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Abstract

Teaching practice has the potential to guide acculturation educational processes to cultural inclusion. Acculturation may lead to social tensions or peaceful connivance. An acculturation process might be inclusive when educational participants symmetrically recognise, validate and use the different cultures as part of the curriculum. The Cultural Bridge (CB) is an approach that teachers might use to design inclusive teaching practices. The method is a qualitative case study on an integration course in Germany. Results evidence a partially inclusive educational process. According to the teacher’s interview analysis, the teaching practice approximates the CB principles, but there are limitations because of the system and social barriers. The most relevant situations that limit the teacher's practice are the rigid curriculum, the test as the primary goal, the short time for addressing the mandatory topics and the students’ social isolation. As a recommendation, integration courses might engage the local community in the educational process.

Keywords

Acculturation Diversity Interculturality Pluralism Teaching

Article Details

How to Cite
Tovar-Gálvez, J. C. (2021). Teaching Practice in Acculturation Educational Settings: A Case Study on an Integration Course. European Journal of Teaching and Education, 3(1), 20–33. https://doi.org/10.33422/ejte.v3i1.655