4.2 Article

Beyond Acting White: Affirming Academic Identities by Establishing Symbolic Boundaries Through Talk

Journal

URBAN EDUCATION
Volume 50, Issue 8, Pages 961-988

Publisher

CORWIN PRESS INC A SAGE PUBLICATIONS CO
DOI: 10.1177/0042085914536999

Keywords

identity; urban; social; Black females; subjects; race; identity

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [REC-0107022]

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This article investigates interactional processes by which students from non-dominant groups develop academic identities within schools that privilege the dominant group. It draws on an ethnographic study of an urban magnet school, focusing on a discourse analysis of conversations between 3 eighth-grade girls. Findings include that students supported their academic identities through strategically establishing symbolic boundaries between academic content and the standards by which they were judged. Overall, this study explores the ways in which students exercise agency as they develop symbolic boundaries that are more complex than the binary white versus nonwhite to attain identity-related goals.

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