Education

Cards (51)

  • Function of education

    • Create social solidarity
    • Teach skills necessary for work
    • Teach core values of society
  • Particularistic values

    Very individual to the child
  • Universalistic values

    Applied to every single student, every student treated the same way
  • Role allocation in education

    • Grades determine most suitable roles in society
    • Meritocracy ensures equal chances and opportunities for job assignment
  • Marxists argue that if education was truly meritocratic, there would be no private schools benefiting the rich and middle/upper class
  • New Right view of education

    Schools should be run like a business, competing for consumers and providing what they want
  • New Right influenced the Conservative government from 1979-1997, introducing league tables to help parents choose schools
  • Marxist view of education

    It passes on ruling class ideology to support and reproduce capitalism
  • Education as an ideological state apparatus

    It reproduces class inequalities by passing on capitalist values and norms, while legitimising these inequalities through false consciousness
  • Correspondence principle
    Similarities between the workplace and school, ensuring people learn to arrive on time, dress smartly, etc.
  • Restricted code

    Used by working class, short forms of speech, less clearly defined
  • Elaborated code

    Used by middle class, similar to speech used by teachers and textbooks
  • Pupil subcultures
    • Groups of pupils with behaviour patterns different from the mainstream school culture
    • Can be anti-school or pro-school subcultures
  • Labeling theory

    Labels given to students become part of their identity, creating a self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Issues with labeling theory include bias from interviews/observations and students not being aware of the labels affecting them
  • Ethnicity and school

    • Black pupils more likely to be disciplined for same behaviour as white pupils
    • Teachers have lower expectations for black pupils
  • Gender and school

    • Boys negatively labeled by teachers and peers as disruptive, annoying, failures
  • Class and school

    Teachers make judgments based on appearance and family background rather than ability
  • Factors influencing working class achievement

    • Labeling and self-fulfilling prophecy
    • Setting and streaming
    • Pupil subcultures
    • Class identity
  • Cultural deprivation

    • Working class parents have less education, less confidence in engaging with school
    • Middle class subculture is future-oriented, working class subculture is present-oriented
  • Rationality in classical economic theory is a flawed assumption as people usually don't act rationally
  • Marginal utility
    The additional utility (satisfaction) gained from the consumption of an additional product
  • If you add up marginal utility for each unit you get total utility
  • Girls have outperformed boys in education although at certain points this gap has narrowed and bigger as well
  • Policies introduced to help girls

    • Equal opportunities policies
    • Introducing more women into science and engineering to motivate girls
  • There is growing employment for women which means there are more female role models for girls in school
  • GCSE exams involving more coursework suit girls as they mature earlier and are more organised
  • Teachers give more attention to boys as they are seen as disruptive, while girls are seen as cooperative
  • Different books are now being used in classes which portray women as strong characters, rather than just housewives
  • Girls are more likely to get into better schools as schools focus on league table positions
  • Feminist campaigning has helped to combat the patriarchy in society and given girls more motivation
  • Changes in the family, with more women as breadwinners and lone parent families, have changed girls' ambitions
  • Boys don't like reading and see it as a feminine activity, leading to a restricted linguistic code
  • The education system has been designed to be more girl-friendly, which has had a negative impact on boys
  • There is a lack of male primary teachers, so boys lack male role models
  • Boys are more likely to form 'laddish' subcultures to increase their masculinity, which reduces their achievement
  • The 'crisis of masculinity' means boys may lack ambition if there are fewer jobs available for them
  • There is still a divide between 'male' and 'female' subjects, with girls choosing more languages and humanities, and boys choosing more sciences and technology
  • Gender socialisation, where girls are socialised to be more gentle and protective, while boys are taught to be more adventurous, contributes to these trends
  • Pupils' identities are constructed by teachers based on ethnicity, with the 'ideal pupil' being a white, middle-class, heterosexual who achieves good grades