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Class and Achievement Sociologists are interested in the inside and outside school processes that lead to differentiated achievement (where different groups achieve different grades base on a social characteristic e.g. class, gender and ethnicity). There are many different sociologists that will be covered in this topic, and there is also a lot of new language to get used to, however, if you stick with it the light bulb will come on. To start with begin to think of all of these issues as separate and as unrelated, this will help you to learn all of the separate components that might disadvantage a social group. Once you are ok with the processes of external and internal factors on achievement then start to link them together under the branches of class, gender and ethnicity. If you start to feel very clever then you can start to comment on which factors are more influential on differentiated achievement. Internal Factors- Factors inside schools that lead to students achieving or failing the education system, they include labelling, student subcultures, the self-fulfilling prophecy and the type of school attended. External Factors- outside school or home factors that can influence educational achievement, for example, material deprivation, cultural deprivation, and cultural capital There are also two other factors to take into account cultural and material factors which can also be internal and external factors. Cultural factors are to do with intellectual development, language and attitudes to the education system So thinks you can touch that might advantage of disadvantage you in the education e.g. cultural deprivation, poor socialisation, and not valuing the schools values e.g. hard work. Material factors are factors that disadvantage you because you physically lack something. So things like material deprivation, a lack of resources, environmental poverty and poor housing that all might affect achievement. Cultural Deprivation Think about this child, is he born a brat, or has he learnt this behaviour at home. If he continues this behaviour which has been learnt and accepted in primary socialisation will he have the social skills and attitude needed to succeed at school? Cultural Deprivation Theorists (CDT) suggests that most people begin to gain the basic values, attitudes and skills that are needed for educational success during primary socialisation. This is things like good language skills, selfdiscipline and reasoning skills. However, CDT suggests that a large majority of working class families fail to socialise their children with the appropriate skills. They suggest they grow up culturally deprived- in other words without the social skills that are vital for achieving in the education system. Cultural Deprivation is made up of the following factors: - Linguisting Development (Bernstine) Intellectual Development (Douglas) Attitudes and Values (Sugarman) Cultural Deprivation Intellectual Development- JWB Douglas Can we really expect working class parents who failed the education system and who can’t read to take an interest in their child’s education? Or to read to them when they might not be able to themselves! Cultural deprivation can lead to cultural reproduction Link This is to do with the development of thinking and reasoning skills needed for school- for example the ability to solve problem. CDT suggest that working class parents fail to provided intellectual toys, trips and books that will aid a child’s intellectual development. This is how they suggest working class children are deprived of the vital foundation needed to progress within school. Thus they are at a disadvantage before they even begin at school- in other words they are deprived of basic knowledge. Douglas found that WC pupils scored lower on tests of ability than middle class pupils. He suggested the one of the biggest factors that led to cultural deprivation was the lack of parental interest in intellectual development. He suggested working class parents were less likely to be interested in their child’s education, to turn up to parents evening and to read to their children at night. Basil Bernstein and Douglas Young (1967) found that the way mothers think about has and influence on their child’s intellectual development. Middle-class mothers are more likely to choose toys that encourage thinking and reasoning skills and prepare children for school Language- Bernstine Sociologists Carl Bereiter and Siegfried Engelmann suggest that the language used in lower-class homes is poor and not developed enough for students to access the middle class education system. They suggested that LC families use gestures to communicate, or single words or disjointed phrases rather than proper English. This affects achievement as students lack the language skills to explain, describe, enquire, and compare issues that might be discussed in schools. They are also incapable of reasoning skills, and are unable to complete abstract thinking skills. Because of this they feel left out by the education system from an early age. Bernstein strengthens Bereiter and Engelmann’s ideas by developing the concepts elaborate and restricted codes. He suggested that these differences in language codes gives middle-class children and advantage at school as they speak the elaborate code which is the code used by the textbooks and teachers at school. However the working-classes are disadvantaged as they