ABSTRACT

International Deficit Thinking: Educational Thought and Practice explores the incontrovertible reality of the persistent and pervasive academic achievement gap in many countries between marginalized students (primarily of color) and their economically advantaged White counterparts. For example, International Deficit Thinking discusses the cases of low-socioeconomic Black and Mexican American students in the United States, Indigenous Māori students in New Zealand, and immigrant Moroccan and Turkish pupils in Belgium. The predominant theoretical perspective that has been advanced to explain the school failure of marginalized students is the deficit thinking paradigm—a parsimonious, endogenous, and pseudoscientific model that blames such students as the makers of their own school failure. Deficit thinking asserts that the low academic achievement of many marginalized students is due to their limited intellectual ability, poor academic achievement motivation, and being raised in dysfunctional families and cultures. 

Drawing from, in part, critical race theory, systemic inequality analysis, and colonialism/postcolonialism, award-winning author and scholar Richard R.Valencia examines deficit thinking in education in 16 countries (e.g., Canada; Peru, Australia; England; India; South Africa). He seeks to (a) document and debunk deficit thinking as an interpretation for school failure of marginalized students; (b) offer scientifically defensible counternarratives for race-, class-, language-, and gender-based differences in academic achievement; (c) provide suggestions for workable and sustainable school reform for marginalized students. 

chapter 1|30 pages

The Construct of Deficit Thinking

part 31I|2 pages

The Americas

chapter 2|33 pages

The United States of America

chapter 3|27 pages

Canada

part 119II|2 pages

South Pacific

chapter 5|24 pages

Australia

chapter 6|26 pages

New Zealand (Fiji)

part 171III|2 pages

Europe

chapter 7|17 pages

England

part 215IV|2 pages

Asia

chapter 9|12 pages

Asia (India; China)

part 229V|2 pages

Africa

chapter 10|22 pages

Africa (South Africa; Nigeria)

chapter |5 pages

Final Thoughts