Sociology AQA - Education

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Particularistic standards

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Sociology

109 Terms

1

Particularistic standards

Children are not judged by a clear measure of achievement

<p>Children are not judged by a clear measure of achievement</p>
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2

Universalistic standards

Children are judged by a clear measure of achievement and are compared to other children

<p>Children are judged by a clear measure of achievement and are compared to other children</p>
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3

Durkheim

  1. Promotes social solidarity

  2. Prepares young people

<ol><li><p>Promotes social solidarity</p></li><li><p>Prepares young people</p></li></ol>
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4

Parsons

  1. Secondary socialisation = education teaches universalistic standards and acts as a bridge between family and wider society

  2. Meritocracy = a meritocratic society is built on 2 key values: +Individual achievement +Equal opportunity

<ol><li><p>Secondary socialisation = education teaches universalistic standards and acts as a bridge between family and wider society</p></li><li><p>Meritocracy = a meritocratic society is built on 2 key values: +Individual achievement +Equal opportunity</p></li></ol>
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5

Davis and Moore

Role allocation = for society to function effectively, the most talented individuals need to be allocated to the most important jobs

<p>Role allocation = for society to function effectively, the most talented individuals need to be allocated to the most important jobs</p>
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6

Evaluation of the functionalist view

  • Hargreaves argues that schools put more of an emphasis on competition than social solidarity

  • Ascribed characteristics are more important in determining income later in life than achievement in school

  • Education is not meritocratic because schools discriminate against some groups e.g. w/c, black pupils

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Althusser

  • ISA = control people's beliefs and ideas indirectly e.g. religion, the mass media and education

  • RSA = physical force used by the state to repress the w/c e.g. police, courts and the army

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8

Bowles and Gintis

The correspondence principle = the education system mirrors work structure

E.g. obedience to teacher = obedience to boss, value of extrinsic rewards, acceptance of inequality through the ISA

<p>The correspondence principle = the education system mirrors work structure</p><p>E.g. obedience to teacher = obedience to boss, value of extrinsic rewards, acceptance of inequality through the ISA</p>
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9

Bowles and Gintis - evaluation of role allocation

  • found that the most obedient students got the highest grades

  • means that the education system rewards those who conform to the qualities required of the future workplace

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10

Bowles and Gintis - myth of meritocracy

  • Argue that in reality, success is based on class background

  • By promising the untrue claim that rewards are based on ability, it helps workers to accept inequality

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11

Sugarman - w/c subculture

  1. Present time orientation

  2. Immediate gratification

  3. Collectivism

  4. Fatalism

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12

Sugarman - m/c subculture

Deferred gratification - m/c taught to work for long term rewards e.g more tend to go into higher education

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13

Berstein - language codes

  • Elaborated code = sophisticated, complex language used (typically used by the m/c)

  • Restricted code = Basic, simple language (typically used by the w/c)

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14

Demie and Lewis

w/c families unable to provide stimulating home environment nor effective enforcement rules

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15

Douglas - parental interest

m/c parents were more likely to encourage their children to succeed and socialise them more effectively to achieve in education

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16

Bourdieu - cultural capital

Norms and values of the middle class

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17

Habitus

The culture that we possess due to our life experiences

  • m/c habitus = cultural capital + symbolic capital

  • w/c habitus = symbolic violence as their habitus is seen as worthless

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18

Archer

w/c develop nike identities as they can't get status so they gain it through style and branding of clothes

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19

Gewirtz - parental choice

Privileged skilled choosers - mainly m/c, prosperous and confident, use their economic and cultural capital to get educational capital for their children

Semi-skilled chooser - mainly w/c, lack cultural capital but do have aspirations for their children

Disconnected chooser - mainly w/c, lack cultural capital, don't know about schools admissions policies

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20

Ingram

  • Studied 2 groups of w/c boys, one of which passed the 11+ test unlike the other

  • Grammar school = strong m/c habitus unlike secondary school

+The boys who went to the grammar school were ridiculed out of school (symbolic capital) and inside of school (symbolic violence)

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21

What do interactionists focus on?

  • Organisation of school

  • Teacher's expectations

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22

What did Becker find from 60 interviews with teachers from Chicago?

That each teacher had an ideal pupil

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23

What is an ideal pupil?

Refers to the image that a teacher has in their head of the pupil that they would most like to teach

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24

What does the labelling theory propose?

Once a child is labelled it becomes their 'master status' - eventually leads to a self fulfilling prophecy

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25

What is a master status?