use the restricted code which is characterised by a very limited vocabulary, and is often grammatically incorrect. Bernstein suggest that the elaborate code gives MC students that ‘tools’ needed in the education system for reasoning, explaining and decoding texts that might be studied in schools. As MC children are socialised into the elaborate code from a young age they are already fluent with the language being used at school and therefore feel included when entering the education system. On the other hand WC children feel excluded. Bernsteins Method Ao2- is language always an issue? Is it really the fault of the parent- what about if they haven’t had the socialisation to give their children the right speech code, shouldn’t the education system be trying to stop this from happening and make it accessible for all? Attitudes and Values- Sugarman CDTs suggest the parents’ attitudes and values are one of the major factors that affect educational achievement. Douglas found the WC parents places little values on education and were less ambitions about their children’s future. He also suggested they gave them less support and encouragements and placed little values on visits to school to discuss their child’s progress. He suggested that these poor attitudes and lack of interest in their child achievement leads to a lack of motivation from WC students’ and therefore a lack of educational attainment. Feinstein suggests the WC parent’s lack of interest in their child education what the main reason for underachievement. He suggests that a lack of interest was a bigger barrier to achievement than financial hardships or factors within school. He suggests MC children achieve higher grades as their parents are more interested and committed to their child’s achievement. Bernstein used a storyboard similar to this in his research (it depicted a football hitting a window) the children who were 5 years old were asked to describe what had happened in the pictures. The middle class children used completed language to describe what happened and could even suggest how people might be feeling. However the WC student could only basically describe the story as they are bound by the language that they have at their disposal and are only capable of a limited analysis of the scene in front of them. Is this experiment reliable? Is it Valid? Has he operationalized his concept of class and how he picked the students to use? E.g. did he look at parental occupation or income? Subcultural attitudes- a subculture is a group whose attitudes and values differ from those of the mainstream culture. According to CDTs they argue that the WCs have different goals, beliefs, attitudes and vales from the rest of society Marxists would suggest that the and this is why their children fail at school, as their education system is unfairly run, and that it only favours goals are different to those of the education system. educational success for the MCs. (Ao2- so far all of these CDT’s blame the WC’s for their They would suggest that through failure saying they ‘lack’ the tools to access the the false consciousness WC students have obtained these education system, however, Bourdieu argues strongly against this, see beliefs that they are unable to Cultural Capital) Hyman supports this subcultural view suggesting that these different values and attitudes are a ‘self-imposed barrier’ to educational and career success. He suggests that WC pupils believe they have less opportunity in society and less change of gaining a high status job that they begin to devalue the succeed and there for are manipulated to take low paid jobs that will benefit the RCs. This is how cultural reproduction occurs. Functionalists, however, would suggest that the education system is meritocratic and that if WC student does want to achieve they have the opportunity to do so- however, they have to value the goals of the education system in gaining qualifications. education system. This leads them to no value the education system and they become less willing to make sacrifices for education e.g. staying on at sixth form and believe leaving school early for manual paid labour is a better goal that deferred gratification. Their subcultural beliefs and values ensure that they neither want educational success, nor know how to get it. Barry Sugarman argues that a working class subculture has four key features that act as barriers to educational achievement: - Fatalism Collectivisum Immediate Gratification Present Time Orientation •Beliefe in fate- what will be will be and there is nothing you can do about it. Contrasts with MC values that they can work to change thier fate. Believing that they are going to fail the education system based on their class before they even start. •Valuing being a part of a group more than succseeding as an individual. Believing that the groups norms and values are more important that ones own and not wanting to go against them. Contrasts to MC values that the indivudaly should follos their own goals •Seeking pleasure now rather than making a scarrifice to enjoy a reqard later. For example leaving school at 16 to gain a manual job with wages comming in every week but with a limited opportunity to earn more money in the future. Contrasts to MC attitudes of deffered gratification e.g. going to universtity and getting into debt to have a better future in the long run. •Seeing the present as more important the the future and not having ling term goals or