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Negotiating the educational spaces of urban multiculture: Skills, competencies and college life

Katy Bennett, Allan Cochrane, Giles Mohan and Sarah Neal
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Katy Bennett: University of Leicester, UK
Allan Cochrane: The Open University, UK
Giles Mohan: The Open University, UK
Sarah Neal: University of Surrey, UK

Urban Studies, 2017, vol. 54, issue 10, 2305-2321

Abstract: This paper contributes to research on urban multiculture and debates as to how people routinely live and experience ethnic diversity in their everyday lives. This research takes an ‘unpanicked’ approach to multiculture that sits differently to, although not unaffected by, multiculturalism as policy objective and those debates around multiculturalism that variously celebrate cultural difference or construct it through crisis talk. Critical to this paper are the routine phenomenologies of multiculture and the everyday practices, competencies and skills of young people attending college. Because of their diverse intakes and the openness of young people to difference, colleges are key sites within which urban multiculture is experienced and through which it is defined. Based on participant observation, repeat in-depth discussion groups and interviews, the focus of this paper is young adults attending post-16 colleges and schools in three ethnically diverse urban locations. Colleges and schools are urban spaces that mediate sociality and student experience but are also woven into the wider urban setting in which they are placed. The paper explores the skills and competencies that young adults develop to negotiate college and we particularly focus on their use of jokes and the exercise of restraint to get along with others.

Keywords: community; competencies; diversity; education; educational spaces; multiculture; young people; å…±å Œä½“; 能力; å¤šæ ·æ€§; 教育; 教育空间; 多元文化; 年轻人 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2017
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:urbstu:v:54:y:2017:i:10:p:2305-2321

DOI: 10.1177/0042098016650325

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