s background and culture. I have to teach”. I understand that. There are several different backgrounds in our classrooms which can be overwhelming. But there are patterns that we could look for in some cultures, universal patterns across cultures that can help. And I’m not talking about patterns of stereotypes. We can’t assume every student of Asian descent is going to be great in math.

Look at patterns such as the community. The way that students interpret the community is important. Did you know that in America, the dominant culture is “individualistic”? Meaning people prefer being independent and self-reliant. There is a strong focus on competition and self-promotion. However, Latino, African, Pacific Islander, and Native Americans have a more “communal” view. Meaning they make a group a priority over each individual in it.

Sociopolitical Issues And It’s Impact On Teaching

A culturally responsive teacher should be aware of the levels of culture. But they should also be aware of the sociopolitical issues affecting their students? Such as housing, transportation, education. Dr. Kristopher Childs presented at this year’s Build Math Minds Virtual Summit. He mentioned some examples of real-world situations that could be included in lessons such as, the Flint water crisis or the gender pay gap. Why not include these in our math lessons? Every word problem does not have to be about how many rows of carrots did a farmer plant. That is not relatable to a large population of students. I’m not saying that students should never be exposed to what a farmer is or does. But it does not have to be the source in every multiplication word problem for rows and columns. Remember, culture is how we make sense of the world. Test yourself For Hidden Bias

But I get it, the farmer word problems are in our textbooks and that’s what we are directed to teach. It’s clear our textbooks and curriculums are not culturally relevant since they are made for the masses. Let’s be honest the writers of such curriculums are primarily of the same background. That is why it’s important to modify our instruction to meet these needs for culturally relevant teaching. I should probably mention that by modifying I don’t mean slapping the name “Enrique” on a word problem. That does not make something culturally relevant.

Where Do We Start?

We first need to reflect on what is happening in your classroom. Where do you stand in culturally relevant teaching? Then start having these conversations with colleagues, leaders, admin, parents, etc.

The most important step we can take is to get past talking about it and get to work on it. There needs to be a commitment, not just a “one and done” professional learning session on how to make things more culturally relevant.

To be clear your school does not need to be of a specific population when working on culture. I have worked in some schools where the population was mostly white. That does not excuse you from doing this work because you do not have minorities in your classroom. Everyone needs to do the work!

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Math Struggles Ain’t Just About Numbers

Let’s be B.F.F.R—math can stress kids out. You’ve seen it: the frozen-in-place stare, the pencil tapping like it’s sending an SOS, or the classic “I CAN’T DO THIS!” meltdown before even trying. But here’s the thing—most of the time, their struggle isn’t about numbers. It’s about mindset.

What if we borrowed some life coaching techniques to help our students not just survive math but actually thrive in it? Let’s break it down into simple, practical ways you can empower your students without turning into a full-blown therapist.

 Reframe the Narrative (A.K.A. Flip the Script on “I’m Bad at Math”)

Ever notice how kids say “I’m bad at math” like it’s their official personality trait? That belief is holding them back more than any tricky word problem ever could.

How to Do It:

  • When a student says, “I suck at math,” respond with: “You’re still learning. Let’s find a way that makes sense to you.”
  • Introduce the Power of Yet: “You don’t get it… yet. But your brain is working on it!”
  • Share stories of people who struggled with math and overcame it (bonus points if you can find famous athletes, musicians, or influencers).

Remind them that they once thought tying their shoes was impossible, and look at them now—shoe-tying pros. Math is just another skill that takes practice.

Teach Emotional Regulation (Because Frustration Is a Math Blocker)

We can’t expect students to push through challenges if they’re spiraling into math-induced panic mode. When frustration kicks in, their brains hit the “I’m out!” button.

How to Do It:

  • Pause & Breathe: Before jumping to the “I CAN’T,” have students take a deep breath. Try “breathe in for 4, hold for 4, out for 4.” Simple, but it works.
  • Break It Down: Instead of tackling the whole problem at once, ask, “What’s one thing we DO know?” Small wins build confidence.
  • Normalize Struggle: Post a sign in your classroom: “Mistakes Mean You’re Learning.” Say it. Live it. Believe it! As Naruto says.

Set Micro-Goals (Because Big Goals Can Feel Overwhelming)

If a kid already feels lost, telling them “just keep practicing” is like saying, “just climb this mountain real quick.” Instead, break it into steps.

How to Do It:

  • Instead of “Get better at multiplication,” set a goal like: “Practice a doubling/halving strategy.”
  • Use progress charts so students can SEE their growth. 
  • Celebrate the small wins! Even if they only got one more right than last time—that’s growth!

Remind them “If you can memorize every single lyric to that TikTok song, you can 100% remember a few math strategies.” 
Honestly research shows long term memory is activated when we leverage different modalities in our lessons. It’s how the brain learns math.

Shift from Performance to Progress (Because Speed Ain’t Everything)

Fluency is about thinking efficiently, not racing to the answer. The goal isn’t to turn kids into human calculators—it’s to help them use numbers flexibly.

How to Do It:

  • Replace timed tests with strategy-based challenges (ex: “How many ways can you solve 12 × 8?”).
  • Instead of praising fast answers, celebrate smart strategies: “Ooooh, I love how you broke that down!”
  • Remind them that even adults use tools like calculators and sticky notes—real math is about knowing how to approach problems, not just getting the answer instantly.

 Teach Self-Talk (Because Their Inner Voice Matters More Than You Know)

The way kids talk to themselves about math shapes their experience with it. If they constantly say, “I can’t do this,” their brain believes it. Time to switch up the self-talk game.

How to Do It:

  • Teach “I can” statements: Instead of “I don’t get it,” try “I don’t get it YET, but I can figure this out.”
  • Have students write down one math strength (even if it’s “I’m good at counting on my fingers” – that’s a start!).
  • Encourage students to talk to themselves like they’d talk to a friend. Would they tell a friend, “You’re dumb at math”? No? Then don’t say it to yourself either!

Emphasize- “You wouldn’t let your best friend talk trash about you, so don’t let your brain do it either!”

Coaching Math Mindsets for the Win

At the end of the day, teaching math fluency isn’t just about numbers—it’s about helping kids believe they can figure things out. When we shift from just teaching math to coaching their mindset, we create students who are not only fluent in math but confident in life.

So, here’s your challenge: What’s one small move you can try this week? Whether it’s shifting self-talk, celebrating small wins, or breaking down frustration, pick one and run with it.

Oh, and if you want more strategies like these, check out my Figuring Out Fluency series, (Book 1) (Book 2) where we make fluency engaging, empowering, and (most importantly) actually make sense.

And if you want more math mindset strategies, grab my Guide For Teachers To Help Students With Growth Mindset