
Contemporary dance choreographer and instructor exploring movement as a form of emotional expression.
This article defines Educational Anthropology as the subfield of anthropology that examines education as a cultural process, using ethnographic methods to understand how learning, teaching, and knowledge transmission occur across diverse social and cultural contexts. Unlike psychology (focusing on individual cognition) or economics (focusing on inputs and outcomes), educational anthropology investigates how cultural values, social structures, power relations, and community practices shape educational experiences. Core features: (1) ethnographic fieldwork (extended participant observation in classrooms, homes, community settings), (2) cultural transmission (how knowledge, skills, beliefs, and values are passed across generations), (3) schooling as enculturation (ways schools teach implicit cultural norms – hierarchy, time management, individualism or collectivism), (4) cross-cultural comparison (differences in learning processes across societies), (5) attention to power and inequality (how race, class, gender, language, and colonialism affect educational access and practices). The article addresses: stated objectives of educational anthropology; key concepts including cultural transmission, hidden curriculum, ethnography of communication, and funds of knowledge; core mechanisms such as participant observation, ethnographic interviewing, and comparative case design; international comparisons and debated issues (schooling vs indigenous learning, cultural mismatch theory, researcher positionality); summary and emerging trends (multisited ethnography, anthropology of policy, digital ethnography of learning); and a Q&A section.
This article describes educational anthropology without endorsing specific theoretical positions. Objectives commonly cited: understanding how culture shapes learning; revealing implicit assumptions in educational policies; amplifying marginalised voices (students, parents, communities); informing culturally responsive pedagogy; and challenging deficit perspectives that view non-dominant cultures as lacking. The article notes that educational anthropology has influenced multicultural education, bilingual education, and school reform efforts.
Key terminology:
Historical context: Early 20th-century anthropology (Margaret Mead, Gregory Bateson) studied child-rearing and learning in non-Western societies. 1950s-60s: George Spindler founded educational anthropology as a subfield (Stanford). 1970s-80s: ethnographies of schooling (Ogilvie, Wolcott, Heath, Lareau). 1990s-2000s: critical ethnography, race and class studies (Fine, Foley, Villenas).
Ethnographic research methods in education:
Key studies and findings:
Policy implications:
International educational anthropology contributions:
| Country/Region | Key scholars/research sites | Topics studied |
|---|---|---|
| United States | Heath, Lareau, Anyon, Valenzuela, Foley | Race, class, tracking, subtractive schooling, immigrant youth |
| United Kingdom | Willis (Learning to Labour), Ball, Reay | Working-class resistance, school choice, identity |
| Brazil | Socrates, da Silva | Indigenous schooling, teacher education |
| Japan | Rohlen, Cave, Fukuzawa, LeTendre | Cram schools, teacher socialisation, examinations |
| Africa | Serpell, Fortes (early), Bloch | Childhood socialisation, literacy practices, rural schooling |
Debated issues:
Summary: Educational anthropology uses ethnographic methods to study cultural transmission, hidden curriculum, and schooling practices. Key concepts: hidden curriculum, cultural mismatch, funds of knowledge. Foundational studies (Heath, Lareau, Anyon) revealed how social class, race, and language shape school experiences and outcomes. Field has influenced culturally responsive pedagogy and bilingual education.
Emerging trends:
Q1: How does educational anthropology differ from educational sociology?
A: Sociology emphasises quantitative methods, survey research, and large-scale patterns (e.g., class effects on attainment). Anthropology emphasises qualitative methods, extended fieldwork, and cultural interpretations (e.g., how class is lived and expressed in daily interactions). Boundaries blur; many researchers use both.
Q2: What is the practical use of educational anthropology for teachers?
A: Understanding students’ home cultures; recognising that differences are not deficits; adapting communication and curriculum; questioning one’s own assumptions about normal behaviour; and advocating for systemic changes beyond classroom walls.
Q3: Can ethnography improve educational policy?
A: Yes, by revealing how policies play out in real schools and communities, including unintended consequences. However, ethnography is time-consuming and findings are not easily quantified for cost-benefit analyses. Some policymakers prefer quick, generalisable data.
Q4: Is educational anthropology only about marginalised groups?
A: No. Studies have examined middle-class and affluent schools (e.g., Lareau, 2003), elite private schools (e.g., Gaztambide-Fernández), and international schools. However, the field historically focused on non-dominant groups due to social justice commitments.
https://www.aaanet.org/sections/cae/ (Council on Anthropology and Education)
https://www.sonoma.edu/users/l/lundberg/anth338/Heath_1982.pdf (excerpt from Ways with Words)
https://www.tcrecord.org/Content.asp?ContentId=10605 (Lareau, Unequal Childhoods summary)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/2547312 (Moll & González, Funds of Knowledge)
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