Cultural Autobiography
Cultural Autobiography
Cultural Autobiography
Dr. Ndemanu
Multicultural Education
4-29-2021
Cultural Autobiography
personally, an immediate thought that personally comes to mind is the thought of being as
culturally responsive and proactive as possible. With this mindset of Education, we as educators
can find ourselves generally more open, more aware, more tolerant, and more effective in our
education. Educators that often find themselves Blocked mentally because of a lack of
understanding generally don't take into consideration that every single student that walks into
your classroom comes from a different background, whether that be a different socioeconomic
status, a different racial group, a different sexuality, a different sexual orientation, or even a
different religion. Working to help identify and accommodate your classroom structure to help
your students learn in the best way possible should be at the forefront oven educator’s mind,
and in some respects, it all starts with a strong and deep look into multicultural education and
how it should be addressed in your classroom. With this awareness as an educator, we can find
education can also be prominent outside of the classroom as well. Being Sensitive in public
situations as well as inside of the classroom is equally important to an individual.
Interactions between people don't carry different weight inside or outside the classroom.
People should always be aware of actions that they're taking and how they affect someone
even if they are not apparently different. To Put it simply, multi education is the link between
the educator and the learner truly coming together to understand each other. When a
classroom feels comfortable and inclusive, learning becomes more natural and more long
lasting simply due to the larger impact you may have on your students. We as educators
sometimes do not realize how much of an impact, we may have on students whether that be
good or bad. Taking the time to learn about a student in a more personal manner could reap
From a personal standpoint, I was raised in a mostly white, suburban town in the middle
of Indiana. going through my education I was never really exposed to a lot of cultural diversity
however our town did have a diverse student population regarding socioeconomic status.
Starting from when I was a student at my original high school, I found that I never really
understood different situations at home simply because I was lucky enough to live in a run of
the mill, middle class, white, suburban family that was living comfortably while I was in school.
When the difference is in my classmates first started to become noticeable, it was in my band
class when we were getting ready to pay our dues to participate in the marching band. The
band director would always try to keep the fees low because the town I grew up with in was a
blue-collar town. With fees being around $200 every year, my family was lucky enough to pay it
with little to no financial stress placed on them. Every year the band director would also
implore students that may or may not have financial issues to talk to him personally about
getting financial aid to help participate in the marching season. My band director was a firm
believer that financial trouble should not limit a child from participating and pursuing their
dreams. Looking at this now as an educator, I found this to be the first real interaction with
multicultural education. The realization that not everyone had the same resources and network
as me or my friends in the band really caused me to think critically and to be more aware of
how a diverse group of students, and in this case diverse in socioeconomic status, could pull
together in create an amazing program all while having drastically different lives outside of the
Being raised in a suburban and mostly white town has brought different challenges to
finding my social identity especially when coming to an extraordinarily diverse campus such as
Ball State University. a major turning point in my analysis that has shaped who I am today must
be my first couple of weeks here in Muncie. Meeting people from so many different walks of
life coming together and creating music as one entity really blew my mind upon walking on the
campus and still astonishes me to this day. Working and talking with my peers has brought to
light a very new perspective on how you look at people in the best way possible. before my
introduction into academia, I was analyzing people at a very surface level which caused me to
have a lot of misconceptions about my peers during high school in middle school. When you are
in an environment where your life and day-to-day activity is filled with aspiring educators, this
helps you in being open with who you really are and where you come from. Talking with peers
about their home lives and how their towns fared in comparison to other towns has been a very
interesting but enlightening process and it has been by far the most influential aspect of my
education to date. Another turning point in my education must probably be taking the
multicultural education class at Ball State University. with Muncie being a suburban area in
North East central Indiana, we as educators are still not very exposed to very much diversity.
