Racialization And Racism

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Racialization and racism. A Critical Race Perspective on Asian Americans shows that they are often depicted as overrepresented in higher education institutions due to the large number of the East Asian ethnic groups, such as Koreans and Chinese, at the top schools (Nakanishi and Nishida, 1995). The belief of overrepresentation shapes how the Asian Americans are racially portrayed as model minorities. The model minority myth purports that racial and ethnic communities can persevere and subdue challenges linked with minority status despite inequalities in America. The myth, however, does not consider the socioeconomic and ethnic diversity of the Asian Americans. The model minority myth combines the experiences of all the Asian Americans, despite …show more content…

The model minority construct refers to the racial, religious or ethnic whose group achieve a higher level of success than the other groups and the population average. The racial construct is used to label the Asian Americans, ethnic minority, as higher achieving than other ethnic minority such as the African Americans. The model minority thesis originated from statistics on the educational achievements of Chinese and Japanese and rise into rising incomes, high-status occupations and low rates of crime and mental …show more content…

The racists argued that the Japanese Americans’ stuck to values such as a proclivity for hard work, a reverence for learning, and profound respect for authority and parents which shaped a psychological achievement orientation to prove that the Japanese performed well in school. The model minority stereotype rose as a model as a way in which the minority groups could rise to success in the society, despite that it was based on the success of less than one million Asian Americans. The model became a direct critique of the Black Americans who applied for relief in the federally supported social programs. Therefore, the Asian Americans could also not get relief, from Welfare programs, because they could make it on their own. The implication of the model minority was that those who had not yet made it were portrayed as not good enough, including their culture. The attention directed to good and bad culture diverted attention from the societal factors and blamed the culture for the racial inequality on