41 results
Search Results
2. Research assessment, emotional practices, and the social hierarchy: what can you afford to feel?
- Author
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Poulsen, Simone Mejding and Rowlands, Julie
- Subjects
- *
HUMANITIES , *HIGHER education , *EMOTIONS , *AFFECTIVE education , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
This paper investigates how the emotional responses towards research assessment reflect both social position and strategy in the struggle for scientific authority. This is examined through interviews with humanities researchers conducted as a part of a study on the implications for research practice of the Danish Bibliometric Research Indicator (BFI). Drawing on Bourdieu's theory of practice and Scheer and Matthäus' conceptualisation of the affective habitus and emotional practices, our research suggests that emotions can be conceptualized as strategic practices closely tied to the hierarchical position of the researchers. Established researchers deployed emotional practices as a form of resistance against compliance-based research assessment to retain their scientific authority and autonomy, while early-career researchers generally wanted to resist but their precarious positions did not afford them the possibility to do so. The study thus highlights the potential of studying emotions in relation to resistance and reproduction of dominance in higher education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. Social class, COVID-19 and care: Schools on the front line in Ireland during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Crean, Mags, Devine, Dympna, Moore, Barbara, Martínez Sainz, Gabriela, Symonds, Jennifer, Sloan, Seaneen, and Farrell, Emma
- Subjects
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SCHOOL closings , *CHILD welfare , *ACADEMIC achievement , *POOR children , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Schools have a duty of care to children that extends beyond educational performance to include wellbeing and welfare. Yet, research has highlighted the tensions that arise when 'care' and 'learning' are treated as binaries, especially when schools operate within unequal socio--economic conditions. Extended COVID-19 school closures brought these issues into sharp relief, highlighting the central role of schools as a front line service in the lives of poorer children. This paper provides qualitative insights into the classed experiences of extended school closure and the role and response of schools through the eyes of parents, teachers and principals in Ireland. We frame these responses in the context of the provision of a careful education, exploring the role of normative and affective relations in teaching and learning. Questions are posed in relation to schools as care regimes and the 'mission creep' between educational and welfare provision in schools serving poorer children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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4. Rethinking causality and inequality in students' degree outcomes.
- Author
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Sabri, Duna
- Subjects
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EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *HIGHER education , *ACADEMIC achievement , *TEACHING methods , *EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
Inequality in students' degree outcomes has been a concern for the higher education sector and the UK government for more than a decade. Since its inception in 2018, the Office for Students in England has prioritised the need for evidence of causality through requiring institutions to evaluate the effectiveness of their initiatives as set out in Access and Participation Plans. This policy development responds to several reports which identify a dearth of evidence-based interventions and scant knowledge of 'what works'. This paper traces the interplay between policy and research, focusing on the assumptions they make about causality. It concludes that unwarranted positions are taken in both spheres of practice, making progress unlikely. A conception of causality situated in extant formal theory on evidential pluralism and that draws on current practices would help us address inequality more effectively. Alternative framings of the problem of inequality in students' degree outcomes is offered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. Is there an old girls' network? Girls' schools and recruitment to the British elite.
- Author
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Worth, Eve, Reeves, Aaron, and Friedman, Sam
- Subjects
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PRIVATE schools , *SOCIAL reproduction , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
Private schools have long played a crucial role in male elite formation but their importance to women's trajectories is less clear. In this paper, we explore the relationship between girls' private schools and elite recruitment in Britain over the past 120 years – drawing on the historical database of Who's Who, a unique catalogue of the elite. We find that alumni of elite girls schools have been around 20 times more likely than other women to reach elite positions. They are also more likely to follow particular channels of elite recruitment, via the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, private members clubs and elite spouses. Yet such schools have also consistently been less propulsive than their male-only counterparts. We argue this is rooted in the ambivalent aims of girls elite education, where there has been a longstanding tension between promoting academic achievement and upholding traditional processes of gendered social reproduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Educational inequality and transitions to university in Australia: aspirations, agency and constraints.
- Author
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Polesel, John, Leahy, Mary, and Gillis, Shelley
- Subjects
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EDUCATIONAL equalization , *CURRICULUM , *ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATION policy , *YOUNG adults , *HIGHER education - Abstract
This paper is based on research into the destinations and aspirations of school leavers in Australia. It investigates the relationship between the transition to university for different groups of students and their own and their parents’ and teachers’ expectations. It draws on Bourdieu, Boudon, Nussbaum and others to investigate the way young people construct their aspirations. It examines the limits of young people’s agency, which is bound by their understanding of the hidden and informal rules that govern access to different spaces within the curriculum as well as access to post-school destinations. Navigating these transitions is becoming more important and more complex with the increasing emphasis on higher level qualifications in an education market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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7. Bernstein in the urban classroom: a case study.
- Author
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Barrett, Brian D.
