This book provides an inclusive and incisive analysis of the experiences of working-class young people in education. While there is an established literature on education and the working class stretching back decades, comparatively there has been something of a neglect of class-based inequality â with questions of gender, 'race' and other forms of identity attracting significant attention. However, events including Britain's 2016 decision to leave the European Union, have thrown social class into sharp focus, both in the UK and elsewhere. Featuring leading thinkers in the sociology of education, this book examines the different ways in which young people relate to various parts of the education system, including different forms of schooling, post-compulsory and university education. They maintain that the issue of social class goes beyond the walls of specific institutions to affect young people in a variety of ways: not only in the UK, but across the globe. This book will be of greatvalue and interest to students and scholars of the sociology of education, working-class youth, and equality of opportunity.

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Education and Working-Class Youth
Reshaping the Politics of Inclusion
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eBook - ePub
Education and Working-Class Youth
Reshaping the Politics of Inclusion
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Topic
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Education GeneralŠ The Author(s) 2018
Robin Simmons and John Smyth (eds.)Education and Working-Class Youthhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-90671-3_10Education and Social Class: How Did We Get to This and What Needs to Change?
Robin Simmons1 and John Smyth1, 2
(1)
School of Education and Professional Development, University of Huddersfield, Huddersfield, UK
(2)
Federation University Australia, Ballarat, Australia
This book draws together eight chapters on education and social class written by leading scholars based in the United Kingdom, Australia and the Republic of Ireland. The different chapters are based on a range of conceptual and empirical research, and focus on how class-related inequalities are enacted in schools, universities and the various locations in which vocational education and training is carried out. The authors draw on a range of traditions and use the ideas and arguments of a variety of critical thinkers. These range from Plato and Aristotle to Gramsci and Althusser , Pierre Bourdieu , and Raymond Boudon to Avery Gordon and Valerie Walkerdine . Taken together, the different chapters represent a varied and wide-ranging critique of the classed nature of education but certain key themes run throughout the text. These deal with various objective and subjective dimensions of social class and include patterns of educational participation and non-participation; the interface between class, gender and other forms of difference; and debates about the relationship between education, work and the economy more broadly. Or, as Dave Hill points out in his chapter, the different ways in which social class affects where we live; the type of school we attend; the qualifications we are likely to get, and the jobs we obtain; how we are treated by teachers, careers advisers, employers and others in authority; and various other dimensions of our lives.
This concluding chapter locates the classed nature of education within a critical socio-historical framework, and reflects on some of the conundrums facing young people as they attempt to navigate the vicissitudes education and work. It also considers a number of strategies which may begin to ameliorate the multiple disadvantages facing working-class youth, or at least prevent their situation from worsening. These relate, on one hand, to the subjective practices of education as well as the more systemic matters which also shape young peopleâs experiences of learning. We also deal with broader, structural questions about the relationship between education, work and social class more generally. Whilst lived experience is deeply important, we need to recognise that the social, economic and political context in which learning takes place can both intensify and exacerbate inequality or else go some way towards promoting equity and social justice.
Education and Social Class: Continuity and Change
Much political discourse in âadvancedâ Western nations presents education as performing numerous positive functions for the individual, the economy and society more broadly. Typically, these include boosting national competitiveness and economic growth, âup-skillingâ the workforce, promoting social cohesion and driving social mobility. Education can be a progressive force and many working-class children, adults and young people have, over time, benefited socially, culturally and materially from various forms of education and trainingânot only in formal settings like schools, colleges and universities but also through trade union and adult education, in early-years settings, or via the numerous spheres of informal education through which learning also takes place. We should, however, also remember that education, at least for the working classes, has always been bound up with social control as much as emancipation (Lawton 1975).
