Abstract
While scholars know that young children are active if inadvertent participants in social reproduction, little has been said
about how young children engage in class reproduction. Through observing in a preschool classroom with a class diverse student body, I show that preschoolers are
already class actors, performing class through their linguistic styles. Upper-middle-class children speak, interrupt, ask
for help, and argue more often than working-class children. Upper-middle-class children’s classed linguistic style effectively
silences working-class students, gives them less power, and allows them fewer opportunities to develop their language skills.
The children’s linguistic class performances have immediate consequences and potential future implications for class reproduction.
about how young children engage in class reproduction. Through observing in a preschool classroom with a class diverse student body, I show that preschoolers are
already class actors, performing class through their linguistic styles. Upper-middle-class children speak, interrupt, ask
for help, and argue more often than working-class children. Upper-middle-class children’s classed linguistic style effectively
silences working-class students, gives them less power, and allows them fewer opportunities to develop their language skills.
The children’s linguistic class performances have immediate consequences and potential future implications for class reproduction.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-16
- DOI 10.1007/s11133-011-9193-1
- Authors
- Jessi Streib, University of Michigan, 3101 LSA Building, 500 State Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA
- Journal Qualitative Sociology
- Online ISSN 1573-7837
- Print ISSN 0162-0436