Learning to Labour

Cards (8)

  • Willis' research

    Visiting one school and observing and interviewing 12 working class rebellious boys about their attitude to school during their last 18 months at school and during their first few months at work
  • Willis argues pupils rebelling are evidence that not all pupils are brainwashed into being passive, subordinate people as a result of the hidden curriculum
  • Willis criticises Traditional Marxism
  • Pupils actively reject the values and norms that benefit the ruling class, and realise they have no real opportunity to succeed in this system
  • Willis believes the counter-school culture still produces workers who are easily exploited by their future employers
  • Counter School Culture

    • The lads felt superior to the teachers and other pupils
    • They attached no value to academic work, more to 'having a laff'
    • The objective of school was to miss as many lessons as possible, the reward for this was status within the group
    • The time they were at school was spent trying to win control over their time and make it their own
  • Attitudes to future work
    • They looked forward to paid manual work after leaving school and identified all non-school activities (smoking, going out) with this adult world, and valued such activities far more than school work
    • The lads believed that manual work was proper work, and the type of jobs that hard working pupils would get were all the same and generally pointless
  • The counter school culture was also strongly sexist