SIGN IN YOUR ACCOUNT TO HAVE ACCESS TO DIFFERENT FEATURES

FORGOT YOUR PASSWORD?

FORGOT YOUR DETAILS?

AAH, WAIT, I REMEMBER NOW!

LERN

  • LOGIN
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • MEET LERN
      • HISTORY & MISSION
    • WHO WE SERVE
      • COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES
      • PUBLIC SCHOOL/COMMUNITY EDUCATION
      • FACULTY
    • …cont
      • ASSOCIATIONS
      • RECREATION DEPARTMENT
      • MUSEUMS & BOTANICAL GARDENS
  • EVENTS & EDUCATION
    • CONFERENCES
      • 2024 Continuing Education Leadership Conference
      • 2024 Recreation & Community Class Programming Conference
    • PROGRAMS & TRAINING
      • LERN Institutes – Spring 2024
      • Certified Faculty Developer
      • LERN MASTER’S DEGREE PROGRAM
      • ONSITE INSTITUTES & TRAINING
  • CONSULTING
    • CUSTOMIZED CONSULTING
    • REVIEW
      • PROGRAM REVIEW
      • REMOTE PROGRAM REVIEW
    • LERN’S CONSULTANTS, SPEAKERS & TRAINERS
      • WILLIAM DRAVES
      • JULIE COATES
      • GREG MARSELLO
      • BRENDAN MARSELLO
      • KASSIA DELLABOUGH
      • JULIA KING-TAMANG
      • HOLLY KLOTZ
  • CERTIFICATIONS
    • CERTIFIED PROGRAM PLANNER (CPP)
    • CPP REFRESHER RENEWAL COURSE
    • PROGRAM CERTIFICATION
  • MEMBERSHIP
  • LERN Club
  • CONTACT US
  • Home
  • LERN News
  • Myth #2: Diversity
Katie
Wednesday, 29 April 2015 / Published in Uncategorized

Myth #2: Diversity

diversityThere are six big myths in learning and education today, says Julie Coates, LERN’s Senior Vice President for Information Services and Research.  Coates is one of the leading researchers in education in the United States.
Myth #2 is that we understand diversity, she told audiences in Savannah and Tucson this spring. There is visible diversity, she noted, and most educators understand the concept of visible diversity.
But there is also invisible diversity, Coates stated, and we don’t understand invisible diversity at all, she stated.
Invisible diversity is about neurological differences, especially those that impact a person’s learning.
Two Examples of Invisible Diversity
Two examples of invisible diversity are those learners on the autism spectrum, and those learners impacted by anxiety and stress.
“Students carry a heavy burden when they come into your classroom,”  she says, noting that a recent survey found that more than half of students say they have “overwhelming anxiety,” some 32 percent are too depressed to function at times, and 10 percent are frequently depressed.  “Stress and depression produce chemicals that impede recall, memory and learning,” says Coates.
Learners on the autism spectrum now number 1 in 68 people, up from 1 in 88 just a few years ago. The Center for Disease Control says the number is growing.  And that a growing percentage of learners on the autism spectrum are high functioning, going to college, and then participating in lifelong learning.
“We are not prepared,” says Coates.  “The kind of diversity we can’t see doesn’t always count in the classroom,” she notes, “and it should count.”
Coates also understands visible diversity, being a civil rights leader and speaking recently about how racism today is different from the days of integration but still prevalent.
Photo of Savannah, site of the LERN Institutes this spring, by LERN staffer Layne Harpine.

  • Tweet

What you can read next

What You’re Doing Right
8 awesome continuing and community education classes
The Net And You

Recent Posts

  • 2024 Directions

    The 5 big new directions for 2024 were outlined...
  • Finally, Your Dashboard

    A dashboard with the 6 most vital statistics is...
  • AI Arrives

    “AI is the wild west,” summarized Danessa Gray ...
  • The 3 Hottest Marketing Tips of the Year

    Here’s the 3 hottest marketing tips of the year...
  • Huge Success!

    With 1,491 people participating, the LERN Annua...

CONTACT US!
Tel:1-800-678-5376
Email: [email protected]

Learning Resources Network
PO Box 9 | River Falls, WI 54022

© 2021-2023 LERN

TOP