“Because I Learn!”: An Exploratory Note on the Academic Identity of African American Children

Academic identity refers to the extent to which one identifies or defines the self in terms of academic-related experiences and can motivate one to engage or disengage from school. Most research on the academic identity of African American students has focused on adolescents; high school students...

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Main Authors: Matthew Sheptoski, Janice Tucker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: North Carolina Sociological Association 2019-05-01
Series:Sociation Today
Subjects:
Online Access:http://sociation.ncsociologyassoc.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/sheptoski_final_05032019.pdf
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spelling doaj-0544c271fa02411f8a81b0944747f1f82020-11-24T22:06:36ZengNorth Carolina Sociological AssociationSociation Today1542-63001542-63002019-05-011815264“Because I Learn!”: An Exploratory Note on the Academic Identity of African American ChildrenMatthew Sheptoski0Janice Tucker1Grambling State UniversityGrambling State UniversityAcademic identity refers to the extent to which one identifies or defines the self in terms of academic-related experiences and can motivate one to engage or disengage from school. Most research on the academic identity of African American students has focused on adolescents; high school students in particular. The primary concern has been academic dis-engagement as an explanation of low African American academic achievement relative to other racial and ethnic groups, white students specifically; the “achievement gap.” As a result, relatively little is known about the subjectively experienced academic identity of African American elementary-aged students: How do they make sense of and understand the student role and what does being “smart” mean to them? Data were drawn from two third grade classes at an African American k-5 charter school on the campus of a prominent HBCU in a small town in the Deep South. Aligning with, yet extending in important ways, the thirty-plus year dialogic tension with the work of Fordham and Ogbu, data presented here clearly indicate this small sample of African American third graders define themselves as intelligent and capable students who identify strongly and positively with the student role. At this stage of their lives, their academic identity is robust; they are engaged, achievement-oriented, and they seem to be saying “School is for me!” Results suggest the school’s proximity to a prominent HBCU in the Deep South may have had a protective effect on student academic identity.http://sociation.ncsociologyassoc.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/sheptoski_final_05032019.pdfAcademic identityAchievement Gap
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew Sheptoski
Janice Tucker
spellingShingle Matthew Sheptoski
Janice Tucker
“Because I Learn!”: An Exploratory Note on the Academic Identity of African American Children
Sociation Today
Academic identity
Achievement Gap
author_facet Matthew Sheptoski
Janice Tucker
author_sort Matthew Sheptoski
title “Because I Learn!”: An Exploratory Note on the Academic Identity of African American Children
title_short “Because I Learn!”: An Exploratory Note on the Academic Identity of African American Children
title_full “Because I Learn!”: An Exploratory Note on the Academic Identity of African American Children
title_fullStr “Because I Learn!”: An Exploratory Note on the Academic Identity of African American Children
title_full_unstemmed “Because I Learn!”: An Exploratory Note on the Academic Identity of African American Children
title_sort “because i learn!”: an exploratory note on the academic identity of african american children
publisher North Carolina Sociological Association
series Sociation Today
issn 1542-6300
1542-6300
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Academic identity refers to the extent to which one identifies or defines the self in terms of academic-related experiences and can motivate one to engage or disengage from school. Most research on the academic identity of African American students has focused on adolescents; high school students in particular. The primary concern has been academic dis-engagement as an explanation of low African American academic achievement relative to other racial and ethnic groups, white students specifically; the “achievement gap.” As a result, relatively little is known about the subjectively experienced academic identity of African American elementary-aged students: How do they make sense of and understand the student role and what does being “smart” mean to them? Data were drawn from two third grade classes at an African American k-5 charter school on the campus of a prominent HBCU in a small town in the Deep South. Aligning with, yet extending in important ways, the thirty-plus year dialogic tension with the work of Fordham and Ogbu, data presented here clearly indicate this small sample of African American third graders define themselves as intelligent and capable students who identify strongly and positively with the student role. At this stage of their lives, their academic identity is robust; they are engaged, achievement-oriented, and they seem to be saying “School is for me!” Results suggest the school’s proximity to a prominent HBCU in the Deep South may have had a protective effect on student academic identity.
topic Academic identity
Achievement Gap
url http://sociation.ncsociologyassoc.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/sheptoski_final_05032019.pdf
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