The whole Paula Dean scandal has gotten me thinking on this and how to handle it in childcare. More times then not since this broke I have heard "People are so Sensitive these days" and it seems I've even heard that alot on here as well. So are we over sensitive to these culture issues or is there really a line not to cross.
For QRIS in our state when you get to 4 or 5 stars you have to start having "culture" intergrated into your program. It pretty much is anything to do with the "culture" the child is living in, not just skin color. So religion, marital, food, disabilities, etc.
I remember awhile back there being a post about a dcb calling everyone at childcare the N word as that is what he heard at home. As I recall the child was African American and alot of the African American use the N word when addressing someone. The other families were offended though by the child using that word even though it was in his culture.
Then I was in a class where same sex marriage was brought up and how some parents in a program were having a hard time with their child being in an environment where children are coming from families with this "culture".
Other providers and I were talking and trying to really figure this out. How do you allow culture from different families in your program without offending each other. Also, what happens if a family calls and their "culture" doesn't fit into your program, how can you decline without possibly being sued for discrimination?
For QRIS in our state when you get to 4 or 5 stars you have to start having "culture" intergrated into your program. It pretty much is anything to do with the "culture" the child is living in, not just skin color. So religion, marital, food, disabilities, etc.
I remember awhile back there being a post about a dcb calling everyone at childcare the N word as that is what he heard at home. As I recall the child was African American and alot of the African American use the N word when addressing someone. The other families were offended though by the child using that word even though it was in his culture.
Then I was in a class where same sex marriage was brought up and how some parents in a program were having a hard time with their child being in an environment where children are coming from families with this "culture".
Other providers and I were talking and trying to really figure this out. How do you allow culture from different families in your program without offending each other. Also, what happens if a family calls and their "culture" doesn't fit into your program, how can you decline without possibly being sued for discrimination?
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