Beyond ‘Migrant Background’: How to Select Relevant, Social Justice Oriented, and Feasible Social Categories in Educational Research

Publication date

2023-03-01

Authors

Vietze, JanaISNI 0000000527862994
Moffitt, Ursula
Schwarzenthal, Miriam
Civitillo, SauroORCID 0000-0001-7607-0935ISNI 0000000512511198

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Across continental Europe, educational research samples are often divided by ‘migrant background’, a binary variable criticized for masking participant heterogeneity and reinforcing exclusionary norms of belonging. This study endorses more meaningful, representative, and precise research by offering four guiding questions for selecting relevant, social justice oriented, and feasible social categories for collecting and analysing data in psychological and educational research. Using a preregistered empirical example, we first compare selected social categories (‘migrant background’, family heritage, religion, citizenship, cultural identification, and generation status) in their potential to reveal participant heterogeneity. Second, we investigate differences in means and relations between variables (discrimination experiences, perceived societal Islamophobia, and national identity) and academic motivation among 1335 adolescents in Germany (48% female, Mage = 14.69). Regression analyses and multigroup SEM revealed differential experiences with and implications of discrimination for academic motivation. Results highlight the need for a deliberate, transparent use of social categories to make discrimination visible and centre participants’ subjective experiences.

Keywords

Academic motivation, Discrimination, Labels, Migrant background, National identity, Social categories, Education, Developmental and Educational Psychology

Citation

Vietze, J, Moffitt, U, Schwarzenthal, M & Civitillo, S 2023, 'Beyond ‘Migrant Background’ : How to Select Relevant, Social Justice Oriented, and Feasible Social Categories in Educational Research', European Journal of Psychology of Education, vol. 38, no. 1, pp. 389–408. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10212-022-00611-2