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Identity and School Adjustment: Revisiting the Acting White Assumption

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Identity and School Adjustment: Revisiting the Acting White Assumption
Author(s)Spencer, Margaret Beale; Noll, Elizabeth; Stoltzfus, Jill; Harpalani, Vinay
AbstractIt has long been offered as an explanation for the achievement gap between White and African American students, that African American youth would do better if they adopted a Eurocentric cultural values system. Unfortunately, this theory, along with a great amount of the established literature on minority youth identity development, depends on a deficit-oriented perspective to explain the discrepancy between African American and White students. This is problematic because the perspective denies minority youth a culturally specific normative developmental perspective of their own, and instead, compares their experience to the normative developmental processes observed in White children. This article invalidates that perspective with a Phenomenological Variant of Ecological Systems Theory approach to a study of 562 African American secondary school students (aged 11-16 yrs). These students, contrary to the traditionally offered “acting White” assumption, show high self-esteem and achievement goals in conjunction with high Afrocentricity. Further discussion of the study stresses the importance of considering the undeniable influence of culture and context.
IssueNo1
Pages21-30
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceEducational Psychologist
VolumeNo36
PubDate 2001
ISBN_ISSN0046-1520

Group Dynamics

  • Bandwagon Effects, NIMBY, and Collective Delusions
  • Caste, Class, Status, and Hierarchy
  • Charity, Volunteerism, and Prosocial Behavior
  • DeIndividuation and Dehumunization
  • Group Communication
  • In-Group/ Out-Group Dynamics
  • Inter- and Intra-Group Dynamics
  • Interpersonal and Familial Relations
  • Norms, Shared Values, and Beliefs
  • Peer Groups, Reference Groups and Group Identity
  • Power, Authority, and Domination
  • Race, Religion, and Ethnicity
  • Social Dilemmas, Prisoner’s Dilemma, and Tragedy of the Commons


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