 |
 |
Anthropology Faculty
John Ogbu passed away on August 20, 2003. Please refer to his
obituary
for further information.
 |
|
Research Interests
I am currently doing research in three areas: minority status and schooling
in urban industrial societies, collective identity, and culture and
intelligence or culture and cognition. I have actually worked in some
of these fields for more than thirty years.
In the area of minority status and schooling I focus on immigrant (or
voluntary) minorities and non-immigrant (or involuntary) minorities.
A major theoretical issue in this research is why some minorities are
relatively academically successful, in spite of discrimination against
them and differences in culture, language, cognitive styles, etc. from
the dominant group in society, while other minorities experiencing similar
discrimination and differences in culture, language and cognitive style,
etc. are not. Through comparative and ethnographic research over the
years, I have developed a framework to address this question. Using
this framework, I, along with my students and research assistants, conduct
fieldwork not only in schools but also in minority communities. We also
examine the historical treatment of these minorities in society at large
both in social and economic domains as well as in education. My most
recent studies were conducted in Oakland and Union City, California
on African Americans, Chinese Americans, and Mexican Americans; and
in an affluent suburban community in the Midwest. Another aspect of
this line of research on minority status and schooling is computer application
to the ethnographic analysis.
My research on collective identity centers around people's sense of
who they are, the "we feeling"and "belonging." Collective
identity may not be important to members of individualistic mainstream
U.S. and Western European societies (including White American and European
anthropologists). Contrary to Giddens'
(1991) assertions about the demise of collective affiliation, essentialized
identity has not been displaced by individualistic or non-essentialized
identity among racial or ethnic minorities in these and other contemporary
societies (e.g., Canada, Japan, New Zealand, the U.S., to name a few.
Furthermore, essentialized identity also matters a lot to members of
ethnic groups in plural societies based on ethnic or religious affiliation,
such as Bosnia, Indonesia, Mexico, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, and so on. Of
course, group identity always co-exists with individual identity. I
am particularly interested in the relationship between collective identity
and cultural/language boundaries.
Generations of anthropologists have responded in several ways to LevyBruh's
question about differences in the way different people think as well
as to how the "scientific testing" of non-Western people as
well as the testing of minorities in Western societies. My approach
to this question is comparative. Using cross-cultural data I explore
the influence of culture and culture change on cognitive skills or "intelligence."
More recently, I have begun to examine what I call "cultural amplifiers
of intelligence" (e.g., schooling, art involvement, and indigenous
economic activities in indigenous cultures) and how they shape or reshape
people's thinking.
I have published extensively in these areas of research. (See publications.pdf.)
Listed below are a few representative publications.
Giddens, A. (1991). Modernity and
Self-Identity: Self and society In Late Modern Age. Cambridge:The Polity
Press.
Representative Publications
2003. Black Students in an Affluent Suburb: A Study of Academic Disengagement.
Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erllbaum.
2002. "Black-American Students and the Academic Achievement Gap:
What Else You Need to Know." Journal of Thought, 37(4):9-33.
2001. Cultural Amplifiers of Intelligence (with P. Stern). In
Understanding Race and Intelligence, J. Fish, ed. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates.
2001. Caste Status and Intellectual Development (with P. Stern). In
Environmental Effects on Cognitive Abilities, R. J. Sternberg and E.
Grigorenko, eds. Pp. 1-37.
Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
2000. Collective Identity and Schooling. In Education, Knowledge
and Power, H. Fujita, ed. Tokyo, Japan: Shinyosha Ltd. (in Japanese).
1999. Beyond Language: Ebonics, Proper English, and Identity in a Black-American
Speech Community. American Educational Research Journal (Summer) vol.
36,
no. 2.
1999. Cultural Context of Children's Development. In Children
of Color: Research, Health, and Policy Issues, H. E. Fitzgerald, B.
M. Lister and B. S. Zuckerman, eds.
Pp. 73-92. New York: Garland.
1998. Voluntary and Involuntary Minorities: A Cultural-Ecological Theory
of School Performance with Some Implications for Education (with H.
D. Simons).
Anthropology and Education Quarterly 29(2):155-188.
1997. Speech Community, Language Identity and Language Boundaries. In
Language and Environment: A Cultural Approach to Education for Minority
and Migrant
Students, A. Sjogren, ed. Pp. 17-42. Stockholm, Sweden: Botkyrka.
1997. Racial Stratification in the United States: Why Inequality Persists.
In Education: Culture, Economy, and Society, A. H. Halsey, H.
Lauder, P. Brown and A. S.
Wells, eds. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
1997. Understanding the School Performance of Urban Blacks: Some Essential
Background Knowledge. In Children and Youth: Interdisciplinary
Perspectives, H. J.
Walberg, O. Reyes, and R. P. Weissberg, eds.
1997. Foreword to Reconstructing 'Dropout': A Critical Ethnography of
the Dynamics of Black Students' Disengagement from School by G. J. S.
Dei, J. Mazzuca, E.
McIsaac, and J. Zine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
1996. Educational Anthropology. In Encyclopedia of Cultural Anthropology.
vol. 2, Pp. 371-377. Henry Holt and Company.
1994. Culture and Intelligence. In Encyclopedia of Intelligence.
R. Stenberg, ed. Pp. 328-38. New York: MacMillan.
1993. Differences in Cultural Frame of Reference. International Journal
of Behavioral Development 16(3):483-506.
*
A copy of Adobe Acrobat Reader is needed in order to open the PDF files
on this site; a free copy can be obtained from the Adobe
web site.
-
-
-
|
|