- Subjects
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EDUCATION & society , *EDUCATIONAL equalization , *SOCIAL justice , *ACADEMIC achievement , *URBAN education , *SECONDARY education , *SCHOOL children - Abstract
Despite a long-standing concern within the sociology of education for ameliorating educational inequality, the challenge of improving educational opportunities for disadvantaged students remains deeply entrenched. While ‘macro’ issues such as segregation and systemic inequalities in school funding and access to qualified teachers must be addressed as matters of social and educational justice, Basil Bernstein's novel focus on ‘relations within’ education as the site of pedagogic discourse offers teachers and those working inside school systems a particularly powerful vision for promoting more equitable outcomes for students. This paper examines this assertion through a case study of the ‘mixed’ pedagogical practice of a successful teacher in a fifth-grade urban classroom in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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8. Interrupted trajectories: the impact of academic failure on the social mobility of working-class students.
- Author
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Byrom, Tina and Lightfoot, Nic
- Subjects
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SOCIAL mobility , *EDUCATION of the working class , *HABITUS (Sociology) , *ACADEMIC achievement & society , *LEVEL of aspiration , *HIGHER education - Abstract
Higher education (HE) is often viewed as a conduit for social mobility through which working-class students can secure improved life-chances. However, the link between HE and social mobility is largely viewed as unproblematic. Little research has explored the possible impact of academic failure (in HE) on the trajectories of working-class students or the ways in which working-class students may re-construct their career aspirations as a result of such academic failure. This paper seeks to fill this apparent gap by focusing on a group of non-traditional students enrolled on a BA undergraduate programme in a post-1992 university. Utilising Bourdieu’s notion of habitus, the paper identifies how academic failure contributes to possible trajectory interruptions and whether these are temporary or possibly permanent. It specifically focuses on how working-class students interpret and respond to their academic failure and the possible impact this has on their social mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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9. Can higher education compensate for society? Modelling the determinants of academic success at university.
- Author
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Smith, Emma
- Subjects
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ACADEMIC achievement , *COLLEGE students , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *SOCIALISM & education , *YOUNG adults , *HIGHER education - Abstract
This paper examines the role that social characteristics play in determining the academic success of students who begin university with roughly similar entry grades. The data used were drawn from the administrative records of over 38,000 UK-domiciled undergraduate students from one British university between 1998 and 2009. Results show that the characteristics of entrants have varied only slightly over this period and intake is still largely in favour of ‘traditional’ entrants: namely those from professional occupational backgrounds, the privately educated and those of traditional age. The relationship between background characteristics and eventual academic success also reflects patterns seen at earlier education stages. However, when prior attainment was taken into account, the link between degree outcome and many social characteristics does diminish – notably for students who were privately educated and who came from professional occupational groups. This suggests that once students have overcome barriers to admission, it is entry grades rather than social characteristics that may most strongly influence eventual academic success. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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10. The socio-political significance of changes to the vocational education system in Germany.
- Author
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Kupfer, Antonia
- Subjects
- *
VOCATIONAL education , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *EDUCATIONAL equalization , *ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
This paper explores the effects on social inequality in Germany of ongoing changes to the employment system and, thus, vocational education. Results based on an examination of the literature indicate that students from increasingly middle-class backgrounds with higher levels of general, rather than vocational, educational attainment are winning the competition for ever-fewer apprenticeships. Progress for women in education is accompanied by relative declines in men's performance on high school exit examinations and does not translate into success in the employment system. Employers are abandoning the corporate-state organization of vocational education. The paper concludes that school degrees are increasingly important for later career opportunities. As a result, the educational system is increasingly stratified, contributing to social inequality in Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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11. Exploring the boundary between school science and everyday knowledge in primary school pedagogic practices.
- Author
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Sikoyo, Leah N. and Jacklin, Heather
- Subjects
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KNOWLEDGE management , *SCIENCE education , *CURRICULUM , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SCHOOL dropouts - Abstract
This paper explores the different ways that primary school teachers in Uganda navigate the boundary between school science and everyday knowledge in the context of a centrally mandated curriculum innovation. The paper is based on a study of the pedagogic practices of 16 teachers in eight Ugandan primary schools that were selected on the basis of having a track record of either high or low academic achievement in the public primary school-leaving examination. The official primary school curriculum in Uganda prescribes that science be taught in an integrated form, including integration between science subject knowledge and everyday knowledge. The strategies that teachers in the study adopted in relating science to everyday knowledge was a key feature that differentiated between pedagogic practices in the high-performing and low-performing schools. In high-performing schools, teachers recruited everyday knowledge as a resource for learning science as a specialised discourse; whereas in the low-performing schools, acquiring everyday knowledge was viewed as an end in itself. The paper, then, considers the implications of differences in teachers' pedagogic strategies for the kinds of knowledge to which learners are given access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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12. The past, present and future of widening participation research.
