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International Baccalaureate Africa, Europe and Middle East regional Conference Liverpool, 26-29 September 2010. ‘Education for Intercultural Understanding and Respect: a critical race perspective’ David Gillborn, Institute of Education, London. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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  • International BaccalaureateAfrica, Europe and Middle East regional ConferenceLiverpool, 26-29 September 2010

    Education for Intercultural Understanding and Respect: a critical race perspective

    David Gillborn, Institute of Education, London

  • Education for Intercultural Understanding and Respect: a critical race perspective

  • Education for Intercultural Understanding and Respect: a critical race perspective

    1. The image of White racial victims

    2. Race, class and educational achievement

    3. Racism across the education system

  • 1: The image of White racial victims

  • http://www.channel4.com/news/media/immigration/immigration_survey.pdf Which ONE if any of the following groups of people do you think suffers the greatest discrimination in British society today? Nationally Rep. SampleMuslim22%

    1: The image of White racial victims

  • http://www.channel4.com/news/media/immigration/immigration_survey.pdf Which ONE if any of the following groups of people do you think suffers the greatest discrimination in British society today? Nationally Rep. SampleMuslim22%White British21%

    1: The image of White racial victims

  • Is [immigration] good or bad for Britain?Bad:52% Working class33% middle

    You are labelled a racist if you criticise the amount of, or conduct of, immigrantsAgree:76% working78% middle

  • Is [immigration] good or bad for Britain?Bad:52% Working class33% middle

    You are labelled a racist if you criticise the amount of, or conduct of, immigrantsAgree:76% working78% middle

    Which of the following would you say has the most NEGATIVE impact on life in Britain today?Working Class: Drink/drugs (35%) > disrespect (23%) > immigration (21%) > rich/poor gap (17%)

    Most immigrants to Britain end up fitting in here if they're given sufficient time to do soAgree: working class 71% middle class 76%

  • School low achievers are white and British, The Times

    White boys are being left behind by education system, Daily Mail

    White boys let down by education system, Daily Telegraph

    Deprived white boys low achievers, Daily Express

    White working-class boys are the worst performers in school, Independent

    Half school failures are white working-class boys, says report, Guardian

  • White boys falling behind

    White, working-class boys have the worst GCSE results

    Just 24 per cent of disadvantaged white boys now leave school with five or more good GCSEs. This compares with 33.7 per cent for black African boys from similar low-income households. There were fears last night that the figures could hand votes to the far-Right British National Party because additional funding is available to help children from ethnic minorities.

    Daily Mail, 13 January 2007

  • White boys falling behind

    White, working-class boys have the worst GCSE results

    Just 24 per cent of disadvantaged white boys now leave school with five or more good GCSEs. This compares with 33.7 per cent for black African boys from similar low-income households. There were fears last night that the figures could hand votes to the far-Right British National Party because additional funding is available to help children from ethnic minorities.

    Daily Mail, 13 January 2007

  • White boys falling behind

    White, working-class boys have the worst GCSE results

    Just 24 per cent of disadvantaged white boys now leave school with five or more good GCSEs. This compares with 33.7 per cent for black African boys from similar low-income households. There were fears last night that the figures could hand votes to the far-Right British National Party because additional funding is available to help children from ethnic minorities.

    Daily Mail, 13 January 2007

  • I don't want to stir up racial hatred, but

    Cameron Watt, deputy director of the Centre for Social Justice and a key figure involved in a report on the subject published recently by former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith, said: "There's a political lobby highlighting the issue of underachievement among black boys, and quite rightly so, but I don't think there's a single project specifically for white working-class boys. I don't want to stir up racial hatred, but that is something that should be addressed.

    Times Educational Supplement, 12 January 2007

  • Department for Communities & Local Government (2010) Tackling race inequality: a statement on race. London: HMSO.

