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7 things that hold black children back from succeeding

20/11/2020

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I thought it would be fitting to end the 2020 series of The Money Spot podcast with a series on the Economics of being black. The issue I would like to explore first is a list of things that could hold a child back before they are even 18.
 
Where possible, I will depend on UK studies and statistics but if that’s not possible reference will be made to US studies where much more research on race tends to be available.
The Money Spot™ - UK Personal Finance · #35 7 things that hold black children back from succeeding
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1. Name 
​
Having a name that is perceived as “different” may be a factor that exacerbates a black child’s feeling of otherness, of being different to the mainstream.
 
In the worst case, it may lead to teasing or just feeling discomfort and insecurity with what might seem like innocent questions from teachers, like “how do you say your name?”
 
I’ll talk more about names in my piece about what holds black adults back.
 
Personally, our desire for our children not to be discriminated against in mainstream British society was a key consideration in name selection. We want them to blend to the extent possible and didn’t feel that name was an issue they should need to deal with in addition to everything else.
 
2. Hair 

Is there an issue more contentious? My son noticed the difference in his hair before he mentioned that his colour was different to that of everyone else in his class.
 
There are many anecdotal examples of black children being treated in an unfair way at school on account of their hair, for example:
  • Being told that they can’t wear their hair in styles that are completely normal and more convenient for black kids;
  • Comments about their natural hair being wild or unsuitable;
  • Having their hair cut or inappropriately handled by teachers, etc.
 
But, while a name and hair, in addition to skin colour may add to a feeling of being different, there are real and recent statistics from the Social Market Foundation and other research organisations to show that black children are discriminated against at higher rates:

3. The perception of being threatening  

There is a perception and stereotype of being threatening which especially haunts black boys. In studies, black boys as young as 5 years old have been perceived as more threatening compared to similar aged white boys which is a scary fact. This has been elicited with tests of association of faces and objects like guns or puppies rather than by asking directly.
 
And where as being “tall and dark” would give a white boy advantages with perceptions of stature, strength and athleticism – for a black boy the exact same tallness and darkness may only serve to make them appear more threatening and with that all the disadvantages: more regular police stop-and-searches and fewer opportunities. This sentiment is my own, rather than from elsewhere but it is something that recently occurred to me as a risk.

4. At-school and In-class discrimination  

The Social Market Foundation reports that “discrimination in education frequently takes place outside of the syllabus. There are a range of institutional practices that underpin Black students’ exclusion and, ultimately, their educational attainment.” For example:

  • “Punishment in UK schools disproportionately affects Black children… Black students have reported facing disciplinary action for their uniform, because of stereotypical perceptions that they are more disruptive, even because of their hair.” This, I wrote about before I even found the SMF report. This is consistent with US research that shows that black children are frequently punished for behaviours which when displayed by white children are not at all punished. Kuba Shand-Baptiste reports in The Independent that at school her “confidence would often be interpreted as arrogance, rudeness or just plain naughtiness.” She says it took her a while to accept, especially when she saw her white classmates rewarded for the same behaviour. 
    • And children, even very young ones, notice. My friend’s mixed race daughter in the first half term of reception has already received 3 yellow cards AND in the latest instance she observed that her white friend who was doing exactly what she was doing at the same time did not get a yellow card!
  • Black Caribbean kids are almost 3 times more likely and Mixed White and Black Caribbean 2.5 times more likely to be permanently excluded from school than white pupils. This data is supported by various reports. It is thought that racist stereotyping of black children may play a key role here.
  • “There is a lack of Black teachers in schools, especially amongst senior staff.” I find the general lack of Black teachers at my children’s private school problematic. There are very few non-White teachers and I fear this may accentuate the belief among children (tomorrow’s leaders) that a figure of authority is “meant” to be white.
  • Black children have their abilities and grades undervalued.
 
So, unfortunate as it is, black children especially black boys face discrimination at much higher rates at school.
 
I haven’t found any research to back it up but a friend who works in the field told me that some recent studies suggest that black boys are ahead of all other ethnic groups on entering school but within a year they are behind others because of the poor engagement they receive.

5. Low expectations  

Akala in his autobiographical, “Natives: Race and Class in the Ruins of Empire” recounts how he was a gifted child, highly intelligent with a GCSE reading age by the time he was 7 and yet, he was placed in a class with children with learning difficulties. It took his (white) mother advocating for him and speaking up for this to change.
 
