|
Connolly, P. (1995) Racism, masculine peer-group
relations and the schooling of African/Caribbean infant boys, British
Journal of Sociology of Education, 16(1): 75-92.
The past decade has witnessed the publication of a growing number
of important ethnographic studies investigating the schooling experiences
of Black students. Their focus has largely been upon student-teacher
relations during the students' last few years of compulsory schooling.
What they have highlighted is the complexity of racism and the varied
nature of Black students' experiences of schooling. Drawing upon
data from a year-long ethnographic study of an inner-city, multi-ethnic
primary school, this paper aims to compliment these studies in two
ways. Firstly the paper will broaden the focus to examine how student
peer-group relations play an integral role, within the context of
student-teacher relations, in shaping many Black students' schooling
experiences. By focussing on African/Caribbean infant boys, it will
be shown how student-teacher relations on the one hand, and peer-group
relations on the other, form a continuous feed-back loop; the products
of each tending to exacerbate and inflate the other. Secondly, by
concentrating on infant children, the paper will assess the extent
to which these resultant processes and practices are also evident
for Black pupils at the beginning of their school careers - at the
ages of five and six.
Back to publications list
|