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本质化优绩:精英私立学校招生中的残疾与排斥

Essentializing Merit: Disability and Exclusion in Elite Private School Admissions

American Sociological Review · 2025
被引 7
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

研究基于对精英私立学校招生人员的访谈,揭示招生过程如何系统性地识别并排除被认为有残疾风险的儿童,将优绩本质化为内在属性而非后天成就。

Abstract

Historically, elite schools have selected students in ways that reproduce advantages for dominant groups and exclude groups deemed undesirable. The specific outgroup in question has changed over time, but the underlying logic used to exclude these groups is often related to disability. Yet, disability as a social category has received minimal attention in discussions of elite reproduction. In this article, we draw on qualitative data collected from elite independent pre-K–12 schools to show that disability is indeed a salient basis of selection into elite educational environments, one that begins at the earliest moments of educational sorting: admission to elite early childhood programs. Through interviews with admissions personnel, we show that elite independent schools explicitly structure their admissions processes to identify—and exclude—children who are perceived as having or being at risk of developing any type of disability, regardless of impairment type or support needs. We argue that admissions practices at elite independent schools (1) serve as a form of social closure intended to restrict enrollment to young children perceived as able-bodied and neurotypical, and (2) represent a case of essentializing merit , in which elite gatekeepers construct merit as an intrinsic, rather than achieved, property of individuals.

精英教育教育社会学残疾研究社会排斥招生政策