The Role of Education in Society Flashcards

1
Q

Explain what functionalists mean by ‘value consensus’.

A

An agreement among society’s members about what values are important.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

What do functionalists aim to explain when studying education?

A

What function education performs in society. What does it do to help meet society’s needs?

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

According to Durkeim, explain how education helps to create social solidarity.

A

Solidarity is when individual members of society must feel as part of a single ‘body’ or a community.
It transmits our shared values and beliefs from one generation to the next.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

How does school resemble a ‘society in miniature’?

A

School also acts as ‘society in miniature’, preparing its students for wider society. Both in school and at work we have to interact with others according to an impersonal set of rules that apply to everyone.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

According to Durkheim, why does education need to teach specialist skills?

A

Most industrial economies have a complex division of labour, where the production of even a single item usually involves the cooperation of many different specialists. Durkheim argues that education teaches individuals the specialist knowledge and skills that they need to play their part in the social division of labour.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

According to Parsons, what are particularistic standards?

A

Rules that only to a particular child. Similarly, in the family, the child’s status is ascribed. For example, an elder son and a younger daughter may be given different rights or duties because of differences of age and sex.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

According to Parsons, how does education act as a bridge between the family and wider society?

A

Both school and wider society judge us all by the same universalistic and impersonal standards. For example, in society, the same laws apply to everyone. Similarly, in school, each pupil is judged against the same standards.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

What is meritocracy?

A

When everyone is given an equal opportunity, and individuals achieve rewards through their own effort and ability.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

According to Davis and Moore, why is it important for role allocation to be meritocratic?

A

They argue that inequality is necessary to ensure that the most important roles in society are filled by the most talented people. For example, it would be inefficient and dangerous to have less able people performing roles such as a surgeon or an airline pilot.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

How does education achieve meritocracy?

A

It acts as a proving ground for ability. Put simply, education is where individuals show what they can do. It ‘sifts and sorts’ us according to our ability. The most able gain the highest qualifications, which then gives them entry to the most important and highly rewarded positions.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

What is human capital?

A

Worker’s skills.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

State four criticisms of the functionalist perspective.

A
Wrong argues that functionalists have an over-socialised view' of people as mere puppets of society. 
Neoliberals and New Right argue that the state education system fails to prepare young people adequately for work.
There is ample evidence that equality in education does not exist. For example, achievement is greatly influenced by class background rather than ability. 
Marxists argue that education in capitalist society only transmits the ideology of a minority - the ruling class.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

State two characteristics of neoliberalism.

A

They believe that the state cannot meet people’s needs and that people are best left to meet their own needs through the free market.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

For neoliberalists, what is the value of education?

A

How well it enables the country to compete in the global marketplace. They claim that this can only be achieved if schools become more like businesses, empowering parents and pupils as consumers and using competition between schools to drive up standards.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

State three similarities between the New Right and the functionalist views.

A

Both believe that some people are naturally more talented than others.
Both favour an education system run on meritocratic principles of open competition, and one that serves the needs of the economy by preparing young people for work.
Both believe that education should socialise pupils into shared values, such as competition, and instil a sense of national identity.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Identify one key difference between functionalism and the New Right.

A

The New Right do not believe that the current education system is achieving the goals they want. The reason for its failure, in their view, is that it is run by the state.

17
Q

According to the New Right, what is the solution to the problems of state education?

A

.They argue that the state education system takes the ‘one size fits all’ approach, imposing uniformity and disregarding local needs. The consumers who use the schools - pupils, parents and employers - have no say. Their solution is the marketisation of education. They believe that competitions between schools and empowering consumers will bring greater diversity, choice and efficiency to schools and increase schools’ ability to meet consumers ‘ needs.

18
Q

Briefly outline Chubb and Moe’s proposed system for education.

A

They want to introduce a market system that would put control into the hands of the consumers. They argue that this would allow consumers to shape schools to meet their own needs and would improve quality and efficiency.

19
Q

According to the New Right, what are the two roles for the state in education?

