Identity and Inner City Kids

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Through programs that directly fuel desegregation in schools, our educational systems have become a melting pot of different races, languages, economic status and abilities. Programs have been in place for the past fifty years to bring student that live in school districts that lack quality educational choices, to schools that are capable of providing quality education to all who attend. Typically the trend appears to show that the schools of higher quality are located in suburban areas, leaving children who live in “black” inner-city areas to abandon the failing school systems of their neighborhoods for transportation to these suburban, “white” schools. (Angrist & Lang, 2004) This mixing of inner-city and suburban cultures creates new challenges for students and teachers alike. Children from the inner city characteristically have lower GPAs, attend very few AP classes and have a dropout rate that is much higher than their suburban counterparts. This has been an area for much exploration and study throughout the years, but yet the trend of a knowledge gap among children seems to continue. Perhaps one area that needs to be further explored is the differences in cultural identity in these two groups of students and its impact on the education these students wish to achieve. In this paper I will present the numerous theories built around the process of establishing one’s identity and provide examples of how this identity shapes a students involvement and actions while in school. I will also reflect on the importance for systems that foster identity formation that is equal for both inner-city and suburban children. It is crucial to the success of America’s schools to understand that a mixture of cultures creates a mixture of identi... ... middle of paper ... ...6, 747-770 Adams, G. R., & Marshall, S. K. (1996). A developmental social psychology of identity: Understanding the person-in-context. Journal of Adolescence 19, 429-442. Bosma. H. A. 11992). Identity in adolescence: Managing commitments. In G. R. Adams. T. P. Gullotta, & R. Mox\.sm-dyor (EiSs.). Adolescent identity formalion (pp. 91-12 Peters, S. (2002) Inclusive education in accelerated and professional development schools: a case- based study of two school reform efforts in the USA, International Journal of Inclusive Education, 6(4), 287–308. Alton-Lee, A. (2003) Quality teaching for diverse students in schooling: best evidence synthesis (New Zealand, Ministry of Education), June 2003. Fearon, James. 1999. “What Is Identity (As We Now Use the Word)?” Unpublished manuscript. Stanford University, Stanford, Calif., November 3.

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