marxist perspective on education Flashcards
what is the hidden curriculum?
- things children learn through the experience of going to school
- feminists also concerned about the hidden curriculum - that produces patriarchy
- functionalists argue this is a vital part of education and not hidden
BOWLES & GINTIS - correspondence principle
- correspondence principle and the hidden curriculum
- there is a close correspondence between school and work
- correspondence principle operates through the hidden curriculum
examples of the correspondence principle
hierarchy of headteachers - hierarchy of management
accept authority of teachers - accept authority of boss
no control over organisation of school/topics - lack of power/control at work
punctual for lessons - on time for work
working hard for rewards (grades, merits etc) - working hard for pay
accept dull subjects and do work because you’re told to - carry out boring and repetitive tasks
BOWLES & GINTIS - myth of meritocracy
- education is a myth-making machine
- everybody doesn’t have a fair chance
- myth of meritocracy justifies higher class privilege
- people blame themselves for their low paid work so proletariat dont gith back
BOWLES & GINTIS - creativity
- interviewed students in NYC, noticed different grades
- schools tend to ignore creativity and independence (low grades)
- schools reward the qualities that create obedient workers (high grades)
LOUIS ALTHUSSER (neo marxist) - state apparatus
- repressive state apparatus - police, courts, army etc
- ideological state apparatus - religion, media, education
- its better to control ideas, beliefs and values
- education is an important ideological state apparatus - fails successive generations of WC children
- legitimises class inequality by producing ideology - a false set of ideas to make children believe they deserve their low position in society and are less likely to challenge capitalism
PAUL WILLIS - ‘learning to labour’
- argues WC pupils can resist attempts to control them
- ‘lads’ studied in their last year of school and first year of work
- boys had a counter culture - rude, sexist and homophobic. hated well behaved boys
- found school meaningless and boring
- focused on truanting and bad behaviour
working class male subculture
- anti school subculture similar to male culture in manual work
- sees intellectual work as inferior/effeminate
- preparing themselves for their future roles
- coping with the boredom in school and the boredom of unskilled labour
evaluation of marxism
- focus too much on class and not on gender, ethnicity
- BOWLES AND GINTIS have a determistic view - pupils have no free will
- WILLIS shows pupils do not passively accept authority - pupils reject school which fails them
- WILLIS study included 12 people so not representative