Exploring Chinese and Korean American Teachers’ Perceptions of Their Cultural Identity as Assets and Barriers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Assets Brought by Asian American Teachers
1.2. Barriers Faced by Asian American Teachers
1.3. Theoretical Framework
1.4. Statement of Problem
- (1)
- How do Chinese and Korean American teachers perceive their cultural identity as an asset in their teaching practice?
- (2)
- How do Chinese and Korean American teachers perceive their cultural identity as a barrier in their teaching practice?
2. Method
2.1. Participants
2.2. Procedures
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Cultural Assets
3.1.1. Understanding and Empathy toward Minority Groups
Being a person of color and experiencing just any form of discrimination or prejudice based on how people see me at first glance, I think that is something that white educators cannot fully grasp and cannot understand. It’s kind of what I said before of just you can learn a lot by listening, but there are also only so many things that you can understand by listening when you have not experienced them yourself.
I think because Asians are a minority and we had to live a life of being a minority, we notice and understand culture and are more cautious of it because we are the different ones in the culture. And so I’m super hyper aware of different cultures and trying to be more sensitive… And I think Caucasians definitely don’t have to do that because they just never were in a position to do that.
If they’re the same racial background, they feel more comfortable with you, so they respect you more. Or because they’re comfortable with you, they don’t respect you that much. They expect more out of you, because they’re like, ‘Oh. You have the same background as me. You should do more for me.’
3.1.2. Exposure to Diversity
They live in a community where there are not a lot of Asian Americans. Even if there are, there’s not a lot of distinction between different Asian identities, of Chinese, Korean, Hmong, Vietnamese. A lot of our students who are Asian at our school are Hmong or Vietnamese. It becomes important when…I’ll teach my kids about Lunar New Year or I’ll teach them about searching for types of foods that my family likes to eat.
I usually lean on it to help my students understand their own identity. But it’s something that I use more as a teaching tool to respond to a moment, my ethnic identity is not really something that I will teach or talk about unprompted. I kind of spend more on helping my students to understand how to talk about their own and each other’s identities first.
Being Korean is important so that they understand to respect not just me, as Korean, but just every other ethnicity out there. For them to be exposed to different skin of color, I think that part is important. I hope they learn that now, since they’re kids.
I do think that there is something very powerful about seeing somebody in a leadership position that looks like you. And it also allowed me to tailor the curriculum a little bit so I could pick out the more Asian-centered literature, especially. That was really hard when I started trying to collect things from my library, there was none. Now there’s a lot, but before there was none and to choose more topics that were inclusive and diverse, that included Asian population specifically Korean was very hard.
I think there are a lot of things that Asian teachers teach that would be inappropriate for white people or white teachers to breach… So I do feel like we have the corner of that. We can actually go into those deeper discussions and even in some cases, some of those more difficult topics about the Asian history than white teachers.
3.1.3. Representation
I think it’s important to have representation, right? If we’re talking about Asian American students having Asian American educators, one of the reasons being just kids seeing that they can do any job. There’s a really big stereotype about Asian Americans or Asians going into certain professions. I know my parents didn’t want me to go into the profession that I’m in, because they felt it was unstable or was unsafe, or I wouldn’t make enough money as much money as they want me to. I think it’s important to have representation, to just show Asian American kids that they can just do what they want to do.
For some reason, I always think for a woman because I identify as a woman, teaching Asian girls has been a very interesting transformation. I never really realized how impactful it is until they come into your classroom, and they are just like, like they call me mom. I mean, they mistakenly call me mother or mom. It’s really interesting, and it’s actually something that I’ve really come to love, just representing and making that a powerful statement for them too. And just having them realize they can do big things and they are not repressed from it. They feel far more comfortable talking to me, I think.
3.1.4. Ability to Speak Their Language
I got into this profession, in this field, this very specific Cantonese bilingual teaching role because I want to not just help the students, but also be a help of the families. Just as simple as a parent-teacher conference, letting them know how their child’s doing. A lot of them work all day, right, and they don’t speak the language, so I think just because we can communicate and understand each other’s culture without a translator in between makes teaching and learning a lot easier.
3.2. Cultural Barriers
3.2.1. Internalized Model Minority
It’s really difficult for me to look at my own culture and see that it’s still very pervasive and a very powerful force and it’s not going to go away anytime soon or ever. Because a part of that is interwoven into the Asian culture, at least the Korean culture. Good student, well behaved, good listener. There’s definitely a generational hierarchy. A lot of that fits in perfectly with white supremacy and the white supremacist culture and especially in schools because you’re shaping young people and it’s not just you, it’s an entire family that follows you around and watches you every move. So it’s hard for me to go in and tell people this is actually really bad for you and you should stop doing it out of experience.
