Seminar: Children, youth and educational contexts
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Description
Join us for a pair of speakers on the theme of children, youth, and educational contexts.
Does Migrant Status Influence Children鈥檚 Academic Achievements in China?
Yifan Bao, Sociological Studies, University of 葫芦影业
The migrant workers in China are a large group of population in the past 40 years. They usually work in some basic and low-class occupations in urban areas, due to lack of education and skills. Some of their children migrate with parents and some of the children are being left-behind children who usually take care by their grandparents and other guardians. It is interesting that how migrant status and family socioeconomic (SES) status influence the children鈥檚 academic achievements compared with urban children. By using mixed method, the research finds out that children鈥檚 migrant status has negative effects on migrant and left-behind children鈥檚 academic achievements. However, with other SES factors involves, such as parental education and family social status, the negative effects decrease.
Anti-Black Racism in China: A Report of Post-colonial Racial Hierarchy in Chinese Society
Zihuan Zhang, Sociological Studies, University of 葫芦影业
This presentation aims to introduce and discuss key findings from my PhD thesis which theorises racism in China by investigating anti-Black racism in China鈥檚 English education. This presentation will be threefolded. First, I argue that anti-Black racism in China鈥檚 English education derives from this industry鈥檚 obsession of White English standards, which manifests in native-speakerism. Second, the preference of White teachers over Black teachers in recruitment process reflects racial hierarchy in wider Chinese society. It also resonates with how the colonial temporality constructs racial ideology in Chinese project of modernisation. Lastly, anti-Black racism in China is intrinsically linked to coloniality, which characterises itself with colonial traits. For example, I refer to the conception of sub-ontological colonial differences that denote Blackness as 鈥渞apeable鈥 and 鈥渒illable鈥. I consider anti-Black racism in China a postcolonial projection based on Chinese own history of colonial struggles against racial inferiority that justified wars and genocides of Chinese people.