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What causes social class disparities in education? The role of the mismatches between academic contexts and working-class socialization contexts and how the effects of these mismatches are explained. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study critiques the traditional explanation for underachievement in students from working-class backgrounds, which often blames individual traits like intelligence or motivation.
  • It presents an integrated model highlighting mismatches between working-class students' experiences and academic settings, including differences in cultural values around independence vs. interdependence, competition vs. cooperation, and varying types of knowledge and social identities.
  • The model suggests that focusing too much on inherent characteristics leads to self-doubt in students and unfair treatment by teachers, ultimately worsening educational disparities linked to social class.

Article Abstract

Within psychology, the underachievement of students from working-class backgrounds has often been explained as a product of individual characteristics such as a lack of intelligence or motivation. Here, we propose an integrated model illustrating how contribute to social class disparities in education over and beyond individual characteristics. According to this new social class disparities in education are due to several mismatches between the experiences that students from working-class backgrounds bring with them to the classroom and those valued in academic contexts-specifically, mismatches between (a) academic contexts' culture of independence and the working-class orientation to interdependence, (b) academic contexts' culture of competition and the working-class orientation toward cooperation, (c) the knowledge valued in academic contexts and the knowledge developed through working-class socialization, and (d) the social identities valued in academic contexts and the negatively stereotyped social identities of students from working-class backgrounds. Because of these mismatches, students from working-class backgrounds are likely to experience discomfort and difficulty in the classroom. We further propose that, when attempting to make sense of these students and teachers rely on inherent characteristics (e.g., ability, motivation) more often than warranted; conversely, they overlook extrinsic, contextual factors. In turn, this explanatory bias toward inherent features leads (a) students from working-class backgrounds to experience self-threat and (b) their teachers to treat them unfairly. These magnify social class disparities in education. This integrated model has the potential to reshape research and discourse on social class and education. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/rev0000473DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

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