The label that everyone identifies you with once you have been labelled as such

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26

What did Rosenthal and Jacobson prove?

That teachers' expectations have a huge effect on the performance of pupils

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27

What was the procedure of Rosenthal and Jacobson's study?

  • Based on a test, they randomly chose children who supposedly would intellectually bloom over the year

  • Pointed these children out to the teachers

  • Came back after a couple of months and after doing another set of tests, found that those children did better

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28

What did Fuller find?

  • Black girls in a London comprehensive school - teachers didn't have high expectations of them

  • They went against their labels - rose above them and achieved

  • Shows that internal factors aren't as significant

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29

What did Ball find?

  • Teachers had higher expectations of children in top sets so pushed them more (warmed up) whereas lower sets were not (instead cooled down)

  • As a consequence, students in top sets got better grades so went on to university

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30

Willis

  • Studied 'the lads' (12 w/c boys) - they didn't care

  • Formed anti-school subcultures

  • Didn't care about their labels

  • socialised into a w/c subculture

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31

Lacey

  • 2 main reasons for subcultures:

  1. Differentiation - ways in which pupils are categorised by teachers on the basis of their perceived ability

  2. Polarisation - e.g streams; pro vs. anti-school subcultures

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32

Vincent et al

  • Black m/c prefer being known as 'professional' not m/c

  • Still below white m/c

  • Had aspirations for their children

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33

Byrne

  • Migrant parents do not have much choice so send children to local schools

  • Area they live in affects their education

  • Parents don't understand the education system, so are unable to support their children in succeeding

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34

Pryce

  • Asian culture = more cohesive as they ignore racism better

  • Impact of slavery = cultural resistance (Hall)

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35

Driver and Ballard

  • Asians tend to have a more pro-school attitude

  • Asian extended family = provides more help and support for their children

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36

Murray

African-Caribbean lone-parenthood is to blame because the lack of male role models means that mothers struggle to socialise and financially support their children

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37

Strand

  • Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Indian - aspirations for higher education

  • Examples of this include private tuition and greater school involvement

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38

Arnot

  • Media created anti-school role model for black pupils

  • 'Ultra-tough ghetto superstar' e.g rappers like 50 cent

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39

Stahl

  • Double bind = fear of both success and failure

  • This middling position helps them to seem 'ordinary'

  • Most boys had egalitarian outlook where they wanted to fit into society

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40

Powell

  • Students exposed to 2 messages

  • Media - high profile entrepreneurs that didn't go to university

  • Peer networks- friends who went to university but didn't have high income jobs

  • Non- graduate jobs = more attractive

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41

Strand (2)

  • Black students are subjected to institutional racism

  • Teachers underestimate their ability due to behavioural problems overshadowing academic talent

  • White students more likely to be entered in higher tier

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42

Gillborn

  • Teachers need to be more self aware of their choices - hold these racist views subconsciously; due to the media etc

  • Causes teachers to set lower expectations for black pupils

  • Black Caribbean children are 3X more likely to be expelled than their white counterparts

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43

Gillborn also said that there was an............

'Undeclared war' against black achievement

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44

Wright

  • Asian pupils victim of ethnocentric curriculum

  • Are left out of discussions and have their names mispronounced which leads to marginalisation

  • Assume British culture is superior

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45

Archer supports.........

Wright and says that the ideal pupil is a white child with a m/c habitus

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46

Showunmi

  • Black girls struggled due to identity crisis

  • Teachers saw them as loud (had ladette behaviour) and negatively labelled them

  • Felt they had to be popular or leave their identities behind

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47

Mirza

3 types of teaching:

  • The colour blind; saw all pupils as equal but in practise allowed racism to go unchallenged

  • Liberal chauvinist; saw black people to be culturally deprived thus have low expectations of them

  • Overt racists; saw black pupils as inferior and actively discriminate against them

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48

Sewell

  • Teachers hold a stereotype of 'black machismo'

  • 4 responses to label; conformity, rebellion, retreatism, innovation

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49

Ball

  • Ethnocentric curriculum= 'little englandism'

  • Ignores history of ethnic minorities, tries to make England look good

  • Black culture and history not mentioned except slavery

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50

Gillborn (2)

  • Marketisation of education puts ethnic minorities at disadvantage

  • Racial bias in enrolment interviews, lack of info to minority languages, minority parents unaware of enrolment procedures

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51

Demie and Lewis (ethnicity)

  • Found that head teachers and class teachers both had low aspirations for white w/c boys