plans. Contrasts to MC attitudes of future planning (future-time orientation) e.g. saving for a morgage. WC students internalise these beliefs and values that are part of their subculture through the socialisation process and this results in underachievement. Sugarman suggests these different class values occur because MC occupations tend to be more secure careers offering promotional opportunities that will benefit the individual. This he suggests encourages ambition, long-term planning and a willingness to invest time and effort in gaining qualifications. In contrast WC jobs are less secure and have no career structure, which gives no real change of promotion or individual advancement. Their earning potential also peeks at an early age. CDT suggests parents pass on their values of class to their children through primary socialisation. They suggest MC values equip children for success whereas working-values fail to do so. Ao2- Can you see how the WCs over time might really start to internalise these attitudes and values. However, you need to make a judgment in an essay on Cultural Deprivation on what really came first- was it the Working classes who had bad attitudes or was it the education system that really started to disadvantage and label these student’s creating a self-fulfilling prophecy and made the WC’s part of an anti-school subculture. You don’t have to make a solid decision in an essay but you need to consider it within your argument. Also are CDTs being deterministic- for examples are all working class families going to have these attitudes and values? E.g. would a vicar’s family suffer from cultural deprivation? Also what is the starting point for social class, are sociologists using the registrar general, are they using parental occupation or income to determine class- Don’t forget to be a smart cookie in the exam! Policies to Tackle Cultural Deprivation Compensatory Education- a policy designed to provide extra resources to schools and communities in deprived areas. This policy attempted to intervene in the early socialisation process t compensate for a lack of cultural awareness in the home. This attempted to tackle language skills, intellectual development and attitudes and values towards the education system. Head Start is a program in America aimed at providing support for students who suffer from cultural deprivation. This was a multi0billions dollar scheme aimed at pre-school students in poor areas. Its aim was ‘planned enrichment’ of deprived children’s environment to develop learning skills and instil achievement and motivation. It also aimed to improve parenting skills, setting up nursery classes, home visits by health visitors and educational psychologists, and the creation of intensive learning programmes for deprived children. Sesame Street was initially part of the Head Start program aimed at providing a means of reaching young children and transmitting values and attitudes needed for educational success. This included the importance of punctuality, hard work, numeracy, literacy and general knowledge. In Britain Educational Priority Areas were created in the 1960’s the Labour government designated schools in deprived areas as "Educational Priority Areas" and promised to give them extra money for school-building projects. It had also been proposed by the Plowden Committee, whose idea it was that teachers should receive a special allowance for working in difficult schools. The education priority areas were gradually absorbed into more general aid programmes for deprived areas. They failed to make radical changes to the nature of schooling. Hence the introduction of EAZ’s, which was all part of Tony Blair’s promise to concentrate government policy on “education, education, education” In the late 1990’s Educational Action Zones were introduced were local charitable partnerships (including schools, parents and other representatives from the local community and private sector) which aim to develop imaginative approaches to raising educational standards in seriously disadvantaged areas. Each of the first 25 zones receives £750,000 of annual grant funding and is expected to raise £250,000 each year in business contributions. They aimed at tackling schools that had high truancy rates, and which often took in a very high proportion of working class pupils. Sure Start was introduced in 2000 and was a nationwide programme aimed at pre-school children and their parents. It had non-educational goals like improving children’s health, but it had a huge impact on educational achievement at Sure Start provided places with educational toys where children could improve their intellectual development. By 2010 all young children in the most disadvantaged agrees had access to one of these centres. The aim of Sure Start was to work with parents to promote physical, intellectual and social development of babies and young children; it was designed to tackle cultural reproduction. It also helped to identify children with special educational needs early on. Counter Argument- Nell Keddie CDTs have been widely criticised for explain the differences in class achievement. Nell Keddie describes cultural deprivation as a ‘myth’ and sees it as a victim-blaming culture and argues that working class children are simply culturally different, not culturally deprived. She suggests they fail in education because they are put at a disadvantage by middle class dominated values which oversee and run the