A

The state imposes a framework on schools within which they have to compete. For example, by publishing Ofsted reports and league tables of schools’ exam results, the state gives parents information with which to make a more informed choice between schools.
The state ensures that schools transmit a shared culture. By imposing a single National Curriculum, it seeks to guarantee that schools socialise pupils into a single cultural heritage.

20
Q

State four criticisms of the New Right perspective.

A

Gewirtz and Ball both argue that competition between schools benefits the middle class, who can use their cultural and economic capital to gain access to more desirable schools.
Critics argue that the real cause of low educational standards is not state control but social inequality and inadequate funding of state schools.
There is a contradiction between the New Right’s support for parental choice on one hand and the state imposing a compulsory national curriculum on the other.
Marxists argue that education does not impose a shared national culture, but imposes the culture of a dominant minority ruling class and devalues the culture of the working class and ethnic minorities.

21
Q

Define the capitalist class.

A

Otherwise known as the bourgeoisie, are the minority class. They are the employers who own the means of production. They make their profits by exploiting the labour of the majority - the proletariat.

22
Q

Define the working class.

A

Otherwise known as the proletariat, they are forced to sell their labour power to the capitalists since they have no means of production of their own and so have no other source of income.

23
Q

What do Marxists see as the main function of education?

A

A way of preventing revolution and maintaining capitalism.

24
Q

Define ideological state apparatus.

A

Maintaining the rule of the bourgeoisie by controlling people’s ideas, values and beliefs. The ISAs include religion, the media and the education system.

25
Q

Define repressive state apparatus.

A

Maintaining the control of the bourgeoisie by force or the threat of it. The RSAs include the police, court and army. When necessary they use physical coercion to repress the working class.

26
Q

According to Althusser, which two functions does education perform?

A
It reproduces class inequality by transmitting it from generation to generation, by failing each successive generation of working class pupils in turn. 
It legitimates class inequality by producing ideologies that disguise its true cause. The function of ideology is to accept that inequality is inevitable and that they deserve their subordinate position in society.
27
Q

According to Bowles and Gintis, what is the role of the education system?

A

To reproduce an obedient workforce that will accept that inequality is inevitable.

28
Q

Outline the findings out Bowles and Gintis’s study.

A

Bowles and Gintis conclude hat schools reward precisely the kind of personality traits that make for a submissive, compliant worker.

29
Q

Give three examples of the correspondence principle.

A

Bowles and Gintis argue that the correspondence principle operates through the hidden curriculum - that is, all of the lessons that are learnt in school without being directly taught.
Cohen argues that 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. It lowers their aspirations so that they will accept low paid work.

30
Q

Explain what Bowles and Gintis meant by the ‘myth of meritocracy’.

A

The myth of meritocracy serves to justify the privileges of the higher classes, making it seem that they gained them through succeeding in open and fair competition at school. This helps persuade the working class to accept inequality as legitimate, and makes it less likely that they will seek to overthrow capitalism.

31
Q

What are the characteristics of the lads’ counter-culture?

A

They are scornful of the conformist boys who they call ‘ear’oles’ (boys who listen to teachers). The ‘lads’ have their own brand of intimidatory humour, ‘taking the piss’ out of ear’oles and girls.

32
Q

What are the similarities between the counter-culture and the shopfloor culture?

A

Both cultures see manual work as superior and intellectual work as inferior and effeminate. This leads to males thinking they are superior to women.

33
Q

How does the counter-culture prepare the lads for the work that capitalism needs someone to perform?

A

Having been accustomed to boredom and to finding ways of amusing themselves in school, they don’t expect satisfaction from work and are good at finding diversions to cope with the tedium of unskilled labour.
Their acts of rebellion guarantee they will end up in unskilled jobs, by ensuring their failure to gain worthwhile qualifications.

34
Q

What do Chubb and Moe argue is wrong with state education?

A

It has not created equal opportunity and has failed to meet the needs of disadvantaged groups.
It is inefficient because it fails to produce pupils with the skills needed by the economy.
Private schools deliver high quality education because, unlike state schools, they are answerable to paying consumers - the parents.

35
Q

What is the correspondence principle?

A

When the relationships and structures found in education mirror or correspond to those in work.