Class differences in achievement (INTERNAL) Flashcards

1
Q

Becker

A
  • Interactionist study
  • 60 Chicago High school teachers
  • Judged pupils according to how close they fitted the image of the ideal pupil
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2
Q

Hempel- Jorgensen

A

Found that notions of the ideal pupil vary according to the social class make up of the school:

  • working class Aspen primary school: discipline major problem, ideal pupil defined as quiet, passive and obedient. Defined in terms of behaviour.
  • middle class Rowan primary school: pupil defined in terms of academic ability rather than personality.
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3
Q

Dunne and Gazeley

A
Argue that schools persistently produce working class underachievement because of the labels and assumptions of teachers.
- Interviews in 9 English state secondary schools - teachers normalised underachievement of working class pupils.
- home backgrounds, less interest
The way teachers explained and dealt with underachievement constructed class differences
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4
Q

Ray Rist

A

Study of American kindergarten shows.
- fast learners ‘tigers’
- working class ‘cardinals’ or ‘clowns’
Read as groups, not individuals, given easier work and books.

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5
Q

Rosenthal and Jacobson

A
  • California primary school
  • Self fulfilling prophecy
  • Fake test, just an IQ, 20% random spurters, false, those who were falsely told to be spurters, made more progress.
  • interaction
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6
Q

Gillborn and Youdell

A

Shows how teachers use stereotypical notions of ‘ability’ to stream pupils.

  • working class and black pupils = less likely to have ability, lower streams
  • A to C economy
  • Educational triage
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7
Q

Lacey

A

Concepts of differentiation and polarisation to explain how pupil subcultures develop.
pupil subcultures

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8
Q

Hargreaves

A

Found the response to labeling and streaming:

saw boys in the lower stream as triple failures: failed 11+, placed in lower streams and labelled as ‘worthless louts’

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9
Q

Ball

A
  • Study of Beachside (comprehensive)
  • abolishing streaming
  • anti school cultures declined
  • polarisation disappeared but differentiation continued.
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10
Q

Woods

A
  • Responses to labeling and streaming:
  • ingratiation: being the teacher’s pet
  • ritualism: going through the motions and staying out of trouble.
  • retreatism: daydreaming and mucking about
  • rebellion: outright rejection of everything the school stands for.
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11
Q

Furlong

A

Observes that many pupils are not committed permanently to any one response but may move between different types of response, acting differently in lessons with different teachers.

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12
Q

Archer et al

A
  • focus on interaction between working class pupils’ identities and school, and how this produces underachievement.
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13
Q

Ingram

A
  • Study of two groups of working class Catholic boys from the same highly deprived neighbourhood
  • Wanted to fit in
  • tension between habitus of working class neighbourhood and that of their middle class school
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14
Q

Evans

A
  • studied a group of 21 working class girls from comprehensive school in London.
  • reluctant to apply to elite universities - did not fit in, hidden barriers.
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15
Q

Reay et al

A
  • Points out that self exclusion from elite or distant universities narrows the options of many working class pupils and limits their success.
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