Ethnic representation and stereotypes in mathematics and Dutch language textbooks from the Netherlands

Publication date

2024

Authors

van Veen, DaudiISNI 0000000506649385
Emmen, Rosanneke A.G.
Tessa van de Rozenberg
Judi Mesman

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

The current study examined ethnic representation and stereotypes in textbooks from two core secondary school subjects: maths and Dutch. We examined all 25 hard-copy textbooks used in first-year secondary schools in the Netherlands in 2019, and coded characters’ ethnic background, competence-related activities, and occupational status. Ethnicity was identifiable for 8897 characters. Results indicate that characters of colour were underrepresented in the text and images in the textbooks compared to Dutch population statistics. Additionally, subtle stereotypical patterns were found in which characters of colour were less competent and lower in occupational status than White characters. These findings suggest that implicit biases influence which groups are featured and how they are portrayed. To help all students to reach their full potential and develop an inclusive worldview, we recommend publishers use publicly available tools (e.g. random name generators) to make their textbooks more inclusive.

Keywords

Educational content, Ethnic representation, Ethnic stereotypes, Textbooks

Citation

van Veen, D, Emmen, R A G, Tessa van de Rozenberg & Judi Mesman 2024, 'Ethnic representation and stereotypes in mathematics and Dutch language textbooks from the Netherlands', Whiteness and Education, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 270–293. https://doi.org/10.1080/23793406.2023.2219997