class differences in achievement - internal factors Flashcards

1
Q

what is labelling, and how do teachers label unfairly

A

to attach a meaning/ definition to an individual

regardless of pupils actual ability or attitude, teachers label on stereotypes assumptions of their identity

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2
Q

what do interactionists study in labelling

A

labelling, in classroom/ playgrounds behaviours
small scale, face to face interactions between individuals

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3
Q

what is a study that shows have teachers label based on stereotypes of students backgrounds

A

Becker - 60 Chicago high school teachers judged pupils based on according to how closely they fitted image of the “deal pupil’
MC pupils= closer to ideal than WC

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4
Q

what is a sutdy that shows that teachers have different notions of their own ideal pupil

A

Hempel-Jorgensen studies two primary schools - notions vary according to social-class make up the school

WC Aspen primary school - discipline a major problem , ideal pupil = quiet, passive + obedient. children defined by behaviour, not academic ability

MC rowan primary school - few discipline problems, ideal pupil based in personality not behaviour

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5
Q

what sociologists state that school persistently produce working class failure because of assumptions and labelling of teachers

A

interviews in 9 secondary school, teachers normalised underachievement of WC, unconcerned by it. believed WC parents are uninterested by underachievement whereas MC are more involved +support

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6
Q

in dunne and gazeleys study how did teachers react to underachievement between classes in context to class and parent support

A

MC parents viewed to be more supportive so if MC were failing, extension work was set for improvement but WC pupils were entered for low tier exams as abilities were underestimated

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7
Q

what study shows that labelling also happens in primary schools

A

Rist’s study of American kindergarten shows. teachers used info from kids backgrounds + appearance to place children in separate tables
MC children = tigers. teacher showed greatest encouragement
WC children = sat far away ‘clowns’ ,read low level books, given less chances to show abilities

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8
Q

what are the steps are the self - fulfilling prophecy

A

step 1 ; teacher labels and so makes predictions
step2; teacher treats pupil accordingly, acting as if prediction is true
step3 ; pupil internalises expectation, becomes a part of his self-concept or self-image

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9
Q

A study that shows how teachers treat students will cause them to respond accordingly

A

Rosenthal + Jacobson - pupils given IQ tests to identify “spurters”
20% picked at random as ‘spurters’, on return a year later 47% “spurters’ showed improvement in performance

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10
Q

why did some ‘spurters performance improve a yar later when IQ test was repeated

A

teachers showed encouragement to those who were viewed as spurters, more frequent interactions, setextension work

students internalised - self fulfilled the label

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11
Q

how can self-fulfilling prophecy produce underachievement

A

if teachers have low expectations of students and communicate these expectations in their interactions, children may develop negative self- concept
e.g fulfilling label of failure

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12
Q

what is streaming

A

streaming - categorisation based on general academic ability

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13
Q

what is evidence of how streaming + setting can be unfair to WC

A

Becker - teachers do not see WC as ideal, they lack ability+ low expectations, so WCare in low streams

once streamed it is difficult to move up from stream, students are locked into low level expectation
this created a self-fulfilling prophecy

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14
Q

what is a study shows that streaming can have a negative impact on cognitive development

A

Douglas - children in low stream at age 8 had suffered decline in IQ by 11
in contrast MC are in high streams, and so develop positive self-concept + confidence
IQ increases by 11

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14
Q

what is a study shows that streaming can have a negative impact on cognitive development

A

Douglas - children in low stream at age 8 had suffered decline in IQ by 11
in contrast MC are in high streams, and so develop positive self-concept + confidence
IQ increases by 11

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15
Q

what is a study that proves that teachers label unfairly based on stereotypes that leads to the failure of minorities

A

Gillborn + Youdell - Black + White are less likely to be seen as having an ability and so entered for low tier exams

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16
Q

how does assuming the ability of white and blacks lead to lower attainment ( Gillborn + Youdell)

A

White +Black are entered for low - tier exam that may underestimate ability.
they are denied of the knowledge + opportunity needed to gain good grades

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17
Q

how do league tables lead to underachievement of WC and black pupils

A

schools need to achieve good league table position to attract funding + pupils

schools focus time on MC - most likely to get good grade, whereas WC + ethnic minorities are ignored

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18
Q

what is the educational triage

A

sorting students into 3 categories
1. those who will pass anyway
2. borderline C/D
3. hopeless cases

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19
Q

how does educational triage cause inequality

A

those viewed as hopeless cases are most likely to be black or WC - stereotypes

leads to self fulfilling prophecy as they are put in low streams where they are ignored

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20
Q

what policies have increased streaming and setting as schools want good league table position

A

marketisation policies

21
Q

what is differentiation in subcultures

A

process of teachers categorising pupils according to how they percieve them based on attitudes/behaviour

e.g streaming

22
Q

what is polarisation in subcultures

A

the students response to teachers differentiation by moving to two poles of extremes

23
Q

what sociologist studied subcultures and explain study

A

Lacey - boys grammar school. he found that streaming leads to response of polarisation into pro + anti school subculture

24
Q

what is the anti - school subcultures and who is fitted in it

A

WC boys + loss of self - esteem = inferior status from school
leads them gaining status from peers

inverting school values pf hardwork, obedience + punctuality

25
Q

what is the pro - school subcultures and who is fitted into it

A

MC - committed to school values because school values them
gain status in approved manner - academic sucess

26
Q

why is joining an anti- school subculture negative for a pupils

A

leads to a self - fulfilling prophecy of failure

27
Q

what is a study on abolishing streaming and how does it improve pupils attitudes to learning

A

Ball - study of Beachside a comprehensive that was abolishing streaming

basis for students to polarise into subcultures largely removed - anti school decreased

however teachers still differentiate by labelling.

