Sunday, October 27, 2013

A Personal reflection on The Cultural Interface and Teacher Sexual Orientation

For this final blog I want to talk about my own experience of what the educational theorist Martin Nakata (2007) calls the cultural interface, a theory developed in reference to Indigenous students who encounter the often conflicting “meeting points” between different world views or identities that arise in everyday experience by being privy to two different knowledge systems. The cultural interface can also be applied in discussions about nationality, gender, or sexuality.
Unfortunately for my teenage self the cultural interface was something I knew experientially, but didn’t have a vocabulary to describe or receive any kind of acknowledgement that it is possible for one person to hold numerous and potentially conflicting identities. Such a concept was of course completely foreign to the essentialist point of view I held: that a person was a coherent system.
The cultural interface that I encountered in high school was the conflict between my homosexuality and the dominantly heterosexual body of students and teachers in a public all-girls school. Having been raised to be straight, I know the ideology of heterosexuality and what it means to not consider a trip to the grocery store with your partner an event worthy of the attention of strangers. So what did it subsequently mean to discover my own disenfranchisement from the privilege of being sexually value-neutral? And what impact did that transition bear on my education? The previous meaninglessness of hetero-normative remarks from teachers e.g. “when you girls get married…” smacked me in the face like a cow bell. Similarly on one teaching prac I undertook a teacher addressing the entirety of a school’s student body during assembly on Women’s Day told the students that women are important and deserve respect, after all women will be their future partners. Such a statement about developing respect was undermined by its homogenising definition of hundreds of people’s futures. Nakata makes a point of mentioning that teachers themselves are present and contributing to the cultural interface, whether consciously or not (pg. 37).

Now, as an educator myself, sexuality and the cultural interface in schools present themselves as a system of power struggles. A student I taught during my internship asked me if I was a lesbian, to which I replied: “would that matter?” His answer was no, and I asked him why he was asking questions about things that don’t matter. His question may very well have been “Can I derail your authority with an inappropriate question?” Teenagers are very cognizant of the power relations that exist between dominant and minority groups, and between the authority of teachers and the enforced passivity of students. As far as professionalism is concerned, GBLT (gay lesbian bisexual and transgender) teachers often make the decisions to keep their personal lives invisible, a big leap from heterosexual teachers who I have heard frequently talk about their partners, husbands or wives with students to relate their teaching to the real world. The decision to keep ones private life invisible is to combat the particular discrimination revolving around the concept that “teachers guide their students by the example they set” and “serve as role models for students” (DeMitchell, Eckes & Fossey, 2010, pg. 104), giving rise to a fear that gay teachers will somehow impose their lifestyle on children, I take issue with this because gay students exist despite their heterosexual examples their teachers set.

References
Nakata, M. (2007). The cultural interface. The Australian Journal or Indigenous Studies 36, pp. 7 – 14.
DeMitchell, T. A, Eckes, S. & Fossey, R. (2010). Sexual Orientation and the Public School Teacher. Public Interest Law Journal, 19; 65, pp. 65 – 105.

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