“I DON’T THINK SHE KNEW I COULDN’T DO IT”: BANGLADESHI PUPILS AND ACHIEVEMENT IN THE EARLY YEARS OF SCHOOLING
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Published:2004
Sue Walters, 2004. "“I DON’T THINK SHE KNEW I COULDN’T DO IT”: BANGLADESHI PUPILS AND ACHIEVEMENT IN THE EARLY YEARS OF SCHOOLING", Ethnographies of Educational and Cultural Conflicts: Strategies and Resolutions, B. Jeffrey, G. Walford
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There has been a great deal of quantitative, survey research produced in the last thirty years which states that there is underachievement amongst ethnic minority children in English schools. This quantitative research reveals an increasingly complex picture of ethnic minority achievement and underachievement. Early work tended to simply demonstrate that ethnic minority children were underachieving in school (Little, 1972; Mabey, 1981; Mabey, 1986), this then shifted (as research became more sophisticated, gender and class were introduced as variables and pupils ceased to be simply categorised as black or white) to the identified achievement of some groups and the underachievement of others (e.g. Brent, 1994; Craft & Craft, 1983; DfES, 2003a, b; Drew & Gray, 1990; ILEA, 1990; Kysel, 1988; Sammons, 1995).
