Chapter Eight: Educational Inequality

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Foundations of American Education, Fifth Edition
Advertisements

Educational Psychology: Theory and Practice Chapter 4 Student Diversity This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The.
Can Data Drive Policy and Change in Oakland Schools? NNIP Providence 2012 Urban Strategies Council Taking.
Mikaila Mariel Lemonik Arthur Data on Race and Education.
© 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. 1 CHAPTER 5 Sociocultural Diversity.
Chapter 8: African Americans Today. Education Disparity in both the quality and quantity of education of African Americans suggests structural racism.
Demographics 14,583 people. 6,137 housing units The racial makeup 97.31% White, 0.23% African American, 2.03% Native American, 0.76% Asian,
Copyright (c) 2003 by Allyn & Bacon1 Sociology Sixth Edition Chapter Twelve Race & Ethnicity This multimedia product and its contents are protected under.
EXCEPTIONAL AND CULTURALLY DIFFERENT APPROACH This approach attempts to assist exceptional and culturally different students to acquire the knowledge.
BY TANYA MARIA GOLASH-BOZA Chapter Eleven: Racism and the Criminal Justice System.
Racial and Economic Segregation in Schools: Barrier to Quality and Equality in Education Baris Gumus-Dawes.
Joli Jackson, Cedria Reid, Asia Johnson, Ana C..  Race is a category of people who share inherited physical characteristics and whom others see as being.
Chapter Nine Inequalities of Race and Ethnicity. What are some common stereotypes that you see on T.V.? What are the common roles played by: Whites?Blacks?Asians?Native.
Chapter Ten: Inequality in Housing and Wealth By Tanya Maria Golash-Boza.
Education and Religion Copyright © Allyn & Bacon  Credential Societies - Diplomas Determine Job Eligibility  Diplomas Serve as Sorting Devices.
Chapter 14 Education.
Asian Americans and Affirmative Action. What is Affirmative Action? Institutional efforts to increase the number of underrepresented minorities in U.S.
Achieve Data Profile: Washington January AMERICAN DIPLOMA PROJECT NETWORK The Big Picture n To be successful in today’s economy, all students.
July 18, 2011 Oakland Boys and Men of Color Project Data Profile of Latino Males in Oakland Unified School District Prepared by: Urban Strategies Council.
Diverse Students of Today Chapter 10 EDCI 201 Contexts of Education 1.
The Need for Disaggregated and Cross-Tabulated Data in Higher Education Policymaking Robert T. Teranishi Associate Professor New York University National.
Education and Equality of Opportunity
Creating a Shared Vision for Institutionalizing Racial Equity Melia LaCour, MSW Director, Equity in Education PSESD 2014, WASA Conference.
CHAPTER 14 COUNSELING AFRICAN AMERICANS
Educational Equity and Science and Mathematics Raynice Jean-Sigur, Ph.D.
The Limits and Possibilities of Using Research to Facilitate School Improvement Pedro A. Noguera, Ph.D. New York University.
Discrimination Chapter 3-Part 2 Slides. Discrimination and Relative Deprivation Relative deprivation – The conscious experience of a negative discrepancy.
SOC 101 Chapter 9 Race & Ethnicity. Characteristics of Minority Groups  A minority group is one that is dominated by a more powerful group  Composed.
Admission & Desegregation Re-examining the Role of Race in the Enrollment of America’s Public Schools By Tracy Hall & Tim Milledge.
Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration Chapter 3. Lecture Outline I. Defining Race and Ethnicity II. American Stories of Inequality, Diversity, and Social Change.
Objectives 1.To become acquainted with the history of Mexican American segregation and desegregation in U.S. public schools. 2.Become familiar with The.
Inequality The Persisting American Dilemma Placing Inequality in the Context of the Course Reparations: One Possible Solution to Inequality –Atone for.
Ethnicity, “Race” Concepts are key Race and ethnic relations: structured inequality.
Vicki Nilles Metropolitan State College. Assigning students to various learning groups based on abilities in specific academic areas These groups could.
Brown V. Board of Education (1954)
Chapter Eight: Educational Inequality By Tanya Maria Golash-Boza.
Summary-- Chapter 13 and Lee, Ladson-Billings, and Kohl Readings What theories contribute to answering these complex questions about teaching and learning?
Race and Ethnicity as Lived Experience
“Males of Color” Initiative A Presentation to the Providence School Board May 11, 2015.
Poverty in Communities of Color Popular Myths and Real Causes Algernon Austin.
Racial and Ethnic Inequality Part 2 Slides. III. Prejudice and Discrimination What’s the difference?
CHAPTER 9 TEST. DEFINE 1.MINORITY 2.STEREOTYPE 3.RACE 4.SUBJUGATION 5.ASSIMILATION 6.PREJUDICE 7.DISCRIMINATION 8.GENOCIDE 9.DE FACTO SEGREGATION 10.SELF.
Chapter 7 Why Can’t Johnny Read?: Education in Crisis.
BLACK OR WHITE: Racism Still Exist in Today’s Schools Ashanti Banks EDU 639 Dr. Miller.
Chapter Ten: Inequality in Housing and Wealth By Tanya Maria Golash-Boza.
School Context: Achievement Outcomes H607: Ethnicity, Context, and Family Dynamics.
The American Dream Graduation rates What is the percentage of first generation students who will not earn an undergraduate degree within six years.
Chapter Eight: Educational Inequality
Chapter 13 Education.
Education and Equality of Opportunity
GOVT 2305, Module 5 Racial Segregation.
Chapter 28 Our Enduring Constitution
Diversity and Equity Today: Defining the Challenge
American Scorecard: Special Populations
The ‘isms’ in Education
Income and Employment Inequalities (poverty)
Chapter Four The Social Work Environment
Chapter 14 Education.
Race, Ethnic Groups, and Racism
School Segregation by Race & Socioeconomic Status
October 12, 2017 Racial Segregation.
(Un)equal Opportunities? Class, Race and Education in America
Educational Psychology: Theory and Practice Chapter 4 Student Diversity This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The.
Education Quality and quantity of education
Chapter 16 Education.
The Charleston-Institute (WV) Chapter of the Links, Inc.
CHAPTER 3: Today’s Multicultural, Bilingual, and Diverse School
Disproportionate Impact Study
Education and inequality
Presentation transcript:

Chapter Eight: Educational Inequality By Tanya Maria Golash-Boza

Shame of a Nation

University Education Disparities in the representation of college graduates in ethnoracial groups is another disparity. The Bakke case determined that race could only be one factor in admission policies. Other court cases ruled on the use of race as a factor for admissions.

Also, state propositions limited the use of race as a factor for admissions. For example, in California a proposition denied the use of race as a factor in admission, which contributed to the numbers of students of color plummeting in the University of California system.

Educational Levels All educational levels characterized by racialized and ethnic inequalities -University level -Preschool/K-12 education

History of Educational Inequality K–12 Separate but equal policies impacted Black, Asian American, and Latino education Native children impacted by policies that took them from their families and brought them to boarding schools where assimilation and where they often were punished for practicing their identities Most schools with high numbers of children from predominantly racialized groups experienced inequities in academic curriculum and resources

Court Cases A number of court cases, government reports, and new policy directions stimulated some changes , but over time also returned some schools to former unequal conditions.

Mendez v. Westminster 1947—Determined that denying enrollment to children on the basis of a Spanish last name violated the Constitution Brown v. Board of Education 1954—Overturned the separate but equal doctrine and began a long attempt to integrate public schools

Court Cases Dowell v. Oklahoma City—Ruling that reversed school desegregation policies . “This decision meant that many school districts abandoned desegregation programs. Once children began to attend schools in the neighborhoods where they lived (as opposed to being bused to other neighborhoods), schools rapidly became resegregated.” (p. 213) In the South segregation has returned to higher levels than in 1970.

