Class Differences in Achievement - External

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  • Class Differences in Achievement - EXTERNAL
    • Cultural Capital
      • Bourdieu - Three types of Capital
        • Educational and Economic Capital
          • Middle-class children are better equipped to meet the demands of the school curriculum
          • Wealthier parents can convert their economic capital into educational capital by sending their children to private schools.
        • Cultural Capital
          • Middle-class culture gives an advantage to those who possess it.
          • Argues through their socialisation, middle-class children acquire the ability to grasp abstract ideas
          • MC more likely to understand what the education system wants for success
          • Gives MC children an advantage in school where these interests are highly valued
          • Shows the education system is not neutral, but favours the dominant MC culture.
        • A test of  Bourdieu's ideas
          • Sullivan uses a questionnaire to conduct a survey of 465 pupils in 4 schools to assess their cultural capital
          • She asked them a range of questions such as TV habits and reading
          • She found that those who read complex fiction developed a wider vocabulary, indicating a greater cultural capital.
        • Argues that both cultural and material factors contribute to educational achievement
    • Cultural Deprivation
      • Language
        • WC
          • Communicate with gestures, single-words and disjointed phrases
          • Deficient
          • Grow up incapable of abstract thinking
          • Simple, descriptive senteces
          • Restricted Code - context-bound
          • Feel excluded and become less successful
        • MC
          • Elaborated Code - context-free
          • Wider vocabulary
          • Grammatically complex sentences
          • Advantage in school - used by teachers and books
        • BERSTEIN
      • Parent's Education
        • Parenting style
          • Educated parents emphasise on discipline and high expectations of their children
          • Less educated parents are harsh or have inconsistent discipline
          • Prevents the child from learning independence and self-control
        • Use of Income
          • Better educated parents tend to have higher incomes
            • better understanding of nutrition and with their income they can buy more nutritious foods
          • Bernstein and Young found that MC mothers are more likely to buy educational toys, books and activities for their children
          • WC homes lack these resources which means these children lack intellectual skills when they start school
        • Parent's Educational Behaviour
          • MC
            • Engage  by reading to their children, teaching them letters and numbers.
            • More successful in establishing good relationships with teachers
            • Recognise the educational value of activities such as visiting libraries and museums
          • WC
            • Don't encourage their children
            • Visit school less
      • WC Sub-culture
        • Sugarman
          • Fatalism
          • Collectivism
          • Immediate Gratification
          • Present-time Orientation
        • Sections of the WC have different goals, beliefs, attitudes and values from the rest of society
        • Compensatoy Education
          • Extra resources for deprived areas
          • Operation Head Start -1960s
          • Improve parenting skills, setting up nurseries and home visits
          • Sesame Street - numeracy and literacy skills
        • Myth?
          • Keddie sees it as victim-blaming
          • Blackstone and Mortimore reject that working-class parents are not interested in their child’s educationtled
            • Attend fewer parents evenings as they work longer, or unusual hours
            • May want to help their child but lack the knowledge and education to do so
        • Cultural deprivationists argue that parents pass on their values of their class to their children through primary socialisation.
    • Material Deprivation
      • Housing
        • Direct effects such as overcrowding can make it harder for a child to study
        • Overcrowding means less room for educational activities, to do homework and disturbed sleep
        • Families living in temporary accommodation may find themselves frequently moving schools, disrupting their child's education
        • Cold or damp housing can cause ill health
        • Children in overcrowded homes run a greater risk of accidents
      • Diet and Health
        • Poor nutrition weakens the immune system and lowers children's energy levels. this may result in absence from school due to illness
        • Children from poorer houses are more likely to have emotional or behavioural problems.
        • Howard notes that young people from poorer homes have lower intakes of energy, vitamins and minerals.
        • Wilkinson found that in ten-year-olds the lower the social class, the higher the rate of hyperactivity, anxiety and conduct disorders
      • Financial Support and the Costs of Education
        • Tanner et al found that uniforms, books and computers placed a heavy burden on poor families.
        • Lack of financial support means that children from poorer families have to do without equipment and miss out on experiences that would enhance their achievement.
        • As a result, poor children may have to do with hand-me downs and become stigmatised and bullied
        • Children in poverty take on jobs such as paper rounds which often has a negative impact on their work.
      • Fear of debt
        • Attitudes towards debt may deter WC students from going to university
        • Callender and Jackson found that WC students are more debt averse, and saw more costs than benefits in going to university
        • Found that attitude to debt was important in deciding whether to go to university
        • Reay found that WC students were more likely to apply to local universities so they could live at home
      • Poverty is closely linked to educational underachievement as evidence shows that exclusion and truancy are more likely to come from poorer families
    • Summary
      • MC pupils tend to achieve more than WC pupils.
      • MC have more cultural capital - better placed to take advantage of the choices offered in the education system
      • Material deprivation means WC children are more likely to have poorer diets, health and housing.

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