28
Q

what act increased streaming

A

Education Reform Act

29
Q

who studied responses to labelling and streaming

A

Woods argues of other responses

-ingratiation - teachers pet
-ritualism - going through notions + staying out of trouble
retreatism - daydreaming + mucking about
-rebellion - outright rejection of everything education stands for

30
Q

what sociologists says that students are not permanently fixed to one response

A

furlong - students not fixed to specific response - depends on different subjects/ how teachers treat them in individual subjects

31
Q

what does labelling and streaming tell us about education

A

education is not a fair or just system as cultural deprivation theorists assume

interactions within schools actively create social class inequalities

32
Q

what is the labelling theory accused of, how does fuller dismiss this

A

labeling theory accused of determinism - assumes that pupils have no other choice but to fulfil the prophecy

humans have free will to accept or reject theory - Fuller’s study - girls reject label + work hard

33
Q

why do Marxists criticise the labelling theory

A

labelling theory ignores wider structures of power within which labelling takes place

labelling theory blames teachers for labelling but fails explain why they do so

marxists - labelling is not only from teachers prejudices but also stem from education system produces class divisions

34
Q

who focuses on the interactions between working class pupils identities and how it produces underachievement

A

Archer et al

35
Q

what is habitus

A

dispositions / learned ways of thinking, being, acting shared by a social class

it is their preferane of lyfestlye, + consumption

36
Q

how is habitus formed

A

it is formed as a response to its position in the class structure

37
Q

why does the education system place higher value on the middle class habit than the working class habitus

A

MC have power to define its habitus as superior and to impose it on education system as they are higher in the hierarchy

so schools puts higher value on MC preferences, tastes

38
Q

how does education putting value on middle class habitus cause symbolic capital and symbolic violence

A

schools = MC habitus, so pupils who have been socialised into MC habitus gain symbolic capital

school devalue WC habitus so WC tastes + preferences = worthless = symbolic violence

39
Q

what does Bourdieu call the witholding of symbolic capital

A

symbolic violence

40
Q

why is educational success a process of losing yourself for working class students (archer et al)

A

WC feel to be successful, you must lose yourself by changing how they talked presented themselves
they see entering good careers + universities as MC spaces, ‘it is not for the like of us’

41
Q

how do working class students seek self - worth and status from alternative ways of the education system

A

WC invested in styles - e.g nike.
wearing brands is way of being authentic, girls develop hypersexual female identites

42
Q

what is the conflict between the educations values and working class pupils identites

A

the schools MC habitus leads to devalueing WC identities, thier Nike is seen as tasteless and are punished for

43
Q

why do the working class see higher education as unrealistic

A

HE is not for ‘people like us’. its for richer, posher, cleverer people
HE is an unaffordable + risky investment

44
Q

why do the working class see higher education as undesirable

A

HE would not suit their preferred lifestyle/habitus
e.g they did not want to live on a student loan as it does not allow them to afford the street styles

45
Q

ingrams study

A

2 groups of WC catholic boys from deprived neighbourhood - 1 group in grammar school, 1 in secondary school

the grammar school had strong MC habitus of high expectations + ambition, whereas secondary school = WC habitus

WC identity is inseparable from belonging to WC locality, it gives a strong sense of belonging. WC communities place emphasis on conformity

grammar school boys felt pressure to fit in, feeling tension of WC + MC habitues
e.g Callum ridiculed for coming in, in a tracksuit - symbolic violence

46
Q

evans findings of reluctancy of applying to Oxford

A

21 WC girls from south London comprehensive school
reluctant to apply to Oxford - fear of not fitting in + hidden barriers

girls had a strong attachment to their locality

47
Q

how does internal and external factors relate in habitus and symbolic violence

A

WC habitus + identity gained from socialisation + community is rejected by MC values of education

identities are devalued resulting in symbolic violence

48
Q

how do internal and external fators relate in speech codes and labelling

A

WC who use restricted code may be labelled by teachers as less able - leads to self fulfilling prophecy

49
Q

how do internal and external factors relate in student backgrounds and teachers judgement of stereotypes

A

Dunne + Gazeley - what teachers believe about WC pupil backgrounds actually produces underachievement

50
Q

how do internal and external facotrs realte in poverty and stigmatisation

A

poverty leads to buying hands me downs - unfashionable things that leads to stigmatisation - tanner et al