  • Ethnic minority parents more involved and interested

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52

Coard

The ethnocentric curriculum is evidence of institutional racism within education

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53

Gillborn and Youdell

Teachers tend to racialize expectations of pupils

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54

Lupton

Adult authority model in Asian families is similar to that in school

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55

Gillborn and Mirza

Ethnic minority pupils can still do well without English as a first language

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56

Khan

Asian families 'stress ridden', bound by tradition; especially girls

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57

Liberal feminists

  • Girls outperform boys in education causing women to break through the glass ceiling and move into higher paying jobs

  • Policies have improved women's position in society

<ul><li><p>Girls outperform boys in education causing women to break through the glass ceiling and move into higher paying jobs</p></li><li><p>Policies have improved women&apos;s position in society</p></li></ul>
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58

Radical feminists

  • Still patriarchy in school

  • Subjects are heavily segregated regarding genders

Examples of patriarchy:

  • The male gaze

  • Double standards

  • Verbal abuse

<ul><li><p>Still patriarchy in school</p></li><li><p>Subjects are heavily segregated regarding genders</p></li></ul><p>Examples of patriarchy:</p><ul><li><p>The male gaze</p></li><li><p>Double standards</p></li><li><p>Verbal abuse</p></li></ul>
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59

Impact of feminism

Increasing women's rights and opportunities through changes in the law, affecting self-image and ambitions

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60

Changes in the family

  • Increase cohabitation and lone parent families

  • Women taking on breadwinner role

  • Need good qualifications and job for a living

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61

Changes in women's employment

  • 1970 equal employment/pay act

  • 1975 sex discrimination act

  • Pay gap halved since 1975 - from 30% to 15%

  • More breaking the glass ceiling as more women in employment in better professional roles

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62

Girls changing ambition

  • Sue Sharpe;

  • 1970s = love, marriage, family

  • 1990s = career, education then marriage

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63

Equal opportunities policies

Promoting girls in non-traditional careers e.g. GIST, WISE

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64

Positive role models

More female class and head teachers

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65

GCSE and coursework

Gorard

  • Introduction of GCSEs increased the gender gap as coursework was brought in

Mitsos and Browne

  • Girls more successful in coursework because they are better organised, spend more time on work, meet deadlines, take care of presentation and are better equipped

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66

Teacher attention

Teachers promote girls self-esteem and raise achievement levels because they cooperate so it leads to a self-fulfilling prophecy

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67

Francis

Boys get more attention - they were disciplined more harshly and felt picked on

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68

Swann

  • Boys dominate discussions

  • Girls are better listeners and prefer group work

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Challenging stereotypes

  • Sexist images have been removed from learning materials

  • Use positive images of what girls can do to raise female achievement

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70

Selection and league tables

Jackson

  • High achieving girls are more attractive to schools unlike underperforming boys

Slee

  • Boys less attractive to schools because they have behavioural issues and are more likely to be excluded

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71

Shortage of male primary school teachers

  • Lack of male role models at school and home

  • Increase in lone parent families means no male figures

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72

Feminisation of education

Sewell

  • Education system has become 'natured'; schools don't 'nurture' masculine traits like competitiveness and leadership

HOWEVER - can be argued that these traits are nurtured due to the marketisation of education

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73

Globalisation and the decline of traditional men's jobs

  • Decline in heavy industries

  • Develop identity crisis with no motivation that they won't get a job

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74

Boys and literacy

  • Gender gap mainly due to boys poorer lang and lit skills

  • Parents spend less time reading to their sons and instead they have more leisure pursuits like football

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75

'Laddish' subculture

Epstein

  • w/c boys likely to be harrassed and labelled as sissies and subject to homophobic verbal abuse

Could also talk about Willis; the lads called the boys who worked hard 'ear oles'

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76

Gender role socialisation

Norman

  • From an early age, boys and girls dress differently, do different activities, play with different toys etc

  • Eventually they develop a different taste in reading:

  • boys = hobby/info books

  • girls = stories about others

Elwood

  • Girls focus more on how people feel whereas boys focus on how things are made and work

  • This explains why girls choose humanities and boys = science and technology

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77

Gendered subject images

Kelly

  • Science teachers are more likely to be men (act as a role model)

Colley

  • Computer science = male

  • Involves machine work, part of male domain and the way it is taught puts girls off

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78

Gender identity and peer pressure

Dewar

  • Male students call girls 'lesbian' if interested in sports

Paetcher

  • Females in sport are there to cope with image that contradicts their stereotype

