Does 'habitus' count in Chinese Australians' mathematics achievement?


Autoria(s): Mu, Guanglun Michael
Data(s)

04/02/2012

Resumo

Large-scale international comparative studies and cross-ethnic studies have revealed that Chinese students, whether living in China or overseas, consistently outperform their counterparts in mathematics achievement. These studies tended to explain this result from psychological, educational, or cultural perspectives. However, there is scant sociological investigation addressing Chinese students’ better mathematics achievement. Drawing on Bourdieu’s sociological theory, this study conceptualises Chinese Australians’ “Chineseness” by the notion of ‘habitus’ and considers this “Chineseness” generating but not determinating mechanism that underpins Chinese Australians’ mathematics learning. Two hundred and thirty complete responses from Chinese Australian participants were collected by an online questionnaire. Simple regression model statistically significantly well predicted mathematics achievement by “Chineseness” (F = 141.90, R = .62, t = 11.91, p < .001). Taking account of “Chineseness” as a sociological mechanism for Chinese Australians’ mathematics learning, this study complements psychological and educational impacts on better mathematics achievement of Chinese students revealed by previous studies. This study also challenges the cultural superiority discourse that attributes better mathematics achievement of Chinese students to cultural factors.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/56862/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/56862/1/stem2012_31.pdf

http://stem2012.bnu.edu.cn/data/long%20paper/stem2012_31.pdf

Mu, Guanglun Michael (2012) Does 'habitus' count in Chinese Australians' mathematics achievement? In 2nd International STEM in Education Conference, 24-27 November 2012, Beijing, China.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 Beijing Normal University.

Fonte

Faculty of Education

Palavras-Chave #130302 Comparative and Cross-Cultural Education #habitus #Chineseness #Confucianism #mathematics #Chinese Australians
Tipo

Conference Paper