Feinstein - parent's own education is the most important factor and MC parents can give their children an advantage by parenting style, parents' educational behaviours and use of income (Bernstein and Young)
Bernstein - some children from WC families still do well at school if teachers talk to them in elaborated speech code. WC underachievement is due to internal factors
Keddie - sees cultural deprivation as a 'myth' and sees it as 'victim blaming' as a child cannot be deprived of its own culture but they ae simply culturally different. The system is dominated by MC values, leading to WC underachievement
Sure start - preschool students living in the most deprived areas could receive early intervention and support
Education maintenance allowance - a weekly payment to post-16 students on low income to encourage them to stay in education and go to university
Education action zones - gov focuses on areas with low educational attainment to encourage whole communities to be involved in creating an ethos of learning
Excellence in cities - compensatory education policy focusing on raising the aspirations of WC boys
Aim higher - encouraging students from deprived areas to attend university
Pupil premium - extra funding to children on free school meals
Free school meals - children from low-income families are provided with a free meal at school
The education reform act - introduced marketisation to education and introduced policies such as league tables and Ofsted leading to greater parental choice. It enables parents to become like consumers in judging the best schools. It has also to a wider range of school types and greater parentocracy.
Gewirtz - carried out research into the effects of marketisation and identifies 3 types of parents: Privileged - skilled choosers (middle-class): fully utilise choice, Disconnected - local choosers (working class): due to lack of capital they find admissions difficult, Semi-skilled choosers (working class): ambitious for their children however they lack capital so rely on opinions about schools