Persistence of Racial Segregation in the Educational System Figure 8-1. Percent of Black Students in Majority White Schools in the South, 1954–2001 Source: Adapted from Orfield and Lee (2004).

Despite This, Educational Disparities Continue In all factors of measurement, racialized groups, with some exceptions with certain Asian American communities, experience disparities. -Graduation rates -School drop-out rates -Grade point averages -Math and literacy rates -Retention and having to retake a grade level -Expulsions

Black Students Disproportionately suspended in LA 2009-2010, black students made up about 9% of the enrollment in the Los Angeles Unified School District, the nation's second-largest. But they accounted for 26% of suspensions -- a ratio of almost 3 to 1. Latinos, whites and Asians were suspended at rates lower than their percentage of district enrollment. In New York City, by contrast, black students account for 40% of enrollment and 46% of suspensions; the numbers for Chicago are 45% and 76%. In San Diego Unified, the nation's 17th-largest school system, African Americans make up 11% of enrollment and 24% of suspensions. Source: http://articles.latimes.com/2012/mar/06/local/la-me-lausd-data-20120306

Educational Inequality Today: Percentage of Population 25 Years and Over with a Bachelor’s Degree or Higher, 2006–2010 Figure 8-2. Percentage of Population 25 Years and Over with a Bachelor’s Degree or Higher, 2006–2010 Source: National Center for Education Statistics (2010).

Average GPA by Race/ Ethnicity, 2008–2009 Figure 8-3. Average GPA by Race/ Ethnicity, 2008–2009 Source: National Center for Education Statistics (2010).

Model Minority Myth “Model Minority” Myth – the stereotype that Asians are the racial minority group that has ‘made it’ in the United States. First, the group is concentrated in cities where the cost of living is very high. Second, per capita income for Asian Americans is lower than the national average.

Third, researchers commonly find that Asian Americans get lower income returns for their years of schooling and earn less than whites of the same educational level. Also, Asian Americans face a glass ceiling that limits their access. Finally, while it might seem that the “model minority” stereotype is benign and positive, it can have serious negative consequences.

Median Household Income, 2010

Families and Children in Poverty 2010

Explanations for Achievement Gap Scholars use several explanations for these achievement gaps: -Income and wealth levels of parents -“Culture” -School structures that use tracking -Social and cultural capital -Hidden curriculum

Income and Wealth Levels of Parents Parents with more wealth and income are able to provide more opportunities and help to their children than parents who have to work multiple jobs and use income to meet basic needs.

“Culture” With this explanation, the behavior and habits of the children explain their investment in their education. An older theory posits that black children thought of education as “acting white” and took on an oppositional stance that interfered with their learning. Newer research shows that black children do gain a sense of excitement and satisfaction from their learning.

Tracking Tracking means that students are predetermined to benefit from certain learning paths such as vocational or nonacademic versus a college preparatory track. Racialized students are more often set into a less academic track of curriculum as teacher and administrator expectations are lower for them due to racist assumptions about the students’ intelligence and motivation.

Social and Cultural Capital Students that come from more economically beneficial and white-normed households may hold more social and cultural capital. Social capital refers to having a network of people to provide direct help and information, and having access to institutional agents (gatekeepers and officials).

Cultural capital refers to knowing how things work in interactions, institutions, and systems: “students with access to dominant cultural capital—the norms, values, and cultural knowledge valued in the school—will have more chances for success than students whose families are not part of the dominant culture.” (p. 226)

Hidden Curriculum Cultural capital works in a way that disvalues other ways of being that do not match the dominant group. The process of disvaluing is called “symbolic violence” in which “the dominant group creates a context in which the norms, values, and tastes of other groups are labeled as inferior.” (p. 226)

An example is to disvalue other cultural ways of being. To compensate, children often begin to learn two sets of norms and interactional strategies.

Ending Thought “What does it say about us as a nation that we do not give truly equal opportunities to children from disadvantaged backgrounds?” (p. 231)