Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- one Disciplining pupils: from exclusion to ‘inclusion’
- two An ethnography of ‘inclusion’: reflecting on the research process
- three Contextualising challenging behaviour
- four Damaged boys, needy girls
- five Dynamics of disadvantage: race, gender and class
- six ‘Yo momma ...’: foregrounding families
- seven “Ain’t doing tramp’s work”: educational marginalisation and imagined futures
- eight The politics of exclusion
- References
- Index
six - ‘Yo momma ...’: foregrounding families
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- one Disciplining pupils: from exclusion to ‘inclusion’
- two An ethnography of ‘inclusion’: reflecting on the research process
- three Contextualising challenging behaviour
- four Damaged boys, needy girls
- five Dynamics of disadvantage: race, gender and class
- six ‘Yo momma ...’: foregrounding families
- seven “Ain’t doing tramp’s work”: educational marginalisation and imagined futures
- eight The politics of exclusion
- References
- Index
Summary
“Without your mum you’re nothing.” (Tanisha, 14)
As the previous chapters have illustrated, schools rely on a model of deficit and disorder to make sense of challenging behaviour in the classroom. The root cause of this personal deficiency is firmly assumed to lie in the home life of the problematised pupil, with responsibility directed at mothers in particular. In this chapter, I show how constructions of inadequate parenting framed and justified the very existence of BSUs as inclusion centres, with practices orientated towards countering and compensating for presumed negative family influences. By focusing on specific examples I highlight the way misunderstandings, conjecture and moral pronouncements could combine to obscure complex socially dispersed difficulties, while simultaneously poisoning home–school relations. As I will illustrate, far from representing a negative force, the young people in the research positioned family at the very centre of their lives. Relationships with parents, siblings and other family members were the source of enormous, pride, passion and pleasure, alongside more difficult emotions, often associated with separation. Illuminating the perspectives of parents themselves reveals the intensive emotional and physical labour they engaged in to address their children’s problems, and the extent to which this was completely invisible to the schools.
Blaming the parents
“Where it goes wrong consistently and regularly over long periods of time is where there is poor parenting. It’s a challenge because people are not shown to be parents or what to do when X, Y, Z situations occur in their children’s lives … but I’m expecting them to be experts at something they haven’t been trained in. Whereas I’m an expert at my job, I’ve been trained for this and I trained hard and long before I even got the job. But parents are expected to be experts straightaway ON the job. So, where there’s poor parenting you will find difficulties… Rarely do you hear of a child who has poor parents and makes a success of themselves… So I will parent them according to my set of rules or we, as a school, parent them but the parent relationship they value the most is a poor one … that’s the window they will view the world through, so if that relationship is abusive or it’s full of violence or shouting or aggression or it’s not full of anything much, it’s just there.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Pushed to the EdgeInclusion and Behaviour Support in Schools, pp. 123 - 150Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2016