Categorization in the classroom: a comparison of teachers' and students' use of ethnic categories
Publication date
2020
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Abstract
This paper builds on an analysis of ethnographic fieldwork data and classroom interaction to examine the use and interpretation of ethnic categories among teachers and students of a secondary school class in the city of Venlo, the Netherlands. Students with a migration background, who were born in the Netherlands, often labeled themselves Turk (‘Turk’), Marokkaan (‘Moroccan’), and buitenlander (‘foreigner’), and referred to others as Nederlander (‘Dutch’). Students used these categories in locally specific ways, for example, to engage in the management of everyday social relations and to construct social hierarchies. Teachers, none of whom had a migration background, appeared to interpret students’ labeling practices as related to issues with integration and belonging. They problematized and sometimes rejected students’ categorization, while at the same time, they also displayed orientation to a categorization system that differentiated between students with and without a migration background. Using tools from membership categorization analysis, the paper examines how these divergent category interpretations surfaced and evokes the effects this may have on students and their relationships with teachers.
Keywords
Classroom ethnography, categorization, ethnicity, membership categorization analysis
Citation
van de Weerd, P 2020, 'Categorization in the classroom: a comparison of teachers' and students' use of ethnic categories', Journal of Multicultural Discourses, vol. 15, no. 4, pp. 354-369. https://doi.org/10.1080/17447143.2020.1780243