TY - JOUR PY - 2018// TI - Numbers are just not enough: a critical analysis of race, gender, and sexuality in elementary and middle school health textbooks JO - Educational studies (Mahwah, NJ) A1 - Deckman, Sherry L. A1 - Fulmer, Ellie Fitts A1 - Kirby, Keely A1 - Hoover, Katharine A1 - Mackall, Abena Subira SP - 285 EP - 302 VL - 54 IS - 3 N2 - Textbooks are a multimillion dollar publishing business in the United States. Even as 21st-century classrooms become more multimodal, digital and hardcopy textbooks remain a key feature of American education. Consequently, classroom textbooks have been shown to control knowledge dissemination across the content areas. In particular, health texts have been uniquely shown to communicate values that validate or marginalize students and encourage healthy or harmful activity. Thus, what textbook makers choose to include as worthy of study, and how they portray various groups of people with regard to race, gender, and sexuality has societal implications. Employing quantitative and qualitative content analysis methods, we analyzed 1,468 images across elementary and middle school health textbooks to examine the portrayal of race, gender, and sexuality. We found that, although gender and racial diversity are well-represented in texts, women and people of color were frequently portrayed in stereotypical roles. For example, girls were depicted daydreaming about heterosexual marriage. Furthermore, this analysis revealed limited representations of sexuality.

FINDINGS suggest that focusing on the numerical representation of marginalized groups is not enough to address issues of equity and power in classroom curricula. Instead, we argue, educators must consider the ways in which people are positioned in curricular materials, and ask if portrayals perpetuate or challenge traditional stereotypes.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0013-1946 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00131946.2017.1411261 ID - ref1 ER -