Educator and author, Parker Palmer wrote a book called To Know as We are Known. The title says it all: In order for our students to learn, they must first be "known." Their stories, their personal experiences, their learning styles, their intelligences, their lives within the context of their family and culture must be known or "seen" by peers and teachers, alike.
We began this course with the idea of "developing a sensitive eye". Here, that sensitive eye is vital. We do not engage in the "doubting game" of tearing down or tearing apart in order to make our students visible. We engage in the "believing game" - we "listen to, affirm, enter in." The "sensitive eye" we develop as educators (and the "sensitive eye" we help our students to develop as learners) becomes the receptor for "knowing" about the history, culture, and individual identities of each of our students.
Every country in which Teachers Without Borders does its work says the same thing - we must define the term "multicultural education" in detail, and know the features and strength of culture in order to be effective teachers for the new millennium.
Here, we begin with our first definition:
Multicultural education is the ability to appreciate and "know" all learners.