- Author
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Kettley, Nigel
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *EDUCATIONAL law & legislation , *HIGHER education , *ACADEMIC achievement , *COEDUCATION , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *SCHOOLS , *RESEARCH , *SCHOLARLY method - Abstract
The provisions of the Higher Education Act (2004) have renewed interest in widening participation research. Therefore, this paper explores the development of this scholarly field, primarily in the United Kingdom, by examining major trends in the study of higher education. Political debates related to higher education, the prevailing structure of the sector and predominant sociological perspectives have largely shaped the empirical and theoretical concerns of widening participation research. These delimiting factors have resulted in incomplete accounts of the barriers to higher education, which do not fully explore the relationship between students' social characteristics, learning experiences and university careers. Furthermore, contemporary research runs the risk of reinventing the wheel and replicating the mistakes of the past, since there has been a collective act of forgetfulness with respect to earlier contributions. In contrast, this paper provides guidelines to facilitate a holistic agenda for future widening participation research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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13. Defining the future: an interrogation of education and time.
- Author
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Gray, Sandra Leaton
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *TEACHING , *ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATION policy , *SOCIAL policy - Abstract
This paper examines notions of 'educational time' with particular reference to the work of Basil Bernstein. It focuses closely on the 1967 Plowden report as a particularly appropriate policy case study to demonstrate how different constructions of time can exist within the same document. It then develops educational models originally mapped out by Bernstein, arguing that a full understanding of the areas of consensus and conflict among these models is vital if we are to understand how teaching professionals think about the future. The paper addresses the following questions: How does time affects education? What influence does this have on educational outcomes? How does this relate to public policy initiatives? Assuming a tacit, collective understanding of time and the future can undermine the very policy intentions a government might be seeking to promulgate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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14. Market Forces and Standards in Education: a preliminary consideration.
- Author
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Gorard, Stephen and Taylor, Chris
- Subjects
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EDUCATIONAL standards , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
This paper considers the possible impact of market forces on educational attainment in secondary schools in England and Wales. One of the main arguments made by market advocates in favour of extending programmes of school choice was that this would drive up standards. However, despite 12 years of relevant experience in the UK, it remains very difficult to test this claim. This paper examines some practical difficulties before presenting three possible models for considering changes in educational standards over time. The results are inconclusive, possibly even contradictory. The measures, such as GCSE and A levels, extending back to 1988 and beyond, have clearly increased in prevalence. In terms of these measures, students from state-funded education have also reduced the 'gap' relative to those from fee-paying institutions. However, it is not clear that either of these developments is market related. In addition, there is no evidence yet that these improvements indicate any breakage in the strong link between the socio-economic background of students and their school outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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15. Learning the 'Hard' Way: boys, hegemonic masculinity and the negotiation of learner identities in the primary school.
- Author
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Renold, Emma
- Subjects
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MASCULINITY , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SCHOOL children , *PRIMARY education , *BOYS - Abstract
The ways in which young boys, masculinity and academic achievement intersect to impact upon boys' disposition to and experience of schooling is relatively under-researched. Drawing on data from an ethnographic exploration into children's gender and sexual identities in their final year of primary school (aged 10/11), this paper sets out to illustrate how the discourses of hegemonic masculinity operate to shape and form boys' learner identities. The first half of the paper explores the processes and strategies by which different boys' negotiate the tensions between the perceived feminisation of academic success and/or 'studiousness', and the need to project a coherent and stable hegemonic masculinity. The remainder of the paper examines the increasing pressures of hegemonic masculinity upon high-achieving boys, and the extent to which some boys managed to carve out and maintain alternative masculinities. The implications for current and future interventions and initiatives, directed at boys' attitudes and experiences of schooling and schoolwork, are briefly outlined in the concluding sections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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16. Socioeconomic background, education, and labor force outcomes: evidence from a regional US sample.
- Author
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Caro, Daniel H., Cortina, Kai S., and Eccles, Jacquelynne S.
- Subjects
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SOCIAL status , *EDUCATION & society , *LABOR supply , *ACADEMIC achievement , *OCCUPATIONAL prestige , *INCOME - Abstract
This paper examines the long-term association of family socioeconomic status (SES), educational, and labor force outcomes in a regional US longitudinal sample (N = 2264). The results offer insights into the mechanisms underlying the role of family SES in transitions from secondary schooling to early work experiences. It was found that the academic achievement gap associated with SES widens during secondary schooling due in part to course-level tracking. Family SES relates to college enrollment mainly via its association with academic gains in school, but also through family income and father’s occupational status. Family SES is weakly but significantly related to adult offspring’s earnings but more strongly related to occupational status. Educational qualifications and cognitive skills make independent contributions to the explanation of labor force outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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17. Schools that Make a Difference: a sociological perspective on effective schooling.
- Author
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Proudford, Christine and Baker, Robert
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EFFECTIVE teaching , *EVALUATION of schools , *SOCIOLOGY , *LEARNING , *ACADEMIC achievement , *TEACHERS , *SCHOOL administration - Abstract
A recent review essay of three books on effective schooling stated that the literature on school effectiveness largely adopts a functionalist view of society and schooling and the field of inquiry is dominated by a positivist paradigm. The review argued for a sociological analysis of effective schooling. This paper examines from a sociological perspective the nature of effective schooling. The paper draws on case studies of four high schools to analyze their relationship with the social, cultural and policy dimensions oft heir context. A major focus of the paper is on the dilemmas, tensions and issues arising from the interrelationship between each school and its context, and the implications of these for an understanding of effective practices in schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
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18. The same but different: The professional socialisation of estate management students reconsidered.