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79

Gendered career opportunities

  • Employment = 'sex typed'

  • Women involved in work similar to housewives e.g childcare, nursing

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80

Double standards

Boys boast about their own sexual exploits but call girls 'slags' - form of social control that reinforces gender inequality by keeping females subordinate

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81

Verbal abuse

Paetcher

  • Name calling shapes identity and maintains male power

Parker

  • Boys labelled as 'gay' for being friendly or hanging out with females

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82

Male gaze

  • Male students and teachers see girls as sexual objects

Mac an Ghaill

  • heterosexual masculinity reinforced and needs to be obvious

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83

Male peer groups

  • Reproduce a range of different class based masculine gender identities

Redman

  • macho lads in younger years, real englishmen in sixth form

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84

Female peer groups

  • Idealised female identity and sexual identity

  • Girls perform balancing act between the both

  • Girls shame each other - social control device to disciple identities

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85

Teachers and discipline

  • Male teachers tell boys off for acting like girls

  • Teachers ignore boys verbal abuse to girls, may even blame girls

  • Male teachers = protective over female colleagues

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86

Lobban

  • found that in children's reading schemes, men and women are presented in gender stereotyped roles

  • also present more male than female characters

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87

Mac an Ghaill

  • argues that w/c jobs are no longer available for w/c boys

  • vulnerable to changes in the youth labour market

  • w/c boys feel that teachers preferred girls and treated them better

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88

Connolly

found that black boys suffered from teacher labelling more than other groups

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89

Paechter

Since the introduction of the National Curriculum in 1988, there has been a reduction of the gendering of subjects in secondary schools

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90

The Butler Education Act (1944)

  • Brought in the 11+ (mandatory)

  • Leaving age of school went to 16

  • Government wanted to create an equal education system

  • Introduced the tripartite system

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91

What was the tripartite system?

  1. Secondary modern school = w/c, normal comprehensive school

  2. Grammar school = m/c, pass the 11+ to get in

  3. Technical school = w/c, had certain skills e.g. vocational courses

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92

Problems with the Butler Act

  • m/c had better schooling - more prepared for 11+

  • Negative stigma on secondary modern schools - leads to a self- fulfilling prophecy for w/c

  • Teachers paid less in secondary modern schools

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93

Comprehensivisation (1965)

  • Aim was to overcome the class divide of the tripartite system and to make education more meritocratic

  • Created comprehensive schools

  • Get into the school regardless of ability or social class - based on 'catchment area'

  • 11+ was not mandatory anymore

  • Also introduced educational priority areas (Deprived schools were listed as 'priority schools' and received additional funding + resources)

  • known as positive discrimination

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Problems with comprehensivisation

  • Introduced setting and streaming ↦ had negative effects (labelling)

  • High flyers are held back by lower ability

  • m/c get m/c comprehensive schools, w/c get working class comprehensive schools

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95

Conservative educational policy (1979 - 1997)

Aimed to develop an educational system which meets the needs of industry (market forces)

  1. The New Vocationalism:

  • Government involvement in youth training

  • Training schemes

  • Vocational qualifications

  1. The Education Reform Act 1988:

  • Brought in national curriculum

  • From age 5-16, both boys and girls had to study maths, english and science

  1. Marketisation; created an 'education market' (competition, introduced league tables, increase parental choice)

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96

The Education Reform Act 1988

  • SATs

  • Ofsted

  • Parental choice through open enrolment

  • Ranking of school exam performance

  • National curriculum

  • Formula funding

  • Literacy and numeracy hours (primary schools)

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97

Ball (parentocracy)

  • Ball argues that marketisation creates parentocracy

  • m/c have more advantages; economic + cultural capital = educational capital

  • E.g. are able to move to better catchment areas

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98

Problems with the conservative educational policy

  • Middle-class parents are still at an advantage, particularly 'privileged skilled choosers' who can become governors or offer 'charitable donations' to ensure their child's place in a good school

  • Popular schools get oversubscribed and therefore can choose their pupils - and will recruit 'ideal' high-achieving middle-class students to ensure their success. (Middle-class students get better education)

  • Schools who achieve badly one time will get less popular and then less money, so they cannot afford to improve their standards (leading to a 'spiral of decline')

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99

New labour policies 1997-2010

  1. To promote diversity and choice

  2. Reduce inequality of opportunity

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100

NLP: Promoting diversity and choice

  • By maintaining the education market

  • Policies include; competition between schools, creating specialist schools and setting up academies

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