The status of minority ethnic teachers in England: Institutional racism in the staffroom

This paper reports research conducted with Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) teachers in England, specifically to find out (i) whether the status of teaching influenced their decisions to join the profession, and (ii) their perceptions of their status within the profession. The data are drawn from th...

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Main Author: Linda M. Hargreaves
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Granada 2011-03-01
Series:DEDiCA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistaseug.ugr.es/index.php/dedica/article/view/7151
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spelling doaj-afe842627a58415ca08345ac291332432021-06-19T11:47:05ZengUniversidad de GranadaDEDiCA2182-018X2011-03-01110.30827/dreh.v0i1.71515822The status of minority ethnic teachers in England: Institutional racism in the staffroomLinda M. Hargreaves0University of Cambridge This paper reports research conducted with Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) teachers in England, specifically to find out (i) whether the status of teaching influenced their decisions to join the profession, and (ii) their perceptions of their status within the profession. The data are drawn from the national Teacher Status Project conducted in England 2002-6 combined with previously unpublished data from a follow up study with Asian teachers in 2007. The conclusions, based on focus groups with 65 teachers (African Caribbean, Pakistani, Indian, Bangladeshi) in four regions of England, are that the teachers were not influenced by the status of teaching but joined the profession for intrinsic reasons, such as to improve children’s achievement, and to be role models for all children and for other teachers.  Their self perceptions of their status within the profession are that it is low, as shown, for example, through the rejection of their culturally sensitive approaches to teaching, and their struggles to achieve leadership roles. The latter finding is repeatedly endorsed in studies of BME teachers and demands national monitoring of their career trajectories. https://revistaseug.ugr.es/index.php/dedica/article/view/7151occupational statusBlack and Minority Ethnic teachersAsianAfrican-Caribbeanrole modelsdiscrimination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linda M. Hargreaves
spellingShingle Linda M. Hargreaves
The status of minority ethnic teachers in England: Institutional racism in the staffroom
DEDiCA
occupational status
Black and Minority Ethnic teachers
Asian
African-Caribbean
role models
discrimination
author_facet Linda M. Hargreaves
author_sort Linda M. Hargreaves
title The status of minority ethnic teachers in England: Institutional racism in the staffroom
title_short The status of minority ethnic teachers in England: Institutional racism in the staffroom
title_full The status of minority ethnic teachers in England: Institutional racism in the staffroom
title_fullStr The status of minority ethnic teachers in England: Institutional racism in the staffroom
title_full_unstemmed The status of minority ethnic teachers in England: Institutional racism in the staffroom
title_sort status of minority ethnic teachers in england: institutional racism in the staffroom
publisher Universidad de Granada
series DEDiCA
issn 2182-018X
publishDate 2011-03-01
description This paper reports research conducted with Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) teachers in England, specifically to find out (i) whether the status of teaching influenced their decisions to join the profession, and (ii) their perceptions of their status within the profession. The data are drawn from the national Teacher Status Project conducted in England 2002-6 combined with previously unpublished data from a follow up study with Asian teachers in 2007. The conclusions, based on focus groups with 65 teachers (African Caribbean, Pakistani, Indian, Bangladeshi) in four regions of England, are that the teachers were not influenced by the status of teaching but joined the profession for intrinsic reasons, such as to improve children’s achievement, and to be role models for all children and for other teachers.  Their self perceptions of their status within the profession are that it is low, as shown, for example, through the rejection of their culturally sensitive approaches to teaching, and their struggles to achieve leadership roles. The latter finding is repeatedly endorsed in studies of BME teachers and demands national monitoring of their career trajectories.
topic occupational status
Black and Minority Ethnic teachers
Asian
African-Caribbean
role models
discrimination
url https://revistaseug.ugr.es/index.php/dedica/article/view/7151
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