Racial Categorization of Multiracial Children in Schools
Multiracial students have unique needs that are not being met in schools, because teachers and school personnel assume that those needs are the same as those of monoracial minority children. Children of multiple races are, in fact, invisible in the schools. On school and federal forms, they are racially categorized based on one race only, and such categorizations are not limited to documents. Schools and teachers may unknowingly transmit monoracial identity messages to multiracial students, which is problematic for some students who may want to identify with more than one race. Our racial categorization process reflects the deficiencies of the concept of race in American culture and needs to be renegotiated.

The multiracial child is a microcosm of the American cultural identity. Current racial categorization of multiracial children reflects a society that is still renegotiating its own racial and ethnic identities, and these children bear the burdens of the difficulties. As America continues to become increasingly populated by diverse peoples, what it means to be American is in transition. Americans are moving away from a fixed notion of the American cultural identity toward an expanded, more inclusive resolution.

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Racial Categorization of Multiracial Children in Schools
Multiracial students have unique needs that are not being met in schools, because teachers and school personnel assume that those needs are the same as those of monoracial minority children. Children of multiple races are, in fact, invisible in the schools. On school and federal forms, they are racially categorized based on one race only, and such categorizations are not limited to documents. Schools and teachers may unknowingly transmit monoracial identity messages to multiracial students, which is problematic for some students who may want to identify with more than one race. Our racial categorization process reflects the deficiencies of the concept of race in American culture and needs to be renegotiated.

The multiracial child is a microcosm of the American cultural identity. Current racial categorization of multiracial children reflects a society that is still renegotiating its own racial and ethnic identities, and these children bear the burdens of the difficulties. As America continues to become increasingly populated by diverse peoples, what it means to be American is in transition. Americans are moving away from a fixed notion of the American cultural identity toward an expanded, more inclusive resolution.

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Racial Categorization of Multiracial Children in Schools

Racial Categorization of Multiracial Children in Schools

by Jane A. Chiong
Racial Categorization of Multiracial Children in Schools

Racial Categorization of Multiracial Children in Schools

by Jane A. Chiong

Hardcover

$95.00 
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Overview

Multiracial students have unique needs that are not being met in schools, because teachers and school personnel assume that those needs are the same as those of monoracial minority children. Children of multiple races are, in fact, invisible in the schools. On school and federal forms, they are racially categorized based on one race only, and such categorizations are not limited to documents. Schools and teachers may unknowingly transmit monoracial identity messages to multiracial students, which is problematic for some students who may want to identify with more than one race. Our racial categorization process reflects the deficiencies of the concept of race in American culture and needs to be renegotiated.

The multiracial child is a microcosm of the American cultural identity. Current racial categorization of multiracial children reflects a society that is still renegotiating its own racial and ethnic identities, and these children bear the burdens of the difficulties. As America continues to become increasingly populated by diverse peoples, what it means to be American is in transition. Americans are moving away from a fixed notion of the American cultural identity toward an expanded, more inclusive resolution.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780897894999
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 05/21/1998
Series: Critical Studies in Education and Culture Series
Pages: 176
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.56(d)

About the Author

JANE AYERS CHIONG was Founder and Director of Boston's first non-profit agency for interracial families, The Multiracial Family Network. She has also taught for many years in colleges and community agencies, and is currently owner and Director of The Math and Reading Centers.

Table of Contents

Series Foreword
Preface
Do the Schools Make Racial Identity Problematic for Multiracial Children?
Mixed Not Messed
Language: Instruments of Identity
How Our School and Federal Documents Frame Racial Identity
How Our School Culture Frames Racial Identity
Inclusion: Making the Invisible Visible
Afterword
Appendix A: School Forms
Appendix B: Federal Documents
Appendix C: Checklist of School Serivces for Multiracial Students
Further Reading
Bibliography
Index

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