The Locus Of Racist Evil Has Finally Been Unveiled: Kindergarten Teachers
08/16/2023
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Earlier: NYT: Nice White Lady Teachers Are Practically George Zimmerman-Level Racists

From a Virginia Commonwealth U. press release:

VCU-led study: Teachers perceive more conflict with Black boys, closer relationships with white girls

An analysis of a survey of more than 9,000 teachers shows kindergarten teachers rated their level of perceived conflict with Black boys as nearly 40% higher than with white girls.

AUG. 14, 2023

By Mary Kate Brogan

A team of researchers led by a Virginia Commonwealth University professor found that teachers, regardless of race, perceived the most conflict with Black boys and the least conflict with white girls in their classrooms. …

The study analyzed nationally representative survey data from 9,190 participants—teachers who evaluated relationships with their students in terms of perceived closeness and perceived conflict toward the end of the school year in the spring semester—in the U.S. Department of Education National Center for Education Statistics’ Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Class of 2010-2011.

The findings indicated that teachers rated their level of perceived conflict with Black boys as nearly 40% higher in kindergarten than their level of perceived conflict with white girls. The gap increased from kindergarten to second grade: Teachers’ perceptions of conflict with white girls, white boys and Black girls stayed nearly flat, but their perceptions of conflict with Black boys increased by 8%.

Kathleen Rudasill, Ph.D., interim dean of VCU’s School of Education and a professor in its Department of Foundations of Education, led the study, serving as first and corresponding author on the paper.

“We were surprised at the disparities in teacher perceptions of their relationships with Black and white boys and girls at the start of formal school,” Rudasill said. “This is the point in the school experience where teacher-child relationships are typically at their most positive, so the fact that Black students, Black boys in particular, are starting off at such a disadvantage in terms of teacher perceptions was discouraging.”

Rudasill said the study isn’t about individual teachers’ bias; it instead uncovers how systemic racism and white privilege in society unfold in the U.S. educational system.

“Although some studies have examined child and teacher race as variables in teachers’ perceptions of teacher-child relationship quality, there has not been a focus on systemic racism as potentially impacting teacher perceptions,” Rudasill said. “Given the historic and current educational disparities between Black and white students’ opportunities and outcomes—and the critical role that teacher-child relationships have in predicting students’ academic and social success in school—it is important to examine the extent to which teachers’ perceptions of their relationship with students differ according to child race.”

While teachers’ ratings of closeness with all students decreased from kindergarten to second grade, their level of closeness with white girls remained highest, followed by Black girls, white boys and finally Black boys.

Based on previous studies, the research team expected that white teachers would perceive their relationships with white children more positively than with Black children. However, when they controlled for teacher race, Rudasill said, the research team did not find evidence that teacher-child relationships differed based on teacher-child racial match.

“We found evidence that teacher perceptions of their relationships with Black and white children in early elementary U.S. classrooms systematically advantaged white children and demonstrated an anti-Black racial bias representative of the structural and systemic racism endemic to the U.S.,” Rudasill and her co-authors wrote in the paper.

We have a severe problem with racist hate in 2020s America as shown by the fact that racist hate is routinely directed at the least hateful people imaginable: kindergarten teachers.

But nobody notices this.

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