- Author
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Greed, Clara H.
- Subjects
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SURVEYING (Engineering) , *ROLE playing , *PROFESSIONAL socialization , *SUBCULTURES , *ACADEMIC achievement , *STRUGGLE - Abstract
This paper compares and contrasts two separate pieces of research on surveying students and practitioners completed in 1980 and 1990, by Martin Joseph and myself respectively. This paper discusses the differences in the two approaches to the research topic, and the changes which have occurred in surveying education and practice over the last ten years, not least of which has been the growing numbers of women entering an erstwhile predominantly male profession. Emphasis is placed upon how women (as against men) experience the values of the subculture and the process of professional socialisation, and related to this women's place and role within surveying education and practice is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
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19. Race, Categorisation and Educational Achievement.
- Author
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Demaine, Jack
- Subjects
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ACADEMIC achievement , *SOCIAL groups , *ETHNICITY , *TERMS & phrases , *DISCOURSE - Abstract
This paper is concerned with the ways in which terms and categories are deployed in analyses and discussions of differences in educational achievement between social groups whose identity is usually specified in terms of 'race' or 'ethnicity' The first part of the paper is didactic, and discusses problems with the use of 'racial' terms with respect to social, biological and legal discourse. The second part of the paper examines the consequences of categorization for analyses of differences in educational achievement, with particular reference to a paper by Mackintosh & Mascie-Taylor, on which the Swann Committee claims to have relied heavily. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
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20. Ethnicity and Educational Opportunity: case studies of West Indian male-white teacher relationships.
- Author
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Gillborn, David A.
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER-student relationships , *ETHNICITY , *EDUCATION , *WEST Indians , *ETHNOCENTRISM , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SCHOOLS - Abstract
The paper examines the complexity of West Indian pupils' adaptations to school Their situation is such that ability, hard work and a commitment to academic achievement may not be sufficient in the struggle for academic success West Indian pupils face the additional barrier of staff ethnocentrism, which must be handled without reinforcing the widespread belief that they represent a challenge to teachers' authority The size of this task is examined through the use of detailed case studies of pupils drawn from ethnographic research in a single multi-ethnic inner-city Comprehensive The paper describes the strategies which allowed one West Indian pupil to succeed academically, whilst a group of his peers experienced increasingly conflictual teacher-pupil relations which culminated in academic failure and, in one case, expulsion from the school. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
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21. Social capital in the classroom: a study of in-class social capital and school adjustment.
- Author
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Van Rossem, Ronan, Vermande, Marjolijn, Völker, Beate, and Baerveldt, Chris
- Subjects
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SOCIAL capital , *STUDENT adjustment , *CLASSROOM environment , *ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATION , *ELEMENTARY education - Abstract
Social capital is generally considered beneficial for students’ school adjustment. This paper argues that social relationships among pupils generate social capital at both the individual and the class levels, and that each has its unique effect on pupils’ performance and well-being. The sample in this study consists of 1036 children in 60 first-grade classes in 46 Dutch elementary schools. Multilevel regression results show that a substantial proportion of the variance in school adjustment can be attributed to the class level and that both individual-level and classroom-level social capital have substantial effects on school adjustment. At the individual level, the size of one’s network is more important than its structure. At the collective level, social capital also has a ‘dark side’ because it can have negative effects on adjustment, lowering the academic performance in a class. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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22. Counter-narratives of educational excellence: free schools, success, and community-based schooling.
- Author
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Gerrard, Jessica
- Subjects
- *
BRITISH education system , *HISTORY of education policy , *FREE schools , *PLACE-based education , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SOCIAL classes , *EDUCATIONAL objectives , *SOCIALISTS , *SCHOOL children , *TEENAGERS , *ELEMENTARY education , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATION ,BLACK British - Abstract
The notion of ‘competitive excellence’ is an enduring cornerstone of UK educational policy. Most recently, expanding and adapting New Labour’s Academy project with the introduction of free schools, the Coalition’s approach advances and embeds competitive market-based forms of community engagement in education. Responding to this policy paradigm, this paper draws upon history in order to open up the notion of excellence. Through examining alternative practices of achievement and success in histories of community education, I aim to disturb the unquestioned attachment of educational excellence to the ideals of competitive meritocracy. Comparing across two community educational movements – Socialist Sunday Schools (established 1892) and Black Saturday Schools (established 1968) – I explore how achievement and excellence have been mobilised to very different educational aims. In distinct times and circumstances, both of these community initiatives practiced versions of educational achievement that challenged dominant knowledge hierarchies and underlying assumptions of incapability. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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23. The body and pedagogy: beyond absent, moving bodies in pedagogic practice.
