Site icon Micah Shippee, PhD

Cultural Curators: Shaping Positive School Culture #wanderlustEDU

I have always found the work of history museum curators to be fascinating. They are tasked, in many cases, with selecting artifacts of our ancestors and displaying them in a way that allows people to make connections with the past. Do they always get it right? Do they always represent a culture with 100% accuracy? – Of course not. But there are take-aways, for us in education as we explore the concept of culture change.

Just a quick reminder from a previous post: Culture is defined as the beliefs, social forms, and material traits of a social group. These attributes are agreed upon and shared by that social group. There are five key tenets of culture:

  1. Culture is learned
  2. Culture is shared
  3. Culture is based on symbols
  4. Culture is integrated
  5. Culture is dynamic

To curate is to collect, select and present information, artifacts and/or experiences. School culture is curated by defining who we are from our collective shared experience. Shaping a positive cultural norm takes purposeful, diligent effort in collecting, selecting, and presenting experiences in our schools. 

Culture curation requires we are cognizant of the context in which we are working. Are we trying to shape our classroom culture with students? Or are we trying to shape our school building culture? Or is it an entire school district/board that we are looking to shape?

A little more direction on this might be helpful… here is the N-S-E-W Positive Culture Shift practices:

Shaping positive school culture is possible through cultural curation. Move forward, speak positively, give voice, and work to understand each other… it is from here that we can begin to grow together.

Looking to change your school culture? Check out WanderlustEDU: An Educator’s Guide to Innovation, Change, and Adventure.

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