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Daniel Talbot – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2023
This article seeks to contribute to recent theorizing around the concept of powerful knowledge. I begin with a discussion of the current use of the term in both academia and the wider institutional environment of schools. I then give a detailed account of its origins in social realism before exploring different iterations of the concept in recent…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Learning Theories, Epistemology, Realism
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Lisa Mckenzie – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2024
Higher education should be a social good for everyone and, despite the intentions of university policy on inclusion and diversity with schemes on widening participation, the truth is that for working-class students, university is still a place where they encounter prejudices and feelings of exclusion. This article uses the method of…
Descriptors: Working Class, Adult Learning, Adult Students, Higher Education
Giroux, Henry A. – Harvard Educational Review, 2023
In the past ten years radical educators have developed several theories around the notions of reproduction and resistance. In this article, Henry Giroux critically analyzes the major positions of these theories, finding them inadequate as a foundation for a critical science of schooling. He concludes by outlining the directions for a new theory of…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Power Structure, Personal Autonomy, Social Justice
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Gulati, Nidhi – Contemporary Education Dialogue, 2022
This commentary navigates the oeuvre of Ariés' writings on childhood, family, private life and death, with a focus on interrogating 'who is a child?' Departing from the intellectual history prevalent at the time, Ariés deployed the psychogenic approach to study the cultural history of childhood and family. He examines the quotidian experience of…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Children, Historiography, Educational Sociology
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Singh, Harshit Pratap – Contemporary Education Dialogue, 2022
All aspects of our lives, including educational access and quality, are affected by our socio-economic position. This reflective note about the author's educational experiences describes the interlinkages of caste and education. It talks about how those experiences played an integral role in shaping the author's beliefs about caste, reservation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Autobiographies, Social Class, Access to Education
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Muñoz-García, Ana Luisa – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2021
This article focuses on the ways in which international students from Chile narrate their experiences in the US, and the extent to which mobility across national borders reshapes social class understandings and privilege. To complete this study, I conducted 13 in-depth interviews and a focus group with five Chilean graduate international students…
Descriptors: Social Class, International Education, Educational Sociology, Foreign Countries
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Bunnell, Tristan – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2021
The well-established yet under-theorised body of 'Traditional International Schools' warrant much greater sociological analysis and inquiry as 'elite' educational institutions. This paper uses Basil Bernstein's "Sociology of the School" to discuss the 'expressive culture' of such schools, representing an idealised model of conduct,…
Descriptors: Advantaged, International Schools, Ceremonies, Values Education
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Davies, Scott; Rizk, Jessica – Review of Educational Research, 2018
This article examines evolving uses of Bourdieu's signature concept of Cultural Capital in American educational research. Bourdieu originally developed the concept in the 1960s and 1970s by mixing French intellectual traditions with ideas from American social science. American researchers have adopted the term over three generations. The first…
Descriptors: Cultural Capital, Educational Research, Educational History, Educational Sociology
Heller, Rafael – Phi Delta Kappan, 2019
Kappan editor Rafael Heller interviews Annette Lareau about her research into different experiences of childhood and family life. In her observations of families of different social classes, she learned that upper-middle-class families approach parenting as an act of "concerted cultivation" requiring ongoing attention, making them more…
Descriptors: Child Development, Family Life, Interviews, Social Class
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Sehgal Cuthbert, Alka – English in Education, 2019
This paper draws on Gramsci's concept of hegemony to locate the Newbolt Report, published in 1921, within a context of the weakening political authority of Britain's ruling class. One indication of this is the fact that in 1917 200,000 workers were involved in strikes in 48 British towns. The moral and cultural dimensions of the problems facing…
Descriptors: Moral Values, English Instruction, English Curriculum, Reports
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Smyth, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2016
This paper is both a careful analysis of a seminal piece of work in the sociology of education, as well as a passionate plea to revisit with renewed urgency, the way in which education continues to fail unacceptably large numbers of working-class children. Through closely examining the work of Dennis Marsden (with his colleague Brian Jackson) in…
Descriptors: Educational Sociology, Working Class, Failure, Social Class
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Smyth, John – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2016
Young people from working-class backgrounds are feeling increasingly insecure in school, and for good reasons. The institution of schooling is being converted into an instrument of neoliberal control. In this paper, I discuss how schools are becoming increasingly insecure places for working-class young people, and how they are responding, and I do…
Descriptors: Youth Problems, School Safety, Working Class, Neoliberalism
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McCulloch, Gary – Journal of International and Comparative Education, 2016
The history of education has often been interpreted either in terms of its importance for education, or for its value as part of history, or for its relevance to the social sciences. However, there is also an inclusive tradition in the history of education that appeals to all three of these constituencies, with distinguished pioneers in Emile…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Trends, Historiography, Educational Sociology
Whitty, Geoff – Trentham Books, 2016
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) tells us that 90 per cent of education reforms are not properly evaluated. So it seems that governments have not lived up to their own ideals of evidence-informed policymaking. "Research and Policy in Education" argues that education policy is as often driven by political…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Research, Educational Policy, Politics of Education
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Delamont, Sara – Oxford Review of Education, 2014
The work of John Furlong on school and classroom ethnography is located in its context and its achievements celebrated. The paper focuses on class, ethnicity and gender issues as it explores the changes and continuities in the ethnography of education over the 66-year period covered. The qualities of a good ethnographer are playfully compared to…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Social Class, Ethnicity, Qualitative Research
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