Abstract

ABSTRACT Schools represent a central meeting place where societal inequalities are reproduced and questions of social justice become important. This study focuses on categorisations related to race, nationality, and gender in interactions in Finnish teaching environments, as well as teacher reflections on these situations. We discuss the implications of the categorisations on social justice and the role of the teacher in these situations. We conducted video observations of a sixth-grade teacher in a Finnish primary school. The study employs both critical multicultural education approaches and Conversation Analysis. Results show that the pupils use categories race, nationality, and gender in ways that limit the agency and positioning of some of the pupils. The extensive and intersecting categorisation in teaching situations makes it demanding for teachers to address and challenge unequal norms attached to the categories. Results also indicate that teachers need an understanding of othering and normativity in order to allow spontaneous critical discussion and problematising categorisations that pupils use. Also, the results highlight the importance of involving pupils in the process of questioning norms that do not provide all pupils with the same agency or sense of belonging.

Highlights

  • Equality and equity are foundational pillars of the Finnish education system

  • We present the results of the analysis of the two chosen situations with categorisations related to race, nationality, and gender

  • There is extensive, intersecting and simultaneous categorisation regarding gender, race, and nationality in peer and teaching interaction in the Finnish school class analysed for this study

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Summary

Introduction

Equality and equity are foundational pillars of the Finnish education system. Education with the same quality is guaranteed free of charge for all pupils, and achievement differences are relatively small between schools and municipalities (OECD 2016). The notion that all pupils are equal does not guarantee equal treatment on a school or individual level (Juva & Holm 2017; Riitaoja 2013). Several studies have shown that school is a place of reproduction of difference between the ’Finns’ and ‘immigrants’ (Lappalainen 2009; Juva & Holm 2017; Riitaoja (2013); Souto 2011), as well as between boys and girls

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