The influence of K-12 schooling on the identity development of multiethnic students

This study examined the influence of K-12 schooling on the racial and ethnic identity development of 23 self-identified multiethnic students attending high schools across the San Francisco Bay Area. All of the students participated in a semi-structured interview, nine participated in one of two focu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mohan, Erica
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/23708
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-23708
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-237082018-01-05T17:24:13Z The influence of K-12 schooling on the identity development of multiethnic students Mohan, Erica This study examined the influence of K-12 schooling on the racial and ethnic identity development of 23 self-identified multiethnic students attending high schools across the San Francisco Bay Area. All of the students participated in a semi-structured interview, nine participated in one of two focus groups, and five completed a writing activity. I approached this study with a postpositivist realist conception of identity (Mohanty, 2000; Moya, 2000a/b) that takes seriously the fluidity and complexity of identities as well as their epistemic and real-world significance. In defining racial and ethnic identity formation, I borrowed Tatum’s (1997) understanding of it as “the process of defining for oneself the personal significance and social meaning of belonging to a particular racial [and/or ethnic] group” (p. 16). The findings from this study indicate that the formal aspects of schooling (e.g., curriculum and diversity education initiatives) rarely directly influence the racial and ethnic identity development of multiethnic students. They do, however, shape all students’ racial and ethnic understandings and ideologies, which in turn shape the informal aspects of schooling (e.g., interactions with peers and racial and ethnic divisions within the student body) which exert direct influence over multiethnic students’ experiences and identities. Of course, schooling is not alone in shaping the racial and ethnic understandings and ideologies of the general student body; other influences such as family and neighborhood context cannot be discounted. Nevertheless, the findings indicate that schools are sites of negotiation, that these negotiations influence multiethnic students’ identities, and that these negotiations occur in the context of, and are shaped by, both formal and informal aspects of schooling, including, but not limited to, school demographics, curricula, race and ethnicity-based student organizations, and interactions between all members of the school community. Based on the findings, it is recommended that educators infuse the curriculum and classroom discussions with issues of race, ethnicity, multiethnicity, and difference; actively engage in the process of complicating, contesting, and deconstructing racial and ethnic categories and their classificatory power; and end the silence regarding multiethnicity in schools and ensure its authentic inclusion in the curriculum. Education, Faculty of Educational Studies (EDST), Department of Graduate 2010-04-16T14:50:05Z 2010-04-16T14:50:05Z 2010 2010-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/23708 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description This study examined the influence of K-12 schooling on the racial and ethnic identity development of 23 self-identified multiethnic students attending high schools across the San Francisco Bay Area. All of the students participated in a semi-structured interview, nine participated in one of two focus groups, and five completed a writing activity. I approached this study with a postpositivist realist conception of identity (Mohanty, 2000; Moya, 2000a/b) that takes seriously the fluidity and complexity of identities as well as their epistemic and real-world significance. In defining racial and ethnic identity formation, I borrowed Tatum’s (1997) understanding of it as “the process of defining for oneself the personal significance and social meaning of belonging to a particular racial [and/or ethnic] group” (p. 16). The findings from this study indicate that the formal aspects of schooling (e.g., curriculum and diversity education initiatives) rarely directly influence the racial and ethnic identity development of multiethnic students. They do, however, shape all students’ racial and ethnic understandings and ideologies, which in turn shape the informal aspects of schooling (e.g., interactions with peers and racial and ethnic divisions within the student body) which exert direct influence over multiethnic students’ experiences and identities. Of course, schooling is not alone in shaping the racial and ethnic understandings and ideologies of the general student body; other influences such as family and neighborhood context cannot be discounted. Nevertheless, the findings indicate that schools are sites of negotiation, that these negotiations influence multiethnic students’ identities, and that these negotiations occur in the context of, and are shaped by, both formal and informal aspects of schooling, including, but not limited to, school demographics, curricula, race and ethnicity-based student organizations, and interactions between all members of the school community. Based on the findings, it is recommended that educators infuse the curriculum and classroom discussions with issues of race, ethnicity, multiethnicity, and difference; actively engage in the process of complicating, contesting, and deconstructing racial and ethnic categories and their classificatory power; and end the silence regarding multiethnicity in schools and ensure its authentic inclusion in the curriculum. === Education, Faculty of === Educational Studies (EDST), Department of === Graduate
author Mohan, Erica
spellingShingle Mohan, Erica
The influence of K-12 schooling on the identity development of multiethnic students
author_facet Mohan, Erica
author_sort Mohan, Erica
title The influence of K-12 schooling on the identity development of multiethnic students
title_short The influence of K-12 schooling on the identity development of multiethnic students
title_full The influence of K-12 schooling on the identity development of multiethnic students
title_fullStr The influence of K-12 schooling on the identity development of multiethnic students
title_full_unstemmed The influence of K-12 schooling on the identity development of multiethnic students
title_sort influence of k-12 schooling on the identity development of multiethnic students
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/23708
work_keys_str_mv AT mohanerica theinfluenceofk12schoolingontheidentitydevelopmentofmultiethnicstudents
AT mohanerica influenceofk12schoolingontheidentitydevelopmentofmultiethnicstudents
_version_ 1718582416316039168