- Author
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Ivinson, Gabrielle
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *SOCIAL theory , *YOUTH , *SCHOOLS , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
Following the corporeal turn in social theory, this paper explores how the body is implicated in pedagogic practice and leaning. Focusing on the body has usually been recognised as part of the regulative rather than instructional discourse in schools. Work has begun to redress the mind–body imbalance through the ‘corporeal device’ developed from Bernstein’s ‘pedagogic device’, the fundamental relay through which social inequalities are reproduced in schools. To properly recognise the way bodies act as pedagogic relays requires a robust understanding of persons as multi-sensorial acting beings. Examples for choreographic pedagogy are used to illuminate the complex and multimodal features of instructional discourse and to suggest how the moving body could be enlisted to enhance students’ access to formal academic discourses and better understand why some young people fail to achieve in schools. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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24. Being strategic, being watchful, being determined: Black middle-class parents and schooling.
- Author
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Vincent, Carol, Rollock, Nicola, Ball, Stephen, and Gillborn, David
- Subjects
- *
BLACK people , *EDUCATION , *EDUCATIONAL planning , *PARENTS , *ACADEMIC achievement , *CAPITAL - Abstract
This paper reports on qualitative data that focus on the educational strategies of middle-class parents of Black Caribbean heritage. Drawing on Bourdieu’s key concepts of habitus, capital and field, our focus is an investigation of the differences that are apparent between respondent parents in their levels of involvement with regard to schools. We conclude that, within a broadly similar paradigm of active involvement with and monitoring of schools, nuanced differences in parental strategising reflect whether academic achievement is given absolute priority within the home. This, in turn, reflects differential family habitus, and differential possession and activation of capitals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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25. Success and failure in secondary education: socio-economic background effects on secondary school outcome in the Netherlands, 1927-1998.
- Author
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Tieben, Nicole and Wolbers, Maarten
- Subjects
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SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *OUTCOME assessment (Education) , *ACADEMIC achievement , *HIGH school dropouts , *EDUCATIONAL equalization - Abstract
In the Netherlands, educational attainment is the result of a sequence of separate educational transitions. Because of the tracked nature of the Dutch educational system, students do not make binary stay-or-leave-decisions at each transition. After having entered one track of secondary education, students can change tracks during the entire secondary course. The initial track and the secondary school outcome therefore are incongruent for a significant proportion of the Dutch students. As social background partly predicts initial track placement, track changes and successful termination of the course, we suggest distinguishing conditional and unconditional effects of family background in the transition to secondary school outcome. This paper complements findings of previous research by taking into account the tracked structure of the Dutch educational system and the entire sequence of transitions in secondary education. For the empirical analysis, repeated cross-sections from the Family Survey Dutch Population (1992, 1998, 2000 and 2003) are used. Multinomial logistic regressions reveal that inequality in the outcome of secondary education is partly explained by the fact that initial track placement is socially selective and because this initial inequality is even enhanced by track changes during secondary education. The remaining 'conditional' effect of parental education, however, indicates that parental education works on top of this selection to prevent drop out. Inequality in secondary school outcome thus is a cumulative result of social background effects in a sequence of educational transitions throughout secondary education. Decreasing inequality over time is entirely explained by decreasing inequality in the transition from primary to secondary education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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26. (Mis)Understanding underachievement: a response to Connolly.
- Author
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Gorard, Stephen and Smith, Emma
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL sociology , *ACHIEVEMENT gap , *ACADEMIC achievement , *BRITISH education system , *UNDERACHIEVEMENT ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
In British Journal of Sociology of Education Volume 29 number 3, 2008, Connolly presented what he termed a 'critical review' of some of our previous work on the relative attainment of male and female students in UK schools. He proposed three general areas for criticism - our use of attainment gaps, our consideration of outcomes other than at specific thresholds, and our querying of the idea of student 'underachievement'. These problems, he claimed, have 'given rise to a number of misleading conclusions that have questionable implications for practice'. However, those of his 'criticisms' with any merit are actually the same as our own conclusions, transmuted by Connolly from our papers that he cites, while his remaining 'criticisms' are based on faulty elementary logic. In case readers have not read our work and were somehow misled by Connolly, we give here a brief reply to each criticism in turn. This matters, because a greater understanding of patterns of attainment and of the nature of underachievement is a precursor to the design of successful initiatives to overcome inequalities in educational opportunity and reward. This is both a practical and an ethical issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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27. Underperformance or 'getting it right'? Constructions of gender and achievement in the Australian inquiry into boys' education.
