Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T16:38:31.935Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Why Are So Many Aboriginal Children Not Achieving At School ?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2015

Jeff Guider*
Affiliation:
University of Western Sydney
Get access

Extract

In 1988 the Aboriginal Education Policy Task Force called for broad equity between Aboriginal people and other Australians in access, participation, and outcomes at all stages of education. Aboriginals are not achieving a comparative level of success at school compared to non-Aboriginals. Symptomatic of problems in our schools are, the over representation of Aboriginals in lower classes, the high drop-out rate of Aboriginal children and their low participation rates in the senior years of high school. Some 17% of Aboriginal youth continue their schooling to year 12 compared to 49% of all students (Department of Employment, Education and Training, 1988, p.7). The failure of Aboriginal children to achieve at school has been widely interpreted as an individual failure on the part of Aboriginal children. Poor attainment has been attributed to lower I.Q. and ability, inadequate home environments, and poor parenting and not to the inadequacies of the education provided, to prejudices Aboriginal children face or to the active resistance by Aboriginal people to the cultural destruction implicit in many educational programs (McConnochie, 1982, p.20). An examination of the determinants of school success shows that Aboriginal children’s cultural values, beliefs and practices and Australian schools are often in conflict. To improve the outcomes for Aboriginal children schools are required to assess whether or not they are catering for the inherent needs and talents of individual Aboriginal children.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1991

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Barlow, A. (1990). Equality or equity?: education for Aborigines and Torres Strait Islander futures, The Aboriginal Child at School, 18 (4), pp.1935.Google Scholar
Braggett, E.J. (1985). Education of Gifted and Talented Children from Populations with Special Needs. Canberra Publishing and Printing Company, Canberra.Google Scholar
Department of Employment, Education and Training., (1988). Report of the Aboriginal Education Policy Task Force. Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra.Google Scholar
Directorate of Special Programs, N.S.W. Department of Education., (1982). Strategies for Teaching Aboriginal Children. Government Printer, N.S.W.Google Scholar
Duncan, A.T., (1969). Motivation for achievement in an industrialised society. In Dunn, S. and Tatz, C.M. (Eds.) Aborigines and Education (pp.106–7). Sun Books, Melbourne.Google Scholar
Folds, R. (1987). Whitefella School. Allen and Unwin, Sydney.Google Scholar
Gallacher, J.D., (1969). Some problems facing the educator in a programme of social change. In Dunn, S. and Tatz, C.M. (Eds.) Aborigines and Education (pp.100–1). Sun Books, Melbourne.Google Scholar
Kociumbas, J., (1988). The best years? In Burgmann, V. and Lee, J. (Eds.) Making a Life: A People’s History of Australia Since 1788 (pp.147151). McPhee Gribble, Victoria.Google Scholar
LeFrancois, G.R., (1988). Psychology for Teaching. Wadsworth, Melbourne.Google Scholar
McConnochie, K.R., (1982). Aborigines and Australian education: historical perspectives. In Sherwood, J. (Ed.), Aboriginal Education: Issues and Innovations (pp.1731). Creative Research, Perth.Google Scholar
Mc Elwain, D.W., (1969). Some aspects of the cognitive ability of Aboriginal children. In Dunn, S. and Tatz, C.M. (Eds.) Aborigines and Education (pp.266–7). Sun Books, Melbourne.Google Scholar
Muir, D.M., (1984). Determinants of school success: part 2, The Aboriginal Child at School, 12 (1), pp.3052.Google Scholar
Muir, D.M., (1983). Determinants of school success: part 1, The Aboriginal Child at School, 11 (1), pp.1927.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
National Aboriginal Education Committee., (1985). Philosophy, Aims, and Policy Guidelines for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education. Australian Government Publishing, Canberra.Google Scholar
Valadian, M., (1985). Promotion of Aboriginal giftedness: strategies for change. In Braggett, E.J. (Ed.) Education of Gifted and Talented Children from Populations with Special Needs. Canberra Publishing and Printing Company, Canberra.Google Scholar
Vander Zanden, J.W. and Pace, A.J., (1984). Educational Psychology in Theory and Practice. Random House, New York.Google Scholar
Walker, K., (1969). Aborigines: assets or liabilities. In Dunn, S. and Tatz, C.M. (Eds.) Aborigines and Education (pp.106–7). Sun Books, MelbourneGoogle Scholar