Cultural Understanding: Teaching about Race Relations in the Primary School

Authors

  • Michael McDougall
  • Peter Hastie University of Queensland

Abstract

Racism certainly exists amongst primary school children in Australia. Through both experience in school and teaching, the authors have noted marked prejudice amongst students. This prejudice takes the forms of slurs, name calling, recitation of myths and stereotypes, and occasionally violence, and is directed at all minority groups, but notably Aborigines and Asians.

Students in minority groups have most likely been on the receiving end of this prejudice during their school lives and, because of this, may have felt alienated and humiliated. In this paper it is proposed that the teaching of race relations and cultural understanding is one method teachers may use to decrease the racial attitudes of the white non-minority students.

References

Branch C.W., and Newcombe N. 1976: Racial attitude development among young black children as a function of parental attitudes: a longitudinal and cross-sectional study. Child development, 57, 712–721 .

Lingard R. 1980: Schools do make a difference, but…!The Aboriginal Child at School, 8, 51–59.

Pettman J., 1986: Racism; attacking the problem. Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 11:3, 27–32.

Pettman J., 1987: Racism in the classroom. The History Teacher, 24:4, 30–41.

Skelton K., 1986: Educating for cultural understanding: The work of the Combating Prejudice in Schools project. Youth Studies, 5:3, 36–39.

Stenhouse L., Verma G.K., Wild R.D., and Nixon J., 1982: Teaching about Race Relations: Problems and Effects. London : Routledge and Kegan Paul.

Downloads

Published

1989-05-01

How to Cite

McDougall, M., & Hastie, P. (1989). Cultural Understanding: Teaching about Race Relations in the Primary School. The Aboriginal Child at School, 17(2), 45–49. Retrieved from https://ajie.atsis.uq.edu.au/acs/article/view/1884

Issue

Section

Articles