I think the relationship (with administrator) is complicated because there’s a hierarchy…I struggle with respecting people who are in leadership positions. I have a lot of trouble breaking through that barrier just because I’ve always been told my entire life not to. So when I do eventually say something that is untoward or she doesn’t appreciate, it’s really hard for me to accept it and say, no, I did the right thing… I question everything I say to her and it’s not just because she’s White, it’s also because she’s the person in power.
3.2.2. Cultural Expectations of Being an Observer
Because it’s so ingrained in our history and our culture… to be quiet and actually be more of an observer and a listener than a participant, the quiet participants what I think I would describe it as… I really didn’t think about (her cultural identity affecting her as a teacher) until much, much later in life when I realized it’s easier to see the patterns that are deteriorating your school or your district or your city… I started noticing it and getting more upset by it… Once we started equity training, I started realizing the conversations that were challenging and difficult, it was actually what opened up and entirely new perspective for me. It really did transform my entire teaching. That was just recently.
I think because Asians, as a culture, you’re told to never speak up and not speak up too much. We’re not used to speaking well, especially in public. We have a hard time. Whereas white folks, they’re very good at speaking, especially in the public setting. For example, an interview, they just know how to talk, really know how to talk.
3.2.3. Emphasis on Education
3.2.4. Savior Complex
Asian Americans don’t always realize that we are also very prone to falling into a white savior complex, a savior complex, because I think a lot of, at least East Asian Americans, come from wealthier situations or more middle class or upper middle class. I feel when we teach in Title I schools, I saw this in my teaching program, we just have to have an awareness of having a savior complex. I think sometimes it’s dangerous, because we think that we won’t because we’re not white and it’s called a white savior complex.
4. Discussion
4.1. Assets of Chinese and Korean American Teachers’ Cultural Identity in Teaching
4.2. Barriers of Chinese and Korean American Teachers’ Cultural Identity in Teaching
5. Limitations and Future Research
6. Practical Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Participant Pseudonym | School Type | Gender | Ethnic Group | Generation in the U.S. | Years of Teaching |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Veon | Elementary | Female | Chinese | 2 | 3 |
Charlie | Middle | Male | Chinese | 2.5 | 6 |
Jasmine | Elementary | Female | Chinese | 2 | 3 |
YL | Elementary | Non-binary | Chinese | 1.5 | 3 |
Olive | Elementary | Female | Chinese/Korean | 2.5 | 1 |
Hailey | Middle | Female | Korean | 2 | 3 |
Cris | Elementary | Female | Korean | 2 | 20 |
Phoebe | Middle | Female | Korean | 1.5 | 1 |
Cynthia | Elementary | Female | Korean | 1.5 | 5 |
Research Question | Theme | Description |
---|---|---|
Cultural Assets | Understanding and Empathy toward Minority Groups | The shared experience allows Asian teachers to understand and empathize with the challenges faced by students from minority groups. |
Exposure to Diversity | Asian teachers’ racial and ethnic identity can help promote diversity among their students. | |
Representation | Asian teachers can serve as representation for Asian students and Asian girls. | |
Ability to Speak Their Language | The ability to speak the shared language with students and parents enables better communication and relationships. | |
Cultural Barriers | Internalized Model Minority | Asian teachers feel the pressure to live up to the model minority myth in school settings. |
Cultural Expectations of Being an Observer | Expectation from others to be quiet makes Asian teachers reluctant to speak up. | |
Emphasis on Education | Family upbringing of prioritizing education makes it difficult to relate to students from a family not emphasizing education. | |
Savior Complex | Asian teachers who want to help students unknowingly adopt a negative mindset toward their students. |
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Share and Cite
Wang, J.; Jackson, K.A.L.; Kim, E.K.; Han, K. Exploring Chinese and Korean American Teachers’ Perceptions of Their Cultural Identity as Assets and Barriers. Behav. Sci. 2023, 13, 969. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13120969
Wang J, Jackson KAL, Kim EK, Han K. Exploring Chinese and Korean American Teachers’ Perceptions of Their Cultural Identity as Assets and Barriers. Behavioral Sciences. 2023; 13(12):969. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13120969
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Jiayi, KeAysia Aiyanna Lana Jackson, Eui Kyung Kim, and Kevin Han. 2023. "Exploring Chinese and Korean American Teachers’ Perceptions of Their Cultural Identity as Assets and Barriers" Behavioral Sciences 13, no. 12: 969. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13120969
APA StyleWang, J., Jackson, K. A. L., Kim, E. K., & Han, K. (2023). Exploring Chinese and Korean American Teachers’ Perceptions of Their Cultural Identity as Assets and Barriers. Behavioral Sciences, 13(12), 969. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13120969