  • We must recognise that we will not succeed in addressing racism without tackling all forms of prejudice and discrimination. (p, 12)

  • We must recognise that we will not succeed in addressing racism without tackling all forms of prejudice and discrimination. (p, 12)

    Racism is also achieving a political voice through the British National Party (BNP) and other extreme racist groups. These groups seek to exploit legitimate worries (p. 10 ) When we target help at one group, we cannot allow others to be left behind or to feel disconnected, otherwise there is a risk that our efforts will be exploited by those who would distort them to drive people apart. () No favours. No privileges. No special interest groups. Just fairness. (p. 12)

  • 24.0%56.0%33.7%5A*-C by FSM status & Ethnic GroupSource: Department for Education & Skills (DfES)(2006) National Curriculum Assessment, GCSE and Equivalent Attainment and Post-16 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics in England 2005/06. SFR 46/2006, London, DfES, table 32. 32% points9.7% points

  • 2: Race, class & educational achievement

  • 24.0%56.0%33.7%5+ A*-C incl. English & maths by ethnic group (percent, all pupils)Source: DCSF (2009) Key Stage 4 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics, in England 2008/09 (SFR 34/2009) table 2

  • White working-class boys are the worst performers in school, Independent

    Half school failures are white working-class boys, says report, Guardian

  • 57% described self as working classSource: Survey by the National Centre for Social Research cited in BBC News Online (2007) What is working class? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/6295743.stm

  • 13.2% of students receive Free School MealsSource: Department for Education & Skills (DfES)(2006) National Curriculum Assessment, GCSE and Equivalent Attainment and Post-16 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics in England 2005/06. SFR 46/2006, London, DfES, table 32.

  • FSM Status by Ethnic Group (percent, all pupils)10.2%Source: DCSF (2009) Key Stage 4 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics, in England 2008/09 (SFR 34/2009) table 2

  • 21.5%FSM Status by Ethnic Group (percent, all pupils)10.2%Source: DCSF (2009) Key Stage 4 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics, in England 2008/09 (SFR 34/2009) table 2

  • 21.5%31.1%FSM Status by Ethnic Group (percent, all pupils)10.2%Source: DCSF (2009) Key Stage 4 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics, in England 2008/09 (SFR 34/2009) table 2

  • 34.3%21.5%31.1%FSM Status by Ethnic Group (percent, all pupils)10.2%Source: DCSF (2009) Key Stage 4 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics, in England 2008/09 (SFR 34/2009) table 2

  • 34.3%21.5%31.1%FSM Status by Ethnic Group (percent, all pupils)46.2%10.2%Source: DCSF (2009) Key Stage 4 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics, in England 2008/09 (SFR 34/2009) table 2

  • 24.0%56.0%33.7%5+ A*-C incl. English & maths by ethnic group (percent, all pupils)Source: DCSF (2009) Key Stage 4 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics, in England 2008/09 (SFR 34/2009) table 2

  • FSM5+ A*-C incl. English & maths by ethnic group (FSM only: percent, all pupils)Source: DCSF (2009) Key Stage 4 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics, in England 2008/09 (SFR 34/2009) table 2FSMFSMFSMFSMFSMFSM

  • 3: Racism (business as usual.?)

  • institutional racism misses the fact that in many parts of the country, the colour of disadvantage is white as well as brown or black () these days, it is not simply to do with race, but a host of other factors, often including your economic background.

  • Critical Race TheoryDerrick BellRichard DelgadoKimberl CrenshawGloria Ladson-BillingsWilliam Tate IV

  • CRT begins with a number of basic insights. One is that racism is normal, not aberrant, in American society. Because racism is an ingrained feature of our landscape, it looks ordinary and natural to persons in the culture. Formal equal opportunity rules and laws that insist on treating blacks and whites (for example) alike can thus remedy only the more extreme and shocking forms of injustice, the ones that do stand out. It can do little about the business-as-usual forms of racism that people of color confront every day

    Richard Delgado & Jean Stefancic (2000, p. xvi)

  • The collective failure of an organisation to provide an appropriate and professional service to people because of their colour, culture, or ethnic origin. It can be seen or detected in processes, attitudes and behaviour which amount to discrimination through unwitting prejudice, ignorance, thoughtlessness and racist stereotyping which disadvantage minority ethnic people.The Stephen Lawrence Inquiry (1999, p. 28) Institutional Racism: outcomes not intentions

