1 / 19

Schooling and the Reproduction of Inequality: Part II

Schooling and the Reproduction of Inequality: Part II. General Point: Whereas the “meritocratic thesis” proposes sorting decisions in school are based on achievement, race, class, gender, physical condition still matter. Classroom. Classroom. 1. 2. 3. 4. 4. 3. 2. 1.

platt
Download Presentation

Schooling and the Reproduction of Inequality: Part II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Schooling and the Reproduction of Inequality: Part II General Point: Whereas the “meritocratic thesis” proposes sorting decisions in school are based on achievement, race, class, gender, physical condition still matter

  2. Classroom Classroom 1 2 3 4 4 3 2 1 State & Federal Policies Political-Economic Constraints 1 the school 2 the district 3 the neighborhood 4 the community Levels of Context from Wilcox, "Differential Socialization . . ."

  3. The Uneven Distribution of Educational Resources: External to Schools • State and federal policies • The [unintended] effects of neighborhood schools, tax structure (Anyon; Bowles & Gintis) • Community Issues • “White Flight” response to desegregation policies • Legacy admissions: 1 in 4 vs. 1 in 8 at Stanford

  4. Differential Distribution of Resources in Schools: Teachers • Staffing Policies based on seniority • Alternatives? • Incentives?

  5. Differential Distribution of Qualified Teachers

  6. Differential Distribution of Teaching Materials in Schools

  7. AP Courses in SDCS As of 1998 Research Question: Any Change since 1998??? Hi Income High Schools (La Jolla, Scripps, Pt Loma): Average: 24.5 Lo Income H.S.: (Hoover, Crawford, Lincoln) Average: 6 Differential Distribution of Resources in Schools: Courses

  8. Classroom Classroom 1 2 3 4 4 3 2 1 State & Federal Policies Political-Economic Constraints 1 the school 2 the district 3 the neighborhood 4 the community Levels of Context from Wilcox, "Differential Socialization . . ."

  9. Tracking and Contest Mobility Compared Slide 1

  10. Differential Access to Resources by Students Tracking Counseling -Erickson: “gatekeeping” -Cookson & Percell: “preparation for power” -McDonough: private counselors

  11. Track Placement by SES: National Data Source: USDOE, Ed Trust 1998

  12. Track Placement by Race/Ethnicity: National Source: USDOE; Ed Trust, 1998

  13. Access to College Prep Courses: San Diego Source: CBEDS: Oct 1997

  14. Differential Access to Resources by Students: Classrooms • Ability Grouping High Ability Group • Differential treatment (self fulfilling prophecy) • GATE Middle Ability Group Low Ability Group

  15. Differential Access to Resources by Students: Classrooms • Relations of Authority in Work are Recapitulated in School (Bowles & Gintis “correspondence principle”) • School recapitulates the factory • Individualism & competition from turns at talk to PhD/LD/MD • Regimentation of time and space

  16. Our schools, are in a sense, factories, in which raw products (children) • are to be shaped and fashioned into products to meet the demands of life. • The specifications for manufacturing came from the demands • of 20th century civilization, and it is the business of the school • to build its pupils according to the specifications laid down • (Cubberly, 1916: 338).

  17. Discipline and Control Messages: Middle SES students: internal control messages Future orientation [show gender tape--kids in rug] “Our 15 minutes are up. Have you used them wisely? “Will this misbehavior help you become a better reader?” “that’s really being an independent reader” Differential Socialization in the Classroom: Wilcox

  18. Low SES students: External control messages Focus on orderly work habits: timeliness, conformity, docility “You can’t get a rat out until I say so” “No playing ball in the hall because I said so” “No running in the room” “No fighting” Differential Socialization in the Classroom: Wilcox

  19. Summary Schooling contributes to the reproduction of inequality, perpetuates stratification • Schools sort--on merit (achievement), but ascription (race/ethnicity, class, gender) still matters • Achievement Ideology--used by less powerful to blame themselves for their own failures • School as vehicle for mobility--for elites more than lower income families and their students

More Related