Elementary Teachers’ Experiences with Applications of Culturally Relevant Pedagogy

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Authors

Oliver, Deborah

Issue Date

2026-05-31

Type

Dissertation

Language

en_US

Keywords

Education, Elementary , Educational equalization , Elementary school teaching , Culturally relevant pedagogy , Dissertations, Academic , Critical race theory , Teacher education

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Abstract

Culturally relevant pedagogy (CRP) has been widely promoted as an equity-centeredinstructional framework; however, limited research has examined how elementary teachers understand, enact, and sustain CRP within contemporary classroom contexts marked by sociopolitical constraint. This narrative inquiry explored the lived experiences of eight fourth- and fifth-grade teachers working in Title I and non—Title I schools to examine how culturally relevant pedagogy was learned, interpreted, and implemented in practice. Guided by Ladson-Billings’s framework of academic success, cultural competence, and critical consciousness, the study centered teachers’ narratives to illuminate how CRP functioned as a lived and meaning-making practice rather than a prescribed set of strategies. Findings revealed that while collaborators expressed strong moral commitment to equity and student success, preparation related to CRP within teacher education and professional development was inconsistent and often minimal. As a result, culturally relevant pedagogy was often enacted through fragmented, surface-level practices rather than as a comprehensive pedagogical framework. Teachers’ meaning making processes were shaped by identity, belief systems, and political context, with many describing fear, hesitation, and professional isolation when engaging issues of race, culture, and equity. Five cross-case themes emerged, highlighting representation as literacy empowerment, community integration, critical dialogue as civic engagement, belief in students’ unlimited potential, and the role of teacher identity and spiritual commitment in sustaining CRP. The findings highlight the need for systemic support, collaborative professional learning, and intentional leadership to sustain culturally relevant pedagogy as a shared instructional responsibility

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Oliver, Deborah. "Elementary Teachers’ Experiences with Applications of Culturally Relevant Pedagogy," Ed.D. diss., Valdosta State University, 2026. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10428/7743

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This dissertation is protected by the Copyright Laws of the United States (Public Law 94-553, revised in 1976). Consistent with fair use as defined in the Copyright Laws, brief quotations from this material are allowed with proper acknowledgement. Use of the materials for financial gain with the author's expressed written permissions is not allowed.

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