  • Racism & Education

  • Racism & Education

    Teachers

  • Racism & Education

    Teachers

    Under-estimate academic ability Over-estimate challenge & threat Discipline Black students more severely Disproportionately place Black students in bottom sets View Black families as disrupted & unsupportive

  • Racism & Education

    Teachers

    Policymakers

  • Public Administration Select Committee: Inquiry into Good Government 23 October 2008http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/public_administration_select_committee/pasc0708goodgovt.cfm

    much of our policy making is evidence free, prejudice driven and hysteria driven (particularly hysteria generated by the press). Paul Flynn MP

  • The gifted and talented scheme will identify children by looking at ability, rather than attainment, to capitalise on the talents of the individual child, regardless of ethnic background

    Departmental rebuttal on BBC News On-Line (2002)

  • Gifted & TalentedWhiteBlack CaribbeanBlack African

  • Gifted & TalentedWhiteBlack CaribbeanBlack African

  • Gifted & TalentedWhiteBlack CaribbeanBlack African

  • Racism & Education

    Teachers

    Policymakers

    Ofsted: schools inspectorate

  • Racism & Education

    Teachers

    Policymakers

    Ofsted: schools inspectorate Race equality training is piecemeal Refuse to check race equality compliance Race inequality is not identified even when the evidence is reported!

  • Racism & Education

    Teachers

    Policymakers

    Ofsted: schools inspectorate

    Media & Commentators

  • Dr Patricia Morgan from the research group Civitas

  • Dr Patricia Morgan from the research group CivitasWhat do you mean by family life? Because I think were getting to a feral situation where we have men, sort of tom-catting round the neighbourhood siring children in various homes. [draws breath]This is almost return to planet of the apes.() It is in - prominent amongst West Indians. An- and sadly, its one of the - it seems to be the reason for the higher educational failure rate and occupational failure rate of Black boys.

    BBC radio 5live, 11 December 2006

  • micro-aggression

    The many sudden, stunning, or dispiriting transactions that mar the days of women and folks of color.

    Like water dripping on sandstone, they can be thought of as small acts of racism, consciously or unconsciously perpetrated

    These assumptions, in turn, continue to inform our public civic institutions government, schools, churches and our private, personal, and corporate lives

    Delgado & Stefancic (2001, p. 2)

  • Conclusions

  • ConclusionsRace inequality is not an accident

  • Conclusions Policy takes for granted the centrality of a white subject; Race equality and ethnic diversity are treated as peripheral complicating factors outside the mainstream; Policy promotes structures, procedures and priorities that actively disadvantage minoritized groups.Race inequality is not an accident

  • What about racism?

    Does current practice and the plans for the future recognize the complexity of racism?

    Or do they blame the victim?

  • Racism: subtle, extensive and complex;

    Policy: usually sustains inequality rather than challenging it.

  • If there is no struggle, there is no progressPower concedes nothing without a demand. It never did, and it never will. Frederick Douglass (1857)Racism, Progress and Political Struggle

  • International BaccalaureateAfrica, Europe and Middle East regional ConferenceLiverpool, 26-29 September 2010

    Education for Intercultural Understanding and Respect: a critical race perspective

    David Gillborn, Institute of Education, London

  • The Colour of Numbersproblems with statistical research

    Everything that can be counted, does not necessarily count; everything that counts, cannot necessarily be counted.Albert Einstein

    Myth of Numbers == science, neutrality, truth

    Racism is hidden amid a range of other factors (maternal education; prior attainment; setting; etc)

    Inequalities are removed by controlling away all but the most extreme inequalities

    Wiping the slate clean: past inequalities are blamed on the student (prior attainment erases all prior racism)

  • Resistance & Racism Education is worth fighting for Dont wait for (or trust) favours from above Make connections Document what you do: measure success Historicize Survive: be strategic Success is never final

  • 24.0%56.0%33.7%5+ A*-C incl. English & maths by ethnic group (percent, all pupils)Source: DCSF (2009) Key Stage 4 Attainment by Pupil Characteristics, in England 2008/09 (SFR 34/2009) table 2