The notion that those from different social backgrounds are more or less suited to particular forms of learning can, as Terry Hyland reminds us in his chapter on craftwork, be traced back to Ancient Greece and the relative value of different âFormsâ of education proposed in Plato âs Republic. Such divisions have traditionally characterised Western education systems and, in England, the ruling classes have attended exclusive fee-paying schools since the Middle Ages. For most of the population though, formal education, where it has existed at all, has been provided mainly by religious and voluntary groupsâa trend which has also been encouraged more recently through the introduction of academies and the free school movement (Ball 2012). Notions of education for democracy and the social good had nevertheless become popular by the nineteenth century, at least in some quartersâalthough events such as the Great Exhibition of 1851 and the 1867 Paris International Exposition also illustrated the inadequacies of laissez-faire in fighting increasing economic and military competition from Europe and further afield. Introducing the English 1870 Education Act, W. E. Forster claimed that:
Upon the speedy provision of elementary education depends our industrial prosperity⌠uneducated labourers are for the most part, unskilled labourers, and if we leave our workfolk any longer unskilled they will become overmatched in the competition of the world. (Forster 1870)
Forsterâs words resonate with contemporary discourses about skill, globalisation , the knowledge economy and so forth but the social upheavals of industrialisation and urbanisation, and the rise of Chartism and other working-class movements, also led to a belief that formal schooling would help make the lower orders both more civilised and compliant. Adam Smith, for example, saw education as a means through which the working classes would become:
[M]ore respectableâŚmore capable of seeing through the interested complaints of faction and sedition⌠less apt to be misled into any wanton or unnecessary opposition to the means of government. (Smith 1785, p. 305)
Eventually the provision of mass schooling became unavoidable but this brought to the fore questions about how, where and for what purpose(s) working-class children were to be educated (McCulloch 1998; Brown 1987). Either way, state involvement initially related mainly to elementary education; state secondary schools continued to charge fees until after the end of World War II and no coherent system of technical and vocational education existed in England until the middle of the twentieth century. Whilst the mechanics institutes can be traced back to the Victorian era, provision was patchy and uneven, and many of Englandâs major industrial centres were still without any adequate vocational education as late as the 1930s (Bailey 1987). The universities meanwhile remained exclusive institutions, catering essentially for the privileged few, at least until the 1960s.
Most orthodox analyses present the 1944 Education Act as an integral part of the social settlement between labour and capital which took place after the end of World War II (Gewirtz and Ozga 1990; Batteson 1999). Undoubtedly, the 1944 Act introduced some significant reforms, including the replacement of elementary schools with a new system of primary and secondary education, and the abolition of fees for all state-run schools . It also raised the school-leaving age to 15, recommended new arrangements for special education and nursery provision, and triggered a great expansion of post-compulsory education across England and Wales. The Act has, however, also been criticised for its role in maintaining the existing social order (see Simon 1990). Both Church-controlled education and the public schools were, for example, left untouched despite considerable public support for the abolition of fee-paying schools and the exclusion of religious bodies from state-funded education. Meanwhile, the tripartite system of secondary schooling introduced by the 1944 Education Act arguably did more to maintain social divisions than reduce them. It is important to remember that leading figures within the Conservative Party were among the Actâs most enthusiastic supporters and arguably they, in conjunction with a privileged civil service elite , were able to ensure continued selection and other socially-divisive practices (Chitty 1989).
The institutional structure of grammar , technical and secondary modern schools was also predicated largely on the assumption that children could be classified according to aptitude and ability, and the notion that different categories of pupils required different forms of schooling which would, in turn, best suit their character and intellect. Criticisms of the tripartite system are, of course, well knownânot least its discrimination against working-class children and the central part it played in the reproduction of class-based inequalities in education and society more broadly (Batteson 1999). The flawed nature of the 11-plus examination upon which pupilsâ educational future was decidedâand, by extension, their working lives thereafterâis also widely recognised. Though presented as an objective measurement of intelligence, the 11-plus was in fact heavily loaded in favour of the middle classes, and systematically biased against girls who had to achieve a higher mark to pass the examinationâarrangements justified by a discourse of fairness and objectivity as well as ancient beliefs about the existence of different kinds of minds able to function more or less well at different levels of cognition (Humphries 1981, p. 48).
Cherry-picking âbrightâ working-class pupils to go to grammar school was, however, championed as a way of increasing social mobility, and no doubt many such children rose above the status of their parents. This, of course, ignores the alienation and disillusion felt by many working-class...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Front Matter
- Where Is Class in the Analysis of Working-Class Education?
- Revisiting the âZombie Stalking English Schoolsâ: The Continuing Failure to Embrace Social Class in Working-Class Education
- Counternarratives to Neoliberal Aspirations: White Working-Class Boysâ Practices of Value-Constitution in Formal Education
- Performance, Choice and Social Class: Theorising Inequalities in Educational Opportunity
- âA Chance to Talk Like Thisâ: Gender, Education, and Social Haunting in a UK Coalfield
- The Re-composition of Class Relations: Neoliberalism, Precariousness, Youth and Education
- An Intersectional Approach to Classed Injustices in Education: Gender, Ethnicity, âHeavyâ Funds of Knowledge and Working-Class Studentsâ Struggles for Intelligibility in the Classroom
- Education, Social Class and Marxist Theory
- Beyond the Vocational/Academic Divide: Inclusion Through Craftwork and Embodied Learning
- Education and Social Class: How Did We Get to This and What Needs to Change?
- Back Matter
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Yes, you can access Education and Working-Class Youth by Robin Simmons, John Smyth, Robin Simmons,John Smyth in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Education & Education General. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.