Class: Internal Factors Flashcards

1
Q
  1. (Labelling) What is labelling?
A

Teachers passing on judgement on their students (e.g. bright, troublemaker).

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2
Q

What did Becker find in secondary schools about how teachers label students?

A

Becker interviewed 60 teachers and found that teachers stereotype students based on work, conduct and appearance.

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3
Q

What did Keddie find about labelling when it comes to teachers distributing knowledge to students?

A
  • Keddie (1971) - unequal access to classroom knowledge (status as knowledge).
  • ‘High status knowledge’ and ‘low status knowledge’. Teachers don’t distribute knowledge evenly.
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4
Q
  1. (SFP) What is the Self Fulfilling Prophecy?
A
  • Fulfilling the ‘prophecy’ that an individual has set for you.
  • E.g. if a teacher sees and treats a pupil as a bright student, they are likely to be bright and succeed academically.
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5
Q

How many stages are there of labelling in education?

A

3

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6
Q

What are the 3 stages?

A
  • Stage 1: Labels pupil + makes predictions.
  • Stage 2: Teacher interacts with pupil based on label.
  • Stage 3: Pupil internalises the label and the teacher’s expectations (‘fulfils’ the original ‘prophecy’.
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7
Q

What did Rosenthal and Jacobson do to research the self fulfilling prophecy?

A

Rosenthal and Jacobson (1968) - Teacher’s expectations and the Self Fulfilling Prophecy: Pygmalion in the classroom experiment.

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8
Q

What was the Pygmalion in the classroom experiment? - They had a new ability - a test to identify who would ‘spurt’ ahead.

A
  • They had a new ability - a test to identify who would ‘spurt’ ahead.
  • R+J randomly picked 20% of the students and lied (high ability) and later 47% of these pupils made significant progress, compared to the 53%.
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9
Q
  1. (Streaming) What is streaming?
A

Streaming is where children are placed in groups according to their general academic ability.

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10
Q

What did Gillborn and Youdell make?

A

(2004) - Educational triage.

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11
Q

What is the educational triage and how many sections/outcomes are there?

A
  • The educational triage shows how important a student is.
  • It had 3 sections/outcomes.
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12
Q

What were the 3 sections/outcomes of the educational triage?

A
  1. Those who will pass anyway.
  2. Border line C / D pupils who are targeted for help.
  3. Hopeless cases.
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13
Q
  1. (Pupil Subcultures) What are pupil subcultures and what are they often based on?
A
  • School subcultures are smaller groups of students who share attitudes to the rules, values, and norms of school and form their behaviour accordingly.
  • School subcultures are often based on gender, ethnicity, and social class.
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14
Q

What is differentiation?

A

How teachers categorise from appearance, ability, etc.

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15
Q

What is polarisation?

A
  • Pupils responding to streaming by moving towards one of two opposite ‘poles’ or extremes.
  • / The splitting of a society into two distinct groups that are different ends of a spectrum.
  • For example, the rich and poor.
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16
Q

What concepts did Colin Lacey develop?

A

(1970) Concepts of differentiation and polarisation to explain how pupil subcultures develop.

17
Q

What did Wills (1977) explain about ‘Resistant Anti-school Subcultures’? (What does it mean and how is it formed)

A

Formed by working class pupils that directly oppose values that the education system promotes.

18
Q

What are Pro-School Subcultures?

A
  • Associated with the middle class.
  • Positive.
  • ‘Halos’ - ‘angel’ children.
  • High expectations.
19
Q

What are Anti-School Subcultures?

A
  • Associated with the working class.
  • Negative.
  • No ‘halos’.
  • Low expectations.
20
Q

What does Wood suggest about dividing students into pro or anti school subcultures?

A

Doing this is too simplistic → wide range of adaptations.

21
Q

What is an evaluation?

A
  • Interactionalist theories show the education system is not a neutral institution (unlike Cultural Deprivation theorists).
22
Q

What 3 points does the interactionalist theories explain?

A
  • It explains how teacher-student relations have an impact on education.
  • Can improve teaching methods (Wood (1983) → school can be improved by reducing stereotyping and labelling = reduce deviance in school).
  • Doesn’t only deal with social background (can provide a detailed insight into the day-to-day life of educational institutions and show that educational attainment is not just based on external factors).