Publication | Closed Access
Negotiating Social Differences
52
Citations
21
References
1999
Year
NegotiationOpposition YouthsNegotiation TheoryTeacher-student RelationEducationHidden CurriculumSocial SciencesTeacher EducationStigmatized YouthsInclusive EducationSocial ConflictSchool FunctioningCurricular ActionsSocial StigmaSocial IdentityApplied Social PsychologySchool ViolenceInterpersonal CommunicationSociologySocial DifferencesSocial Exchange Theory
Many have described the opposition youths from stigmatized social groups may develop toward school. This study focuses alternatively on interactional, pedagogical, and curricular actions that stigmatized high school students perceive as affecting their willingness to adapt to varied classrooms. Interview, observation, and record data from 49 students illustrate that stigmatized youths prefer teachers who give personal attention to students, who convey respect for and confidence in students who are socially different from themselves, and who support and elicit student voice and input. Youths also express strong distaste for lecturing and seat-work and prefer personally relevant curriculum.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1