South African Journal of Childhood Education 7(1):a461 Initiating a different story about immigrant Somali parents’ support of their primary school children’s education

Type
E-Journal
Authors
ISSN
2223-7682 
Category
ECCE, Foundation, Intermediate, Senior  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
2017 
Publisher
URL
[ private ] 
Subject
Early childhood education, Primary education, Immigrant learners, Somali children, Parent support, South Africa 
Tags
SAJCE 
Abstract
The ability of parents to nurture and support their children during their primary school years is considered to be fundamental for the child’s development and learning. Teachers and educational psychologists assign great prominence to parental involvement as a tool to advance educational success for children, especially for those who are faced with disadvantages. In the past two decades, we have seen South African schools radically shifting from being racially and ethnically homogenous to becoming culturally, ethnically and linguistically heterogeneous. It is especially the schools in the lower socioeconomic areas that find themselves under tremendous pressure to serve their growing immigrant school population. Not enough is known about the cultural capital that lies embedded in these learners’ home contexts and the roles that their parents play in their education. In this manuscript, I investigate the potential intersectionality of school and home and critique the affiliation between teachers and immigrant parents as an important dimension of learning success in the primary school. I situate the discussion in a community school with a strong Somali immigrant population. 
Description
Article 
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