Ethnic differences in achievement (internal) Flashcards
Labelling and teacher racism
Gillbourn and Youdell (2000)
in their study - found that teachers were more likely to have “negative expectations of black pupils”
> they were quicker to discipline them in comparison to other backgrounds.
> teachers held “racialised stereotypes” of black pupils.
> when teachers acted, confrontations occurred, which got these black pupils in even more trouble - black pupils claimed teachers ‘picked on them’
>Gillbourn and Youdell claim that black pupils did not behave worse, teachers were just less tolerant of them.
> this explains black pupils having the “highest exclusion rate”
EVAL - unclear why teachers only have racialised stereotypes of black pupil and not other ethnic minority groups.
EVAL - better teacher training and racism being taken more serious nowadays.
Louise Archer (2008)
Teacher perceptions and pupil identities
explore relationship between processes such as teacher labelling and how they impact pupils see themselves.
> three main ways school shapes the identities of ethnic minority students and how this can influence achievement:
IDEAL PUPIL IDENTITY - typically refers to white, middle class students who are considered high achieving by teachers.
PATHOLOGISED PUPIL IDENTITY - often involve teachers regarding the passive quiet characteristics often Asian girls as ‘abnormal’ and a ‘cause for concern’ teacher pereceptions involve these Asian girls as oppressed by strict home life.
DEMONISED PUPIL IDENTITY - involves black or white working class pupils, overly-sexualised, peer-led and culturally deprived achievers. Stereotypes focus on boys who are considered “trouble” - this is not true but can be after a “self-fulfilling prophecies” occur.
EVAL - classifications too simplistic - isnt clear what evidence Archer uses to make the three distinctions.
Tony Sewell (1998)
4 responses to negative label black pupils
examines the ways in which “black pupils” coped with negative labelling and teacher racism.
> found that teachers held a view of “black machoism” which sees all black boys as rebellious and anti-school.
they boys in his study responded in 4 ways:
THE REBELS - rejected everything school stands for - embraced black masculinity and felt that “womanising” and being ‘macho’ desirable
THE CONFORMISTS - many black boys continue to follow rules and do work - had friends from other ethnic groups and were anxious to avoid the negative stereotyping of teachers.
THE RETREATISTS - isolated individuals, who didnt have many friends at all. They withdrew from school, keeping heads down.
THE INNOVATORS - pro-education, but anti-school, they weren’t interested in impressing teachers but wanted to achieve well for themselves
EVAL - can easily create the impression that all teachers are racist and all teachers negative label black boys, this isnt the case.
EVAL - not all students accept negative label, some resist it and use it as motivation, they assume they always accept the label.
Mary Fuller (1984)
study year 11 black girls that achieve highly - they reject the “negative labelling”
> instead of accepting negative label, they “channelled their anger at being labelled into their work”
> they were not interested in impressing teachers, instead they wanted to ‘prove themselves’
> they succeeded in this respect showing that not all students accept this negative label
EVAL - it isnt clear what evidence the girls had for the negative labelling they recieved and the study is rather dated.
Ethnocentric curriculum
ethnocentric curriculum is once which gives priority to the culture of one particular ethnic group - therefore ignoring cultural diversity and making everyone feel included.
Evidence of this may include:
> school year calendared around Christian festivals and celebrations
> subject content e.g. history focusing on White-British experiences
> school uniform requirement clash with cultural expectations of dress.
eval - white working class boys underachieve the most in our education system. This goes against the ethnocentric argument that the curriculum focuses on white people.
Institutional racism