Race, Skin Tone, and Educational Achievement

Citation

Thompson, Maxine S. & McDonald, Steve (2016). Race, Skin Tone, and Educational Achievement. Sociological Perspectives. vol. 59 (1) pp. 91-111

Abstract

Research on skin-tone bias has focused primarily on intraracial inequality with little attention to skin-tone inequality across ethnoracial groups. We engage the debate over the color line by considering the independent, simultaneous, and interactive impacts of skin tone and self-identified race on educational performance. Analyses of National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) and Adolescent Health and Academic Achievement (AHAA) data show significant skin-tone differences in grade point average (GPA) both across and within racial groups, with darker skinned tone individuals receiving significantly lower grades than their lighter skinned tone counterparts. Net of controls, skin-tone differences in GPA are essentially flat among African Americans but are notably stronger among other race/ethnic groups. These findings highlight the interplay between racial categorization and colorism by revealing the categorical disadvantage of racial stigma versus the more fluid colorism boundaries of nonblack groups.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177%2F0731121415580026

Keyword(s)

mexican-americans phenotypic discrimination teacher expectations Social Class High school Color students

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Sociological Perspectives

Author(s)

Thompson, Maxine S.
McDonald, Steve

Year Published

2016

Volume Number

59

Issue Number

1

Pages

91-111

Edition

April 17, 2015

DOI

10.1177/0731121415580026

Reference ID

8026