Educational potential, underachievement, and cultural pluralism

The term ‘underachievement’ is widespread in modern educational discourse, invoked most frequently in relation to a perceived failure to reach ‘potential’. In this paper, it is suggested that such terms, though widely used, are highly problematic, masking ideological assumptions which concern social...

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Main Author: Donald Gillies
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Aberdeen, School of Education 2008-11-01
Series:Education in the North
Online Access:https://abdn.ac.uk/eitn/journal/49
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spelling doaj-0d6aff5b13c047f1b1fbfa91ed57ed092021-09-13T22:51:48ZengUniversity of Aberdeen, School of EducationEducation in the North0424-55122398-01842008-11-01161https://doi.org/10.26203/sz5n-x952Educational potential, underachievement, and cultural pluralismDonald Gillies0University of StrathclydeThe term ‘underachievement’ is widespread in modern educational discourse, invoked most frequently in relation to a perceived failure to reach ‘potential’. In this paper, it is suggested that such terms, though widely used, are highly problematic, masking ideological assumptions which concern socially constructed, culturally sensitive, subjective, and relative matters. In fact, underachievement is most often used to mean low academic attainment and the paper argues that this is already better understood in terms of well-known factors such as prior attainment, socioeconomic disadvantage, and systemic biases. paper also suggests that there is a danger of pathologising the low attainer when in fact it may be the system which is failing the learner. Further, the paper argues that the monologic focus on individual academic attainment as the sole measure of ‘achievement’ fails to take account of alternative cultural values and risks the charge of cultural imperialism. https://abdn.ac.uk/eitn/journal/49
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Donald Gillies
spellingShingle Donald Gillies
Educational potential, underachievement, and cultural pluralism
Education in the North
author_facet Donald Gillies
author_sort Donald Gillies
title Educational potential, underachievement, and cultural pluralism
title_short Educational potential, underachievement, and cultural pluralism
title_full Educational potential, underachievement, and cultural pluralism
title_fullStr Educational potential, underachievement, and cultural pluralism
title_full_unstemmed Educational potential, underachievement, and cultural pluralism
title_sort educational potential, underachievement, and cultural pluralism
publisher University of Aberdeen, School of Education
series Education in the North
issn 0424-5512
2398-0184
publishDate 2008-11-01
description The term ‘underachievement’ is widespread in modern educational discourse, invoked most frequently in relation to a perceived failure to reach ‘potential’. In this paper, it is suggested that such terms, though widely used, are highly problematic, masking ideological assumptions which concern socially constructed, culturally sensitive, subjective, and relative matters. In fact, underachievement is most often used to mean low academic attainment and the paper argues that this is already better understood in terms of well-known factors such as prior attainment, socioeconomic disadvantage, and systemic biases. paper also suggests that there is a danger of pathologising the low attainer when in fact it may be the system which is failing the learner. Further, the paper argues that the monologic focus on individual academic attainment as the sole measure of ‘achievement’ fails to take account of alternative cultural values and risks the charge of cultural imperialism.
url https://abdn.ac.uk/eitn/journal/49
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