Skip to main content
European Commission logo
English
European Website on Integration
20 January 2024

Cultural inclusion has positive effects in Danish and Swedish schools

The words 'Rockwool Fonden' appear in black block capital letters against a white background, underlined in orange.

 

A new study finds no support for claims that adjustments for and acknowledgement of cultural differences in schools is harmful to the integration or performance of students. Where a difference in performance following activities promoting such inclusion can be found at all, the study finds, it is positive.

The study shares the findings of questionnaires completed by more than 4 000 ninth-grade students in 75 Danish and 65 Swedish primary schools. Denmark and Sweden have similar school systems but different approaches to integration: where Denmark has focused more on teaching national culture, Sweden has promoted multiculturalism and minority rights to a higher degree. Individual schools may also adopt different attitudes towards these issues within the wider national frameworks.
  
Activities examined by the study include serving halal food, arranging multi-cultural parties and recognising ethnic minority groups and different religions in schools. All were found to have very little impact on students’ performance or attitudes.

In schools where some efforts are made to recognise cultural and religious differences, students whose parents migrated from North Africa and the Middle East tend to have, according to the study, stronger political and social self-confidence and better overall wellbeing. In these particular schools in Sweden, grades were found to be slightly higher than in schools where no such inclusion efforts are made. In Denmark, no difference was observed between those schools that make such efforts and those that do not.
 
When comparing school classes that have different numbers of students with an ethnic minority background, the study finds that a high concentration of such students in one class does not have a negative effect on the wellbeing of the students of that class; nor does it negatively affect their political integration.
  
The study divides students into 4 categories based on their parents’ origin: 'Danish native', 'Western', 'MENAPT' and 'Others (non-Western)'. These are categories used by Denmark's national statistics body: their definitions have been previously discussed on EWSI.
 
The study was conducted by researchers from Aarhus Univeristy and Malmö University as part of a larger project - funded by the Rockwool Research Foundation - entitled “When do children of immigrants thrive? How schooling and politics affect civic and educational outcomes”.

RFF Kulturel imodekommenhed i skolen og medborgerlig integration
None
(7.51 MB - PDF)
Download

Details

Authors
Per Mouritsen, Liv Bjerre, Kristian Kriegbaum Jensen
Geographic area
Denmark
Sweden
Contributor type
Academics and experts
Original source
Posted by
Michala Clante Bendixen
Country Coordinator

Related content

2025 IMISCOE Spring Conference

The 2025 IMISCOE spring conference will take place on 17 – 19 March 2025 in Krems, Austria, and online. The title / topic of the conference is " The
More content