Learning about themselves, others
Michael Miller
At Kaiser Elementary School on Friday, the multipurpose room looked
like a costume party at the United Nations.
Each member of Debra Muniz’s sixth-grade class dressed in the
traditional garb of his or her family’s country of origin -- in some
cases, more than one country. Students walked across the stage in a
mock fashion show, wearing German folk dresses, soccer uniforms, even
a Viking helmet and fake beard.
There was a serious bent to the proceedings, however. The
Multicultural Festival signified the end of a six-week program in
Muniz’s class titled the Tolerance Training Unit -- in which students
learn about their own ethnicities, and about how to respect others.
“I teach a unit where they learn to celebrate their differences,”
said Muniz. “This is to prepare them for junior high, where diversity
is rampant. We learn what is discrimi- nation, what is prejudice, and
how to respond if they’re in that situation.”
Six years ago, Muniz started the program by using materials from
the Orange County Human Relations Department. During the Tolerance
Training Unit, students go through a number of unique exercises to
help break down any barriers between them. In one, which Muniz calls
the “circle of truth,” students sit in a circle and talk about times
when they’ve felt slighted. Other times, Muniz has them role-play and
create comebacks for insensitive remarks.
One of the most popular exercises is “compliment cards,” in which
students write positive notes to pass on to classmates.
“I choose four kids each week to sit in the middle,” Muniz said.
“And they basically get loved upon with compliments and praise.”
Although Muniz’s students said that Kaiser has only minimal
prejudice problems, they found the exercises useful.
“I think if there is discrimination, it’s because people haven’t
learned this [unit] in school yet,” said Sara Vetrovec, who has roots
in Russia and the Czech Republic. “We’re third- through sixth-grade
here, and people only do this in the sixth.”
“There have been a few issues,” added classmate Maddy O’Neill, who
is part Irish and part Italian. “But we get along pretty well.”
The Multicultural Festival -- held Friday by Muniz and two days
earlier by fellow sixth-grade teacher Narisa Hoevatanakul -- provided
an upbeat finish to the Tolerance Training Unit. Students in each
class had to research their countries of origin, which often led them
to contact grandparents and distant relatives in search of stories.
A few students made surprising discoveries.
Quinn Stirdivant’s great-great- grandfather, who immigrated to the
United States from Germany in the 19th century, built a chicken coop
upon settling in Wisconsin and ended up living in it when he couldn’t
afford a house. Later, he dismantled the coop and brought the planks
of wood with him to California -- where he transformed them into a
house, which is Stirdivant’s grandfather’s current residence.
Jason Dinh, a student in Hoevatanakul’s class, learned about his
great-grandfather, who is 116 years old and still lives in Vietnam.
Despite his age, Dinh said, the man still drinks wine every day and
can break crabs open with his teeth. And he keeps in touch with his
family in America, even from a distance.
“I didn’t know about him,” Dinh said. “But he knew about us for
some reason.”
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Michael Miller visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about his experience.
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