Functionalism Perspective Flashcards
(29 cards)
What does Durkheim argue?
that society needs a sense of social solidarity
What is social solidarity
its individual members must feel themselves to be apart of a ‘single body’ or community
What does Durkhiem argue would happen without social solidarity within society?
social life and cooperation would be impossible because each individual would pursue their own selfish desires
How does Durkheim argue the education system helps create social solidarity?
by transmitting society’s culture from one generation to the next generation
How does the National Curriculum aid Social Solidarity?
it teaches a country’s history which instils in children a sense of a shared heritage and a commitment to the wider social group
What does Durkheim argue if value consensus broke down?
society would fall into anomie
What is vital for social solidarity?
Functionalist see an ethnocentric curriculum as being vital for social solidarity
Why might postmodernist criticise Durkheim?
Postmodernists might criticise Durkheim for his assumption that society needs shared value as Britain has become much more multicultural in recent decades and the extent to which there is a single British culture is debatable
How does Parson see the school as?
the ‘focal socialising agency’ acting as a bridge between the family and wider society
Why is the bridge needed?
family and society operate on different principles so children need to learn a new way of living if they are to cope with the wider world
What does Parson think the education system is?
meritocratic, so that children learn the importance of hard work
Parson argues that children are judged by particularistic standards which is
rules that only apply to that particular child
In families, the child status is
ascribed, which is fixed by birth
An example of an ascribed status?
An elder son and a younger daughter are given different rights or duties because different age and sex
what does the school and the wider society judge us all by?
the same universalistic and impersonal standards e.g. the same laws apply to everyone and within education each pupil is judged against the same standards as they all sit the same exam and the pass mark is the same for everyone
In both school and work, our status is
achieved not ascribed e.g. at work we gain promotion or fired depending on how good our work is whilst at school we pass or fail due to our own idnividual efforts
How does Parson see schools as preparing us to move from the family to wider society?
because school and society are both based on meritocratic principles
What is a meritocracy?
everyone is given an equal opportunity, and individuals achieve rewards through their own effort and ability
Criticisms of Parson Meritocracy
Marxists criticise the appearance of meritocracy as nothing but an ideology and they call this the myth of meritocracy - they argue that the proletariat are persuaded to believe that the rich and powerful reached their position through their hard work and their natural ability rather than their privileged birth because this then leads them to accept inequality as fair
Bowles and Gintis Criticism of Meritocracy
conducted a study which demonstrated how IQ played a small part in academic success which translated into economic success and this depended on social class, ethnicity and gender significantly
Davis and Moore argue that the education system
has the function of role allocation
What does education do?
it sifts and sorts people into appropriate jobs based. on their work ethics and ability and the most able people gain the highest qualifications and go on to have the highly rewarded positions
what does Davis and Moore argue?
that people social class is directly linked to their abilities and effort and in olden times the rich could only afford schooling but this is no longer the case
What is the education system specifically designed for?
to give everyone a fair chance and therefore each individuals allocated role in society is their own doing