Tamils, Social Capital and Educational Marginalization in Singapore
Labouring to Learn
- 184 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Tamils, Social Capital and Educational Marginalization in Singapore
Labouring to Learn
About This Book
Labouring to Learn examines academic mobility pathways among ethnic minority Tamil youths in public secondary schools and vocational institutions in Singapore. This book qualitatively examines the interactive effects of race and class on the educational performance of these youths through the lens of social capital. Despite their numerical majoritarian position within the Indian population in Singapore, the foreclosed access for Tamils to diverse class networks within the ethnic community as well as limited inter-ethnic interactions has historically truncated the means to resources and opportunities for social mobility. In schools, the narratives shared by Tamil boys and girls from the lower academic streams and economically disadvantaged backgrounds reveal that they typically experience exclusion on account of racial, economic and academic marginalisation in their everyday lives. Turning to bonding ties among peers and family members provides social support resources that offer some respite from marginalisation. On the flipside, articulations of resistance ensue among Tamil youths that tangibly take time away from learning, and run the danger of strengthening the cultural deficit rhetoric for mainstream society to explain the poor academic performance among ethnic minorities. This account of educational marginalisation amongst Singaporean Tamil youths contributes towards understanding social inequality in a non-liberal multicultural context where marginalisation is differentially experienced across ethnic minority groups and traced to broader socio-historical contexts of migration, assimilation and minorityâmajority relations. Furthermore, it also articulates the utility of a social capital framework in historically revealing how educational inequality emerged and continues to be sustained in a postcolonial context.
Frequently asked questions
Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: the mobility question in modern Singapore
- 1 Youth and educational marginality in multicultural contexts
- 2 Educational mobility in a multiracial city-state â a social capital story
- 3 The politics of racialisation and social mobility amongst ethnic Tamils in Singapore
- 4 You are Normal: contextualising schooling experiences amongst Tamil youths
- 5 Being Tamil in Singapore
- Conclusion: labouring to learn
- Bibliography
- Index