Australia: Selective schools’ long and tangled history with race and class

Australia/Marzo del 2017/Noticia/https://theconversation.com/

Reseña:

Las escuelas secundarias selectivas en Australia son populares y polémicas  esto  atrae a  muchos niños que buscan matricularse e ingresar a ellas.  El comentario público desde finales de los años 90  ha sido el acusar a estas escuelas de ser secuestradas por colegios de entrenamiento privados y racialmente inestables, señalan que  se inscriben  un número desproporcionado de estudiantes «asiáticos «. De allí que el tema de las escuelas selectivas tienen su origen en la historia de exclusión racial e inmigración.  Según las escuelas debían ofrecer a los estudiantes una «escala de oportunidades» meritocrática. Es decir, estarían abiertos a todos, independientemente de su riqueza o clase social, siempre y cuando se cumplieran los requisitos académicos de entrada. Esto, y la ausencia de criterios religiosos, los diferencian de las escuelas privadas.  En este sentido se enfatiza en la selección de raza blanca de los estudiantes , el establecimiento de la Política de Australia blanca, los niños aborígenes podrían ser legalmente excluidos, y las culturas protestantes de clase media de la época dominaron tanto las pruebas de ingreso como el currículo dentro de las escuelas.

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Fuente:

https://theconversation.com/selective-schools-long-and-tangled-history-with-race-and-class-74614

 

Selective schools’ long and tangled history with race and clas

Selective high schools in Australia are both popular and controversial. Many more children seek enrolment in them than gain entry.

Public commentary since the late 1990s has accused these schools of being both hijacked by private coaching colleges, and racially unbalanced — enrolling disproportionate numbers of “Asian” students.

To properly understand the nature of selective schools today, you have to go back to when they first opened.

Why do we have selective schools?

Selective schools have never operated in isolation from broader historical forces — including Australia’s connected histories of racial exclusion and immigration.

The selective school system in New South Wales, for example, which has the largest concentration and longest history of selective schooling, is a relic of when secondary schooling was the destination of only a minority of young people, mostly from the middle or upper classes.

Secondary schooling was not universal in Australia before the 1960s, and it was only in the 1980s that everyone had the opportunity to complete Year 12.

The NSW selective high schools system was founded between the 1880s and the 1910s.

The schools were to offer students a meritocratic “ladder of opportunity”. That is, they would be open to everyone, regardless of wealth or social class, so long as academic entry requirements were met. This, and the absence of religious criteria, set them apart from private schools.

Selecting whiteness

However, the foundations of selective schooling in Australia were always deeply raced and classed.

Despite being accessed by many working class students, their credentials were geared towards middle class occupational groups. And their essential whiteness was ensured by several factors:

  1. Their establishment period coincided with the establishment of the White Australia Policy, which restricted non-Europeans from migrating to Australia.
  2. Aboriginal children could be legally excluded from the feeder primary schools and often were.
  3. White Protestant middle class cultures of the time dominated both the entry tests and the curriculum inside the schools.

Non-British migrants arrived in Australia in larger numbers from late 1940s. As early as the 1930s, many children of European Jewish refugees attended selective high schools.

But from the 1960s to the 1980s, the children of non-English speaking migrant families were more often categorised as educationally disadvantaged, and rarely seen as “displacing” the academic opportunities of Anglo-Australians.

Falling out of favour

During the 1960s and 1970s, selective schools fell out of favour with policymakers and many parents. They were mostly replaced by comprehensive high schools, which enrolled all students within a given area, no matter their test scores.

Selective high schools were disparaged as old fashioned and elitist. It was also argued that selection at the age of 11 or 12 was too young to set children on a certain path.

The revival

The revival of selective schooling from the late 1980s accompanied a new commitment by the NSW state government to the education of the “talented” child.

Academically gifted children, it was argued, were neglected in the one-size-fits-all classroom.

During the same period many white, middle-class families moved to private secondary schooling, responding to policies of “school choice”.

Both these developments coincided with increased middle class migration from east and South East Asia.

Coded racism in media commentary

By the late 1990s, Australian print media began focusing on the dominance of Asian students in selective school entrance examinations, and on the impact of “too many Asians” on schooling cultures.

The resurgence of white nationalist politics at the time was relevant to these debates. Such politics sought to normalise the whiteness of institutions like schools.

Our analysis of media coverage in the early 2000s uncovers the coded racism that underpinned public anxieties about selective schools.

Media commentary focused on the “fairness” of the selection process itself, indicating that Asian students were using coaching services to gain an unfair advantage.

Our research into the use of academic coaching by Chinese-Australian families demonstrates that far from “gaming” the system, parents were attempting to mitigate the disadvantages produced by a competitive, marketised, and culturally biased school system.

The need for historical awareness

Since the late 1990s, public commentary about selective schooling has often failed to address historical complexity in at least two ways.

Firstly, it tends to use the category of “Asian” in sweeping cultural terms rather than in reference to historically differentiated people.

Asians are cast as a singular group who are then made an easy target of blame for the unfairness of the system.

Secondly, the history of selective schooling is often misunderstood, containing uncritical assumptions about the “good” of a meritocratic system. There tends to be a silence around the histories of racialised exclusions in education and in selective education in particular.

“Asians” in selective schools are positioned as interlopers or breakers of heritage, and other non-white groups including Indigenous Australians tend to be rendered invisible altogether.

We need public debate that challenges – not normalises – the conditions of white privilege in a multicultural settler-colony, not least within our education system.

Fuente Imagen:

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/I-vpNWb6mcR-YMJQzE-9i6b6Y5OSFrgZwiRtoKThpbcMl7W5Doz8Cc7ZrMYH7ukDZMSR=s85

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