- Author
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Hodgetts, Katherine
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION of boys , *UNDERACHIEVEMENT , *AUSTRALIAN students , *ACADEMIC achievement , *GENDER differences in education - Abstract
The underachievement of boys has been a focus of intense concern in Australia for over 15 years. Historical analyses suggest that male students' poor performance has traditionally been attributed to factors external to boys themselves (methods, teachers, texts), deflecting attention from the relationship between masculinity construction and successful engagement with school. This paper turns the focus back, addressing the ways in which gender itself was constructed within hearings held for the Australian Parliamentary Inquiry into Boys' Education. Discursive analysis demonstrates that witnesses to the Inquiry drew upon a series of gender binaries in representing male and female students, and accounting for their relative attainment. These binaries worked to associate masculinity with 'authentic' learning, such that the success of male students was naturalised even in the absence of achievement. Conversely, the association of femininity and 'inauthentic learning' worked to undermine female students' demonstrated success. The role of these binaries in the reproduction of a paradoxical relationship between gender and achievement is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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28. A new equity deal for schools: a case study of policy-making in Queensland, Australia.
- Author
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Singh, Parlo and Taylor, Sandra
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATION , *ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *SCHOOL autonomy , *RIGHT to education , *LITERACY policy , *HIGHER education & state , *EDUCATION & politics - Abstract
In this paper we draw on concepts from policy sociology to analyse the new equity deal for schools in Queensland, Australia. We examine this 'new deal' through an analysis of the language of 'inclusion' and 'educational risk' in key policy documents associated with a major reform of public education in Queensland. In addition, we analyse the interview talk of key policy actors involved in policy framing, carriage and monitoring. We note that globalism has increased rather than reduced social inequity. At the same time, good quality accessible education can play a crucial role in challenging the inequalities produced by global informationalism. In Queensland, Australia, equity is still on the agenda, but in radically new neo-liberal economic ways. The focus is individualistic - each individual needs to be tracked because they are potentially 'at-risk' of 'school failure'. Identification of 'at-risk' students has been devolved to the level of the school and district, and intervention strategies have to be devised at the local level. Stories of success are then to be shared/networked with other schools. We suggest that while 'target group equity' strategies were limited in terms of addressing issues of social exclusion and inequity, the new deal on equity, a market-individualistic approach is an inadequate alternative. In tough times you stick together. ... This was Labor's 'inclusive' society: a social democracy sustained by the wealth-generating power of free markets and economic integration with the world economy, and made strong by a practical ethic of social cooperation and fair distribution. (Watson, 2002, p. 316) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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29. Bernstein and the explanation of social disparities in education: a realist critique of the socio‐linguistic thesis.
- Author
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Nash, Roy
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL sociology , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SOCIAL psychology , *PHENOMENOLOGICAL sociology , *EFFECTIVE teaching , *EDUCATION , *SOCIOLOGY , *STRUCTURALISM , *SOCIOLINGUISTICS , *LANGUAGE & culture - Abstract
Can an explanation of the origins of social disparities in educational achievement be assisted by a critical examination of Bernstein’s sociology? This central question is approached by a consideration of the status of Bernstein’s socio‐linguistic thesis. The focus is on the nature of the explanations provided. The paper asks: What is the explanatory force of Bernstein’s structuralism? What is the relationship between Bernstein’s sociological explanations and Vygotskian psychological explanations? What are the effects for pedagogy of cognitive socialization mediated by language‐use consistent with Bernstein’s theory? The answers to these questions may pose a challenge for sociologists of education engaged with Bernstein’s sociology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. An assessment of the extent to which subject variation between the Arts and Sciences in relation to the award of a First Class degree can explain the ‘gender gap’ in UK universities.
- Author
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Woodfield, Ruth and Earl‐Novell, Sarah
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCABILITY , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *COMPULSORY education , *EDUCATION of men , *WOMEN'S education , *BRITISH education system , *EDUCATION research ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
There is a widely recognised national trend for girls to outperform boys at all levels of compulsory schooling. With few exceptions, however, most recent research has reported that, in relation to academic performance at university, men are proportionately over‐represented at the First Class level. A number of general hypotheses have been put forward to explain this phenomenon, including those that assume gender‐linked differences in cognitive and/or personality traits. A smaller proportion of research has given explanatory primacy to the broad subject area studied. More specifically, it has been alleged that the over‐representation of men within the First bracket is largely a function of a ‘compositional effect’ whereby men achieve proportionately more Firsts as there are more of them within the First‐rich Sciences. Based upon analysis of 1,707,408 students graduating between 1995 and 2002, this paper seeks to provide the most comprehensive exploration, to date, of this effect. It confirms that a substantial proportion of the ‘gender gap’ can be explained with reference to the male propensity to take degrees in first‐rich disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. ‘There's a war against our children’: black educational underachievement revisited.
- Author
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Crozier, Gill
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement , *HIGHER education of minorities , *EDUCATION of minorities , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *EDUCATION , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper focuses on the educational experiences of a group of African Caribbean and mixed ‘race’ young people from the perspectives of their parents. The discussion is set within a national context where children of African Caribbean origin are one of the lowest achieving minority ethnic groups in the UK and are disproportionately one of the highest ethnic groups of children excluded from school. The parents recount a pattern of cumulative negative experiences which for many of the children results in academic underachievement and becoming demotivated to learn, by a system that they feel has rejected them, or imposed exclusion. The story is hardly new but it provides important further evidence that schools need to tackle head-on factors such as low teacher expectations and negative stereotyping of young black people and their contribution to black underachievement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The 'self-interested' woman academic: a consideration of Beck's model of the 'individualised individual'.
