HED487
ASSIGNMENT 4 2025
DUE: OCTOBER 2025 (MEMO)
, HED4807
ASSIGNMENT 4 2025
DUE DATE: 08 OCTOBER 2025
UNIQUE NUMBER: 203737
Multiculturalism and Indigenous Knowledge in Language Education
Question 1: Multiculturalism
1.1 Content Integration in Grade 6 FAL (Banks et al. 2001):
Content integration involves using curriculum content to expose learners to diverse
cultures and perspectives. In the Grade 6 English FAL Term 2 Theme, many texts e.g.
“The lion sleeps tonight” and The Lion King cartoon draw on African wildlife and folklore,
which can serve as a basis for integrating indigenous and local cultural content. For
example, lessons on “Animals big and small” and South African animals zebra, elephant,
lio can be linked to indigenous knowledge about those animals’ roles in local ecosystems
or folklore. Explicitly connecting story elements to Zulu or Xhosa proverbs, local legends,
or African ecological practices, the teacher applies Banks’s content-integration approach
embedding multicultural content in standard lessons. In practice, one might supplement
“The brave little fish” story with a South African folk tale about a fish or a river, or use the
Lion King lesson to discuss African languages and traditions. This enriches the curriculum
and helps learners see diverse cultural contributions integrated into the English lessons,
which is exactly the goal of Banks’s content integration.
1.2 Additive vs. Transformation Approach:
It simply inserts multicultural elements e.g. a single story or unit about a culture into the
existing curriculum without changing its overall structure. In contrast, the transformation
ASSIGNMENT 4 2025
DUE: OCTOBER 2025 (MEMO)
, HED4807
ASSIGNMENT 4 2025
DUE DATE: 08 OCTOBER 2025
UNIQUE NUMBER: 203737
Multiculturalism and Indigenous Knowledge in Language Education
Question 1: Multiculturalism
1.1 Content Integration in Grade 6 FAL (Banks et al. 2001):
Content integration involves using curriculum content to expose learners to diverse
cultures and perspectives. In the Grade 6 English FAL Term 2 Theme, many texts e.g.
“The lion sleeps tonight” and The Lion King cartoon draw on African wildlife and folklore,
which can serve as a basis for integrating indigenous and local cultural content. For
example, lessons on “Animals big and small” and South African animals zebra, elephant,
lio can be linked to indigenous knowledge about those animals’ roles in local ecosystems
or folklore. Explicitly connecting story elements to Zulu or Xhosa proverbs, local legends,
or African ecological practices, the teacher applies Banks’s content-integration approach
embedding multicultural content in standard lessons. In practice, one might supplement
“The brave little fish” story with a South African folk tale about a fish or a river, or use the
Lion King lesson to discuss African languages and traditions. This enriches the curriculum
and helps learners see diverse cultural contributions integrated into the English lessons,
which is exactly the goal of Banks’s content integration.
1.2 Additive vs. Transformation Approach:
It simply inserts multicultural elements e.g. a single story or unit about a culture into the
existing curriculum without changing its overall structure. In contrast, the transformation