Kasetsart Journal of Social Sciences (KJSS)

Migrant cultural capital accumulation amid the first COVID-19 shock: Shan children in Chiang Mai municipal schools, Thailand
Kasetsart Journal of Social Sciences -- formerly Kasetsart Journal (Social Sciences), Volume 045, Issue 2, April 2024- June 2024, Pages 349-358
ISSN: 2452-3151(0125-8370)
DOI: doi.org/10.34044/j.kjss.2024.45.2.01
Nongyao Nawarata, Pisith Naseea,*, Michael Medleyb
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aDivision of Social Science Education, Faculty of Education, Research Center for Multiculturalism and Education Policy, Multidisciplinary Research Institute, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai 50200, Thailand
bCenter for Social Development Studies, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand
*Corresponding author, e-mail: pisith.nasee@cmu.ac.th
Abstract
Among the measures taken by Thailand’s government in 2020 in response to the first wave of the Covid-19 epidemic was the closure of schools for the months of May and June that year, and a scheme of distance-learning for the students instead. The present study examines the impact of this crisis and the education policy response on a group of teenage students who were children of Shan migrant workers in inner-city Chiang Mai, and their nuclear families. It is based on interviews with the students, their parents, and teachers or principals from their respective schools. The questioning was influenced by previous studies of migrants in Thailand, and a theoretical framework involving Pierre Bourdieu’s conceptualisation of cultural capital; it was supposed that the students and their families would attempt to protect the children’s acquisition of cultural capital in the face of an exogenous shock to their household economy. The interviews helped illuminate how far this was the case, and the ways in which it happened. Further, in contrasting the student experiences with the way in which the distance-learning measures were announced by the Minister of Education, the paper provides evidence about ways in which modern technology solutions can overlook children’s individual learning needs, and create new disadvantages for poorer students, particularly the children of inner-city migrant workers.
Keywords
Chiang Mai, COVID-19, cultural capital, migrant workers, Shan children
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