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Dr. John Ogbu

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... theories and methods to problems related to minority education in the United States and abroad. ... especially minority children, performed poorly in school. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dr. John Ogbu


1
Dr. John Ogbu
  • Nigerian-American Anthropologist
  • Major figure in the application of
    anthropological theories and methods to problems
    related to minority education in the United
    States and abroad.
  • Named one of four intellectual giants of the
    20th century by Eminent Educators Studies in
    Intellectual Influence

2
Background and Schooling
Born in 1939 Umudomi, Nigeria Schooling Hope
Waddell Training Institute Methodist Teachers
Training College Princeton University
Theological Seminary University of California,
Berkeley Bachelor of Arts, Anthropology
(1965) Masters, Anthropology (1969) Doctorate of
Philosophy, Anthropology (1971) Professor from
1970 to his death
3
Voluntary vs Involuntary Minorities
  • Voluntary minorities groups of immigrants who
    chose to come to the United States, and their
    descendants
  • Irish, German, Asian-Americans, etc.
  • Involuntary minorities descendants of groups of
    persons who found themselves in the United
    States, or under United States jurisdiction,
    against their will
  • African-Americans, Mexican-Americans
  • Ogbu argued that, "involuntary minorities" often
    adopted an "oppositional identity" to the
    mainstream culture in response to a glass ceiling
    imposed or maintained by white society on the
    job-success of their parents and others in their
    communities. Therefore, he reasoned, some
    non-whites "failed to observe the link between
    educational achievement and access to jobs."

4
Acting White
  • 1986 study (with Signithia Fordham) which
    concluded that some African American students in
    a Washington, D.C., high school did not live up
    to their academic potential because of the fear
    of being accused of "acting white
  • It was concluded that these students' cultural
    attitudes hindered their own academic achievement
    and that these attitudes are too often neglected
    by parents, educators and/or policymakers.

5
African American Vernacular English
  • Known by non-linguists as Ebonics
  • In 1996, Ogbu played a prominent role in the
    debate about the utility of African American
    Vernacular English
  • Ogbu encouraged teachers to become familiar with
    and to make use of this vernacular in helping
    African American students transition to
    traditional English

6
The Next Generation An Ethnography of Education
in an Urban Neighborhood
  • In 1968, he had begun his doctoral fieldwork in
    Stockton, California in a neighborhood called
    Burgherside trying to discover why some children,
    especially minority children, performed poorly in
    school.
  • His dissertation was published in 1974 as "The
    Next Generation An Ethnography of Education in
    an Urban Neighborhood"

7
The Next Generation
  • explores education (schooling) in Burgherside, a
    low-income neighborhood in Stockton, California
  • majority of residents are blacks and
    Mexican-Americans - they make up about 92 of the
    elementary school population.
  • study explores the reasons for many children from
    the neighborhood failing in public schools.
  • goal was to study how the people in Stockton,
    including Burghersiders, conceptualize their
    educational system and their place in it, and how
    these conceptualizations influence the way they
    behave within the institution.
  • research covered the following groups in
    Stockton (a) Burghersiders (b) residents of
    adjoining neighborhoods attending the same junior
    and senior high schools with Burghersiders (c)
    organizations and leadership representing the
    interests of the subordinate minorities in the
    wider community (d) school personnel (e)
    taxpayers, principally the middle-class
    Stocktonians and the organizations they formed to
    assist with "problems" of Burghersiders and
    similar groups.

8
Findings
Belief system of minorities
White institutional barriers, etc.
confirms
confirms
Low status occupations, low wages, etc.
High rate of school failure
justifies
Washington, T.A. (2008)
9
Findings
Belief system of whites (dominate class)
Intellectual, cultural inferiority or
subordinate minorities
confirms
confirms
Low status occupations, low wages, etc.
High rate of school failure
justifies
Washington, T.A. (2008)
10
Findings
Practice that ensues
School Failure adaptation as a coping mechanism
causes
causes
Mistreatment by dominant class because of
school failure
School failure
justifies
Washington, T.A. (2008)
11
References
  • Ogbu, John U.  (1974).  The next generation an
    ethnography of education in an urban neighborhood
    by John U. Ogbu  Academic Press New York.
  • John Ogbu. (2009, May 26). In Wikipedia, The Free
    Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1230, May 26, 2009, from
    http//en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?titleJohn_Ogb
    uoldid292426446
  • Washington, Tracy Amanda. (2008). The next
    generation An ethnography of education in an
    urban neighborhood. Powerpoint Presentation.
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