education system in Britain. Keddie suggests that rather than seeing WC culture as inadequate, schools should recognise and build on its strengths and should challenge teachers’ anti-working class prejudices. Barry Troyna and Jenny Williams argue that schools and teachers have a ‘speech hierarchy’ and that they label middle class speech highest followed by working class speech and then finally black speech. Blackstone and Mortimore reject the idea that WC parents are not interested in their child’s education. They suggest they attend less parent’s evenings because they have to work more not because of a lack of interest. They also suggest WC parents might be put off by MC teachers and the MC atmosphere of school. They want to help their children progress but often lack the knowledge and education to do so. Some critics argue that compensatory education schemes are a smokescreen concealing the real cause of under-achievement, which is social inequality and poverty which is not being tackled by the government sufficiently. They argue the problem is not cultural deprivation but poverty and material deprivation. Material Deprivation CDTs blame educational failure on the inadequacy of working-class norms and values. Other sociologists disagree that this is the main reason why working class children underachieve in the education system and suggest that material deprivation is the main factor. Material deprivation means that lack of materials and necessities such as income and adequate housing, and is linked to poverty. Link Poverty is closely linked to educational under-achievement In 2006 only 33% of children receiving free school meals gained 5 of more GCSEs at A*-C (as apposed to 61% of children not on FSM) Jan Flaherty (2004) suggests that money problems in the family are a significant factor in younger children’s non attendance at school Exclusion and truancy are more likely for children from poor families. 90% of failing schools are located in deprived areas Working-class families are much more likely to experience poverty as their incomes are much lower and they are more likely to live in inadequate cheap housing. These factors can severely affect children’s achievement at school. Housing Poor housing can affect pupils’ achievement both directly and indirectly. Overcrowding can have a direct effect by making it harder for the child to study. They may also not have enough room for educational activities, nowhere to do homework and their sleep might be disturbed as they may share bedrooms. All of this can lead to poor performance in school and also to a lack of teacher input as the student may become labelled at lazy. For young children a lack of a safe space to play can affect their development. Families who move from temporary accommodation due to financial hardships may also affect achievement as children may have to move schools, or may begin to feel disjointed and loose equipment by moving so regularly. Indirect affects of poor housing can have affects on the child’s health and welfare. If children grow up in crowded homes there is a greater risk of accidents. Cold and damp houses can also cause ill health for example breathing difficulties such as asthma might mean children are more probe to chest infections and in turn have long absences from school. Children may also suffer from psychological distress from the fact that they are moving regularly or that they are worried about money themselves. Diet and Health- Marilyn Howard (2001) Howards suggests that young people from poorer homes have lower intakes of energy, vitamins and minerals. Poor nutrition affects health as it can weaken the immune system and lower a child’s energy levels. This can lead to absences form school due to illness, and difficulties concentrating in class. With the price of fresh fruit and vegetables constantly going up especially since the recession it is not surprising that on a limited income families are bulk buying un-nutritious ready meals. Imagine the future for this young boy growing up in a council flat in London and suffering from environmental poverty. He has no safe space to play, and he often finds broken bottles and needles in his local playground. His school is in a deprived area and most of his friends live in the same block. His parents suffer from material deprivation and his only hot meal of the day is when he gets his FSM at lunch time. How is his future looking? Is he culturally deprived or just materially deprived? Do you think he has chosen this life for himself or has this life been chosen for him. If he has the right attitude towards education can he still achieve and get out of this area? Children from poorer homes are also more likely to have emotional or behavioural problems. Richard Wilkinson suggests that among ten year olds, the lower the social class, the higher and the rate of hyperactivity, anxiety and conduct disorders, all of which are likely to have a negative affect on the child’s education. The Cost of Education David Bull (1980) looks at ‘the cost of free schooling’ in the UK. He suggests that although the school system in the UK appears to be free there are many hidden costs that disadvantage working class pupils, for example the cost of uniforms, transport, basic equipment, lunch, and school trips. A study in Oxford by Emily Tanner also back this up suggesting that the costs of all of the things needed place a heavy burden on poorer families. As a result students may have to do