role of education Flashcards
9oDurkheim
social solidarity, specialist skills, hidden curriculum, society in miniature
parsons
Education acts as a bridge between particularistic and universal standards. It leads to value consensus- everyone is conditioned to agree on what is important.
Children are selected for suitable future roles- role allocation.
bridge between home and work, meritocracy, particularistic/universialistic standards, ascribed/achieve status
davis and moore
role allocation
education ‘sifts and sorts’
Role Allocation - ‘Education sorts and sifts individuals ‘ - inequality is both natural and inevitable as people are born with unequal talents/abilities providing a meritocracy where people gain their position on ability alone.
schultz, blau and duncan
human capital- modern economy depends on using human capital and utilising its workers skills- a meritocratic education system allocated roles and maximises productivity
functionalist evaluations
- education system doesn’t actively teach specialist skills (1/3 of 16-19 yos in vocational courses dont get good jobs)
-DEA topics show that equal opportunity does not exist
-Tumin- criticises Davis and Moore as important jobs aren’t always highly rewarded
-Marxists argue there isn’t social solidarity, just capitalist ideology
-New Right argue education doesnt adequately prepare pupils for work
-Wrong- functionalists wrongly imply that pupils passively accept school values
new right view on education
Like functionalists they believe that some people are more talented than others and that meritocracy exists and thy we should socialise pupils into shared values
BUT New Right think the current system is not achieving these goals and that the solution is marketisation
chubb and moe
consumer choice, meritocracy, voucher scheme, ‘one size fits all’, two roles of the state
- state run education has failed because it hasn’t created equal opportunity and doesnt produce pupils with skills needed in the economy and their study shows low income pupils do 5% better in private schools
new right two roles of the state
1- impose framework for schools to compete through eg league tables
2- impose a national curriculum to transmit shared values and affirm national identity
chubb and moe voucher system
Each family given a voucher to spend on buying education from a school of their choice forcing schools to respond to parents since their vouchers are the schools source of income. Like private businesses the schools would compete for the parents
new right evaluations
- Gerwitz and Ball argue that competition between schools benefit the middle class who can use their capital to get access to more desirable schools
- state control isn’t the reason for low standards, inequality is
-contradiction between parental choice and having national curriculum
-Marxists argue that education doesn’t impose shared national identity but capitalist ideology
althusser
Education is an ISA. It reproduces class inequality and legitimates it by producing and transmitting ideology that inequality is inevitable and hierarchy is normal
bowles and gintis
hidden curriculum, correspondence principle, myth of meritocracy, hierarchy, alienation, extrinsic values, fragmentation, competition
Study of 237 NY HS students shows that schools reward the type of traits that make a submissive compliant worker
Correspondence principle operating through hidden curriculum
cohen
youth training schemes serve capitalism by teaching young workers not genuine job skills, but rather the attitudes and values needed in a subordinate labour force. - lowers their aspirations so that they will accept low paid work
bordieu - role of education
cultural capital, habitus, reproduction of class inequality
willis
- study of 12 WC boys: participant observation and unstructured
- distinct counter culture: find school boring, meaningless and break the rules, reject meritocratic system and ‘take the piss’ out of girls
- willis notes the similarity between the lads’ anti-school counter-culture and the shopfloor culture of male manual workers