- Author
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Skelton, Christine
- Subjects
- *
SELF-interest , *CONDUCT of life , *EDUCATION , *SOCIOLOGISTS , *MODERNITY , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
The work of Ulrich Beck, particularly his concept of the 'individualised individual', is increasingly cited by educational social scientists. As yet, there have been few empirical investigations that consider how applicable and relevant is the notion of the 'individualised individual' in understanding how people make sense of their lives (for an exception, see Reay, 2003 ). This paper considers Beck's assertion that social class is of increasingly less importance as society shifts from a first to a second modernity. Interviews were carried out into the career experiences of a group of academic women working in higher education institutions. The conclusions reached suggest that if Beck's theory is to be useful in understanding contemporary actors in contemporary societies then the critical concepts he introduces need to be articulated by researchers in more complex ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Pedagogic practices in the family socializing context and children's school achievement.
- Author
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Neves, Isabel and Morais, Ana
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *ACADEMIC achievement , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIALIZATION , *INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
This paper describes a qualitative study about pedagogic practices in the family. The pedagogic code underlying family practices is characterized and related to specific social groups. Students' achievement is discussed in relation to family and school pedagogic practices. The analysis of family pedagogic practice was based on a model derived from Bernstein's theory. The model considers two main dimensions, the coding orientation and its specific realizations in both the instructional and regulative contexts. It provided indicators of the family discursive context and the form in which knowledges and values are transmitted. The model developed allowed a deep and delicate analysis of the family socializing context. The study showed that families differ in their coding orientation and pedagogic practices, and suggested that there are factors other than social groups to determine family's pedagogic practice. It also suggested that specific familial practices may explain children's differential achievement at school. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. One of Us Cannot Be Wrong: the paradox of achievement gaps.
- Author
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Gorard, Stephen
- Subjects
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ACADEMIC achievement , *SEGREGATION in education , *SOCIAL mobility , *EDUCATION , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIAL isolation - Abstract
There are two general groups of methods of calculating achievement gaps (between groups of students in education) in common current usage, similar to those used to calculate social segregation in space and social mobility over time. Each type of method clearly seems valid to its proponents, yet their results in practice are radically different, and often contradictory. This brief paper considers both of these methods and some related problems in the calculation of achievement gaps, in an attempt to resolve the contradiction. The issue is a relatively simple one, but one with significant implications for social researchers as well as commentators in many areas of public policy using similar indicators of performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Racism in Schools and Ethnic Differentials in Educational Achievement: a brief comment on a recent debate.
- Author
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Pilkington, Andrew
- Subjects
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RACISM , *ETHNICITY , *DISCRIMINATION in education , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
Whether schools are racist continues to be the subject of intense debate in Britain. Those writing from an avowedly anti-racist stance argue that schools are responsible for the differential treatment of African-Caribbean pupils and that it is incumbent on them to reflect on their existing practices, while their critics writing from an expressed apolitical stance argue that perfectly appropriate professional practices result in badly behaved pupils receiving differential treatment, that African-Caribbean pupils only receive such treatment because they are more likely to misbehave and that there is no need therefore for schools to re-examine their practices. It is suggested that a way out of this impasse is to recognise that differential treatment and bad behaviour are part of a vicious cycle. While accepting that the evidence for racial discrimination in schools is stronger than the critics maintain, this paper argues, however, that we should be cautious in seeing such discrimination as the major factor accounting for the complex pattern of ethnic differences in educational achievement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Impact of Working-class Mothers on the Educational Success of their Adolescent Daughters at a Time of Social Change.
- Author
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Mann, Chris
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement , *CHILDREN of working mothers , *WORKING mothers , *MOTHER-daughter relationship , *SOCIAL change - Abstract
Current unprecedented levels of academic achievement among girls from all classes raise questions about the contemporary experience of girls in general and, in particular, working-class girls who, historically, perform less well. As the relatively low achievement of working-class girls has been associated with family culture and influence, this, in turn, raises questions about girls' experience in the contemporary family. This paper draws on findings from a recent research project and focuses on the contribution of working-class mothers to girls' achievement. Working-class families were defined as either traditional (retaining traditional gender relations) or transitional (challenging traditional gender relations). Factors which were identified as contributing to a 'transitional' life trajectory for a working-class mother might include: the impact of employment, adult education, the women's movement, and/or the experiences of divorce and lone parenting. The author concludes that while neither traditional nor transitional working-class mothers might become greatly involved in formal aspects of schooling, it is clear that their relationships with their daughters strongly influence their academic experience. Mother-daughter relationship seemed to favour girls' educational achievement in three main and interconnected ways: (a) by emphasising independence, (b) by providing emotional support, and (c) by influencing girls' values in the light of current social change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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37. The Influence of Education and Family Background on Women's Earnings in Midlife: evidence from a British national birth cohort study.
