Publication | Closed Access
Minority Education in China: From State's preferential policies to dislocated Tibetan schools
54
Citations
11
References
2003
Year
Educational OutcomesEast Asian StudiesMulticultural EducationEducationSuburban EducationElementary EducationEducational EquityEducational SystemEducational PolicySociology Of EducationAfrican American StudiesInclusive EducationCultural DiversityEducational DisadvantageCulture EducationTibetan SchoolsSchool DifferentiationSocial InequalityEqual Educational OpportunityMainland ChinaEducation SystemPreferential PoliciesMinority EducationEducation Policy
Abstract This article analytically describes how the state of mainland China addresses the 'periphery syndrome' of education in its 'peripheral areas' of national minorities. It discusses the rationales, policies, implementations and results for the development of minority basic education. The examination of the 9-year compulsory schooling and the boarding school system for minority pupils suggests contradictions and mismatches between state policies and implementations. The article reveals educational, as well as geographical displacement of minority schooling, particularly the internationally little-known Tibetan Schools and Classes that have been radically developed in the metropolises of Han majority. The dislocation of reform for minority basic education, especially the lack of cultural sensitivity, is further compounded by the ubiquitous practices of pupil tracking and school differentiation in the education system. The author concludes that the policy components of cultural responsiveness should be integrated in minority education development.
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