Department of Sociology and Social Policy, Lingnan University, New Territories, Hong Kong SAR.
Department of Sociology, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR.
Br J Sociol. 2023 Jun;74(3):376-401. doi: 10.1111/1468-4446.13004. Epub 2023 Feb 28.
A long tradition in stratification research argues students with higher cultural capital are likely to be treated by their teachers as possessing the "right culture," which positively affects their academic performance. Nevertheless, the literature has paid little attention to the role of students' perception in this process. Using two waves of the China Educational Panel Survey, we investigate how students' cultural capital affects their own understanding of teacher-student interactions, including its gender difference. Fixed effects regressions show a substantially positive effect of cultural capital on the perceived frequency of teachers praising and calling on students to answer questions across subjects. Nonetheless, we also find the lack of cultural capital is not punished and that the cultural capital's effect varies across its specific components and gender. These findings pave the way for elucidating the entire causal chain of intergenerational social inequality via cultural capital, teacher bias, students' perception, and their educational outcomes.
分层研究的一个悠久传统认为,文化资本较高的学生更有可能被老师视为具有“正确的文化”,这对他们的学业成绩有积极影响。然而,文献在很大程度上忽视了学生感知在这一过程中的作用。利用中国教育追踪调查的两波数据,我们研究了学生的文化资本如何影响他们自己对师生互动的理解,包括其中的性别差异。固定效应回归显示,文化资本对教师在各学科中表扬和要求学生回答问题的频率有实质性的正向影响。尽管如此,我们也发现缺乏文化资本并不会受到惩罚,而且文化资本的效果因具体组成部分和性别而异。这些发现为通过文化资本、教师偏见、学生感知及其教育成果来阐明代际社会不平等的整个因果链铺平了道路。