It's not the end: destigmatising education-based stigma in Singapore

Defined as the discrimination based on the educational status and the affiliation to the education institution, education-based stigmatisation is rooted in the social process of academic streaming within the education system where the individual is ascribed a stigma on the basis of their enrolment i...

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Main Author: Sim, Shanna Si Lei
Other Authors: Shannon Ang
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173797
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1737972024-03-07T08:52:06Z It's not the end: destigmatising education-based stigma in Singapore Sim, Shanna Si Lei Shannon Ang School of Social Sciences shannon.ang@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Defined as the discrimination based on the educational status and the affiliation to the education institution, education-based stigmatisation is rooted in the social process of academic streaming within the education system where the individual is ascribed a stigma on the basis of their enrolment into the academic institution. In Singapore, the Institute of Technical Education has long been negatively perceived as being associated with less well-educated individuals and delinquency – this public perspective arises due to a combination of factors, such as the global socio-historical roots of vocational education and training, the valuation of the knowledge worker, academic streaming and sorting of students in Singapore, media reports of delinquents enrolled in the institution, as well as the pervasiveness of meritocratic ideology in Singapore’s social structure. As a response to the stigma, top-down efforts initiated by the institution and education reforms aim to destigmatise the collective and the institution have resulted in media reports of positive deviances. These individuals accounts reported in the media are presented as “ITE success story” a narrative founded on the principles of meritocracy in the individual education-career trajectory. To understand the phenomenological experiences of those in the lower stratum of the education system, who are educationally stigmatised, the present study uses semi-structured and focus group discussions to explore the school-to-work transitions and the individual responses to the ideological beliefs and practices of meritocracy embedded within social structures, social interactions and the self. It found that in response to ascribed stigma, individuals engaged in various strategies in order to manage the self and their social identity, these included resisting and overcoming stigma through the reinterpretation of experiences. In addition, the study also found that the porous nature of the Singapore education system resulted in an increasingly differentiated pathway among participants where individuals were motivated to pursue their passion and thus, aligning the education-career trajectories to their identity. In the process of aligning their education-career trajectories, individuals exercised reflexivity in their social position, the identity capital available, and the opportunity structures, thus engaging in the navigation of the social structure. Master's degree 2024-02-28T03:12:05Z 2024-02-28T03:12:05Z 2024 Thesis-Master by Research Sim, S. S. L. (2024). It's not the end: destigmatising education-based stigma in Singapore. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173797 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173797 10.32657/10356/173797 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Sim, Shanna Si Lei
It's not the end: destigmatising education-based stigma in Singapore
description Defined as the discrimination based on the educational status and the affiliation to the education institution, education-based stigmatisation is rooted in the social process of academic streaming within the education system where the individual is ascribed a stigma on the basis of their enrolment into the academic institution. In Singapore, the Institute of Technical Education has long been negatively perceived as being associated with less well-educated individuals and delinquency – this public perspective arises due to a combination of factors, such as the global socio-historical roots of vocational education and training, the valuation of the knowledge worker, academic streaming and sorting of students in Singapore, media reports of delinquents enrolled in the institution, as well as the pervasiveness of meritocratic ideology in Singapore’s social structure. As a response to the stigma, top-down efforts initiated by the institution and education reforms aim to destigmatise the collective and the institution have resulted in media reports of positive deviances. These individuals accounts reported in the media are presented as “ITE success story” a narrative founded on the principles of meritocracy in the individual education-career trajectory. To understand the phenomenological experiences of those in the lower stratum of the education system, who are educationally stigmatised, the present study uses semi-structured and focus group discussions to explore the school-to-work transitions and the individual responses to the ideological beliefs and practices of meritocracy embedded within social structures, social interactions and the self. It found that in response to ascribed stigma, individuals engaged in various strategies in order to manage the self and their social identity, these included resisting and overcoming stigma through the reinterpretation of experiences. In addition, the study also found that the porous nature of the Singapore education system resulted in an increasingly differentiated pathway among participants where individuals were motivated to pursue their passion and thus, aligning the education-career trajectories to their identity. In the process of aligning their education-career trajectories, individuals exercised reflexivity in their social position, the identity capital available, and the opportunity structures, thus engaging in the navigation of the social structure.
author2 Shannon Ang
author_facet Shannon Ang
Sim, Shanna Si Lei
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Sim, Shanna Si Lei
author_sort Sim, Shanna Si Lei
title It's not the end: destigmatising education-based stigma in Singapore
title_short It's not the end: destigmatising education-based stigma in Singapore
title_full It's not the end: destigmatising education-based stigma in Singapore
title_fullStr It's not the end: destigmatising education-based stigma in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed It's not the end: destigmatising education-based stigma in Singapore
title_sort it's not the end: destigmatising education-based stigma in singapore
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173797
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