This class offers a unique lens to analyze educational settings and interactions between
teachers and students to help gain a more complete understanding of what does and does not
work in a classroom setting. Realizing that my peers in this class were from different parts of
the country and had different backgrounds in their family’s history, we engaged in very in
interesting discussion on at home lives and experiences inside the classroom that shaped us to
who we are today. with this class at the forefront of my mind, I feel that it has proven to be a
very long lasting and truly deep experience in recognizing my identity as well as identifying with
With these events becoming a more prominent aspect of my life, I have taken these life
lessons to heart and have applied them to as many aspects of my daily living as I could. Working
with my peers became a lot more professional and a lot more productive as well as creating a
culture of understanding between everyone involved. The beautiful part about being a music
education major is that not only do you get to collaborate with your peers in curriculum design
and lesson planning, but you also get to collaborate artistically with them in developing and
rehearsing music that you will perform for loved ones and people from all around the nation.
Once this mutual understanding was met between my peers and myself, work became more
seamless and more collaborative rather than strenuous and tedious. Creating an environment
where people are first rather than a product that you and your colleagues are trying to pursue,
create a drastically more efficient working environment not only in the realm of education but
in any collaborative space. Working with people from different walks of life that have not been
raised like I have been personally has really increased my patience. Before really integrating a
mindset of multiculturalism I became frustrated and easily irritated by a lack of efficiency and
understanding amongst peers when tasked with group work or in a rehearsal setting when we
were playing in a band. Through my interactions with my peers and through this course, I have
found that understanding someone on a deeper level then just knowing what their name in
major is proving to be very important when creating a dynamic in the educational setting where
Connecting all this very valuable information that has been presented and professed in
this classroom, I've had the esteemed privilege to work with two drastically different high
school marching bands and create valuable relationships with almost every individual student
that I teach. The first school that I work with is on the northwest side of Indianapolis and it is
my hometown. Being a few years removed from the program I get a very interesting look on
how I perceived the program inside while I was an active participant with the band and now
analyzing the program based on my perceptions and observations outside the student
perspective. The student body is largely made up of white middle class suburban kids with
varying economic comfort at home. This really reigns in the scope in which I can analyze and
evaluate these students simply do too only one or two aspects of multicultural education being
prominent in this situation. A large part of being successful is specially in the music field, is to
take private lessons on your primary instrument. With some student’s situations not being as
financially stable we have created a program where some of the funding for lessons come out
of the band boosters’ budget to not limit the student’s success simply due to financial difficulty.
With this program in place, every student can study with an instructor that has the same or
more instruction on their primary instrument to help them receive pedagogical instruction
specific to their instrument. I teach the tuba, trombone, and euphonium and I teach roughly
eight students from this school district. As an educator I don't discriminate or treat my students
differently based on their financial status. I treat them with the upmost respect and try to give
them not only a professional learning experience but also building relationships that help
achieve an emotional understanding while playing music. With music being an emotionally
complex activity that requires the entire brain to do, building emotional connections with your
students is very important not only two gauge how they're feeling in certain situations but to
portray and perform music that they have selected also properly.
Another school that I was lucky enough to work for was up in Northwest Indiana near
Chicago. What was interesting about this town is that it was quite small, and the high school
was more of a regional area high school that brought in students from several towns. Despite
being so close to Chicago, a lot of the students were living in rural communities where their
parents were farmers and didn't really work in the city. These types of situations really are scary
for music educators because farmer families and families with that same line of work generally
don't see music education as a valuable resource for their kids. The director has done an
amazing job building and recruiting this program to become one of the better high schools up in
Northwest Indiana to perform at a state level. With a band of roughly 110 students, this
seemingly small regional high school helps me breathe a breath of fresh air and have hope for
MUSIC Education in places other than suburban America. Students in this area were a bit more
racially diverse with a larger Hispanic population while most had similar at home situations,
there were few that had financial struggles paying for marching band every year. Just like the
school mentioned previously, the director made it a priority to allow anyone who had an
interest in performing the ability to participate no matter what their financial standing was at
home. Another very interesting aspect of this school was the sense of camaraderie amongst the
students. When students didn't have a ride with their parents, a friend would step in and offer
them a ride even if they were 20 minutes out of the way. These weren't isolated cases either,
this sense of ownership and courtesy spread throughout the band program and became part of
the culture.