And in her time on Desert Island discs Sonita Alleyne, the first black Master of a Cambridge college admits that exactly the same thing happened to her when she arrived from Barbados as a young child. Placed in the special needs class, her mum walked into school and explained that her daughter’s accent wasn’t a sign or symptom of being stupid.
 
The most frustrating thing about these examples is that similar things are happening to many black children today and they don’t have an advocate. What of those children that reveal they want to be a doctor, lawyer or astronaut that are told to be realistic and guided towards nursing, hair dressing, plumbing and other manual jobs. Or towards sports and more artistic jobs like music – yes, there are more examples of black people succeeding in these fields but this is simply because you can’t pretend the boy or girl who came first in the 200m sprint actually didn’t. If nurtured correctly there’s nothing to stop black children excelling in any and every field.
 
Further, many black children up and down Britain simply assume it’s “stupid” or “unrealistic” for them to aim for Oxford and Cambridge and there is no one there telling them otherwise. Conversely, the majority of those in private schools assume it’s a given that they are expected to apply to the top universities.
 
Not long ago women had many of the same challenges – in her time on Desert Island discs retired surgeon Averil Mansfield (born in 1937) says her mum told her to lie she wanted to be a nurse rather than admit she wanted to be a doctor to avoid the mockery. Any girl can say they want to be a doctor now and no one would bat an eyelid and that is the position I would love all disadvantaged children and black children specifically to get to.

6. Poverty  

People can live in a vicious cycle of poverty from which they struggle to escape.
 
What proportion of black children live in poverty?
 
The Social Metrics Commission found that almost half of people living in a family in the UK where the head of the household is black are in poverty. This compares with 19% or about a fifth for white people.
 
This means black-headed households in the UK are 2.5 times more likely to live in poverty than their white counterparts.
 
Poverty comes with many disadvantages that you can probably list yourself, a few that are commonly discussed in the press include:
  • Trouble providing children with a nutritious diet which may affect a child’s ability to learn well;
  • Inability to pay for extracurricular activities that other kids have an opportunity to access, e.g.: learning an instrument, learning various sports including swimming, getting coached for the 11-plus to get into a grammar school, no access to the stimulating environment of a nursery in the formative years;
  • Possibly insecure housing which may mean children move around schools leading to instability in their education;
 
These are example economic factors but poverty, of course, also has negative social consequences, living in an economically deprived area may mean increased exposure to crime etc. According to research  by the University of Manchester, “a fifth of its Black African, Black Caribbean, and Arab populations live in the country’s most deprived neighbourhoods compared to 8% of the white British population.”
 
I will tackle “social mobility” in my next instalment, for now it is enough to know that many more black children than white children are living in poverty and therefore do not have access to opportunities taken for granted by middle class and more well off children.

7. Single parent home  
​
This data is a little old (from 2007) but is unlikely to have changed much so I will use it. According to a Metro article, “48% (almost half) of black Caribbean families have one parent, as do 36% (a third) of black African households.” This figure is 10% for Indians (and marginally higher for those of other South Asian background), 15% for the Chinese and 22% (a fifth) for whites.
 
90% of single-parent families are headed by mothers. Children who grow up without their biological father are more likely to be
  • unemployed,
  • commit crime and
  • leave education early, according to research by think tank Civitas.
  • They are also twice as likely to be homeless.
  • Lone-parent families are three times more likely to live in rented accommodation than couples with children; and
  • are also more likely to live in homes that fall below minimum standards.
 
I don’t want to stereotype the single parent with lots of dreary stats but suffice it to say having to manage as a single parent according to the data tends to exacerbate poverty – which stands to reason because one person equals fewer resources including services like washing, cooking etc rather than financial resources. It may also mean the child has less access to parental support for homework and possibly other emotional needs.
 
In summary, before a black child is even a teenager they may face major challenges with their development because they are:
  • More likely to be poor;
  • More likely to live in a single parent home;
  • More likely to be punished or discriminated against by teachers;
  • Less likely to be pushed towards the highest paid careers because teachers and their social circle have low expectations for them;
and if that were not enough black children are more like to be bullied, teased and targeted in other ways because of their:
  • Name;
  • Hair; and
  • An erroneous perception that they are threatening.
 
If ALL school teachers could treated ALL children like they are special and going places regardless of race so much progress could be made in erasing educational inequalities between the races. And over the long run, erasing wealth inequality.

​Heather 
p.s. subscribe to my podcast and ask me any money question, HERE - do it now!
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Heather Katsonga-Woodward, a massive personal finance fanatic.
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