“Real-Life Needs”: How Humanitarian Techniques Produce Hierarchies of Science and Mathematics Education

Kathryn L. Kirchgasler, Ayşe Yolcu
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Background and Context: Racialized disparities in curricular tracking have long been ascribed to narrow tests that create a hierarchy of perceived ability. Consequently, teachers are urged to reject deficit views of ability and embrace more expansive techniques to reveal and respond to the real-life needs of students, especially those from minoritized groups. Paradoxically, these tools, upheld as equity strategies today, had prior careers racializing populations along a hierarchy of perceived needs. That hierarchy, which gave a humanitarian basis for curricular tracking, continues to produce racializing effects today. Purpose: This article rethinks how teachers are taught to distinguish the real-life needs of students from marginalized communities. As a history of the present, it examines how demographic distinctions in health-related needs emerged historically and became tied to lower track science and mathematics instruction. We ask: To what extent do current strategies persist in dividing populations and prescribing distinct pedagogies? Have the normalizing impulses of past tools been removed or rearticulated in recent reforms that promote educational and health equity? Research Design: We first analyzed articles reviewed as exemplary of culturally responsive science and mathematics education to identify techniques recommended to uncover students’ real-life needs. Next, we compared these techniques with similar tools promoted in early 20th-century U.S. science and mathematics education journals, when these fields began distinguishing types of students and matching them with distinct tiers of instruction. Conclusions: Despite key shifts over the century (e.g., from treating inherent pathologies to redressing inequities), similar tools operate as humanitarian techniques today. That is, they classify populations as having “immediate needs” for intervention in daily life that preempt “future needs” for academic preparation. The resulting hierarchy of perceived needs orders students and subject matter from applied relevance to abstract rigor. This yields four dangers: (1) positing target students and families as not-yet-capable of self-direction, (2) prioritizing for target groups an applied and often lower prestige curriculum with consequences for their academic trajectories, (3) depoliticizing systemic inequities as problems of attitude adjustment, and (4) depoliticizing mainstream science and mathematics education by isolating sociopolitical concerns as compensatory interventions. We argue that school science and mathematics are not unique in these respects but epitomize risks present whenever social scientific tools offer an ostensibly neutral basis for seeing and sorting difference.
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“现实生活的需要”:人道主义技术如何产生科学和数学教育的等级
背景和背景:长期以来,课程跟踪中的种族差异被归咎于狭隘的考试,这种考试创造了一种感知能力的等级制度。因此,教师们被敦促拒绝能力缺陷的观点,并采用更广泛的技术来揭示和回应学生的现实需求,特别是那些来自少数群体的学生。矛盾的是,这些工具在今天被视为公平战略,它们之前的职业生涯使人们按照感知到的需求等级进行种族化。这种等级制度为课程跟踪提供了人道主义基础,今天继续产生种族化的影响。目的:本文重新思考教师如何被教导区分学生和边缘社区的现实需求。作为当前的历史,它考察了与健康相关的需求的人口差异是如何在历史上出现的,并与较低轨道的科学和数学教学联系在一起。我们的问题是:目前的策略在多大程度上坚持划分人口和规定不同的教学方法?在最近促进教育和卫生公平的改革中,过去工具的正常化冲动是否被移除或重新连接?研究设计:我们首先分析了作为文化响应性科学和数学教育典范的文章,以确定推荐的技术来揭示学生的现实需求。接下来,我们将这些技术与20世纪初美国科学和数学教育期刊上推广的类似工具进行了比较,当时这些领域开始区分学生的类型,并将他们与不同的教学层次相匹配。结论:尽管本世纪发生了重大变化(例如,从治疗固有病症到纠正不公平现象),但类似的工具今天仍作为人道主义技术发挥作用。也就是说,他们将人群划分为在日常生活中有“直接需要”干预的人群,这些人优先于学术准备的“未来需要”。由此产生的感知需求层次将学生和主题从应用相关性排序到抽象严谨性。这产生了四个危险:(1)假定目标学生和家庭尚未具备自我指导的能力;(2)优先为目标群体提供实用且通常较低声望的课程,从而影响他们的学术轨迹;(3)将系统性不平等作为态度调整的问题去政治化;(4)通过孤立社会政治问题作为补偿性干预,将主流科学和数学教育去政治化。我们认为,学校科学和数学在这些方面并不是独一无二的,而是体现了社会科学工具为观察和分类差异提供表面上中立的基础时所存在的风险。
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