- Author
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Kuh, Diana, Head, Jenny, Hardy, Rebecca, and Wadsworth, Michael
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN'S employment , *EDUCATION , *SOCIAL background , *WAGES , *COHORT analysis , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
Studies which have investigated the influence of education on adult earnings art almost exclusively concerned with men and take hale account of family influences on either education or later earnings Those studies which have information on women's earnings focus on Lender differential rather than differences between women in opportunities and outcomes This paper which examines the influence of education and family background on the midlife earnings of a national cohort of British women born immediately after the Second World War is an attempt to redress this situation. It shows that the few women who net able to take full advantage of the expansion us educational opportunities and achieve high educational qualifications earned significantly more us adult life than less educated females Family background played an important role, both through its effect on early educational achievement and attitude to school work, which in turn influenced the type of secondary school attended and the achievement of educational qualifications, and also by well-educated mothers raising their daughter's career expectations or providing successful role models In adult life, employment characters which indicated a long-term commitment to fill-time work and the decision not to have children, or to delay childbearing, were also important predictors of later economic success in this cohort, but did not explain the prior effects of education and family background. Advanced educational qualification were the key to economic success for women born in the early post-war period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Linking Class and Gender Inequality: the family and schooling.
- Author
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Toomey, Derek
- Subjects
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EQUALITY , *SOCIAL classes , *GENDER , *FAMILY-work relationship , *ACADEMIC achievement , *HOME environment - Abstract
Some feminists have argued that a woman's class position should be determined by her own employment and work history, whereas Goldthorpe has argued that the family is the basic unit in class analysis, with the husband's occupation determining the class position of all family members, including the wife's Goldthorpe denies that this position as an example of gender bias, claiming that class and gender inequality are separate issues This paper argues that gender and class inequality are strongly interconnected, by virtue of the importance of the work in child-rearing earned out by the wife-mother and its effects on the child's scholastic achievements and life chances It shows that within-family processes are more important than clew position in affecting children`s scholastic achievements It further argues that children `s family environments are affected by the biographies of both parents The institutional separation of the family, schooling and the work-place means that there will be great variability in the biographies of parents who are in the same `class position' by virtue of their occupations The notion of a single indicator of `class position' therefore seems inappropriate, and too static for the complex. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Influence of the Social Context of the School on the Teacher's Pedagogic Practice.
- Author
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Domingos, Ana M.
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL sociology , *TEACHERS , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SECONDARY education , *SOCIAL classes - Abstract
The paper is part of a broader study which investigates the relation between differential patterns of achievement in the sciences at the secondary school level and social class, and in which a relation was found between the high level of conceptual demand of modern science courses and the underachievement of the working-class pupils Thu relation is mediated by a number of sociological factors, the teacher being one of them This study describes the assessment we made of teachers' pedagogic practice and its influence on pupils' achievement The evidence obtained shows that teachers differ greatly in the level of conceptual demand they make of their pupils and an their ability to enable pupils to attain that Level Both of these competencies of the teacher are strongly related to the social context of the school where he/she teaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Schools Effects in Scottish Secondary Schools.
- Author
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Willms, J. Douglas and Cuttance, Peter
- Subjects
- *
SECONDARY education , *SCHOOLS , *SOCIAL background , *SCHOOL children , *STUDENTS , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
The present paper examines whether there is significant variation in schooling outcomes between Scottish secondary schools, and if so, how much is associated with pupil intake, and how much is associated with the schools they attend It also examines whether schools vary in their effectiveness for different types of pupils, and whether schools tend to be superior, or inferior, across three different outcome measures The study employed a subsample of data from the 1977 Scottish School Leavers Survey on over 700 pupils from 15 schools in one administrative division These data were linked to data on the verbal reasoning quotients of the pupils, derived from a test administered to them before they entered secondary school For each of the 15 schools we estimated the expected scores on measures of English, arithmetic and overall attainment for pupils with below average, average, and above average ability, controlling for pupils' verbal ability, gender, prestige of father's occupation, mother's education, and number of siblings The study shows there was wide variation in schooling outcomes between secondary schools in the division, even after controlling for family background characteristics and pupil ability prior to entering secondary school There were few schools that were particularly effective for low ability pupils, but not high ability pupils and vice versa Schools tended to be effective, or ineffective, across all three outcome measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Cultural Themes in Educational Debates: the nature culture opposition in accounts of unequal educational performance.
- Author
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Carrier, James G.
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATION , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper investigates certain aspects of the debate about the causes of unequal educational performance By analyzing two illustrative explanations of performance. It shows that the debate appears to be shaped by a fundamental theme in modern Western culture, the nature-culture opposition. This suggests that the knowledge that we have concerning educational performance is influenced not only by the social and political interests and positions of educators and researchers, but also by more basic cultural concerns, and if we want to understand both educational performance and the debate surrounding it, we need to be aware of this broad influence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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