with hand-me-downs and cheaper by unfashionable equipment. This may result in them being stigmatised or bullied in school for being poor. # Flaherty suggests that the fear of stigma can be clearly seen when looking at FSM, where 20% of pupils eligible for them refuse to take them. Ridge found that children from low income families also had to work to help with the family income, which often leads to a negative impact on their schooling. In contrast to CDTs who suggest that it is because WC pupils have a sub-cultural attitude such as immediate gratification and present time orientation- Material deprivation theories suggest that this move is to do with being stigmatised and because of necessity. Financial restriction can often explain why WC pupils leave school at 16 to gain full time employment, rather than going to university. Sunderland University 13% of pupils dropped out compared to 1.4% at Cambridge. This is linked to the fact that a higher proportion of WC students attend Sunderland than Cambridge. Think about the educational opportunities you would have if you lived in one of these areas- do you think that you would be going into higher education? Rates of people entering Higher education have risen year on year until 2005 when student figures started to fall- this is linked to the political situation and the social policies that governments put in place to help students access higher education. However compare these maps to the ones below and look at the poverty rates linked to GCSE rates- see if there are any correlations. In both of these graphs think about how class and poverty are really linked to educational achievement. If you were given an exam question on cultural or material factors you need to be able to make a judgement on whether one has more impact on a student’s achievement. Material factors like housing clearly have some impact on achievement, however, children from poor families do still achieve regardless of their material deprivation. Or is a lack of achievement really down to attitudes and values? Think about Michel Carroll, the lottery winner, he technically is upper class based on his monetary status; however, does he have the attitudes and values that would allow him and his family to achieve in the education system. Also what about the quality of the school? Can a child have the right attitudes and values but attend a ‘bad’ school that can change their attitude towards educational achievement, or vice versa with a poor WC student attending a grammar school e.g. by passing the 11+ or gaining a scholarship (remember the Too Poor for Posh School Documentary).Final Thought- Mortimore and Whitty (1997) argue that material inequalities have a greater effect on achievement than school factors. Peter Robinson (1997) argues that tackling child poverty would be the most effective way to boost achievement. Cultural Capital Marxism Link You can link Bourdieu to other Marxists Pierre Bourdieu (1994) suggests that both that we have studied- for example see if you can link any part of Bourdieu’s cultural and material factors contribute to concepts to Bowles and Gintis, Paul Willis education achievement, and that they are not and Althusser. Key Marxists Concept Link separate but interrelated. Also being a Marxist Myth of meritocracy, Correspondence he disliked the term ‘cultural deprivation’ as principal, hidden curriculum he suggested that the working classes were Also think about the connections you disadvantaged by a middle class system that could make to other theories either was bias against them- rather than them ‘lacking’ a set of backing them up or criticising them. For example could you link this idea to appropriate norms and values he suggested that the WC’s had their parentocracy and social policy with own values that were devalued by the education system. This is why parents moving to new catchment areas? he chose to use the term Cultural Capital as he suggested that the knowledge, attitudes, values and money that the MC’s possess has an advantage over that of the WC’s (capital is a Marxist key term referring to money- here capital will be linked to knowledge as well as financial capital). Bourdieu 3 types of capital Cultural Capital Econdomic Capital Educaional Capital Note:- although Bourdieu gives 3 distinct types of capital he suggests they can all be interrelated and all link to one and the same as it is these 3 types of capital that lead to WC education failure. Cultural Capital Bourdieu coined this term to refer to wealth of knowledge, attitudes, values, language, tastes and abilities of the middle classes possess. He suggests that the MC’s culture is a capital- like a wealth that gives and advantage to those who possess it. He is similar to Bernstein who argues that through socialisation the middle classes acquire the ability to grasp, analyse and express abstracts ideas, and because of this they are more likely to develop intellectual interests and understanding of what the education system requires for success. Thus he suggests that the middle classes are at an advantage when they enter the education system as the education system is based on Middle class values and run by middle class teachers teaching a middle class curriculum. Bourdieu suggests that the education system in not natural but favours and transmits the dominant middle-class culture (contrasts to functionalist theories who suggest that the education system transmits the shared norms and values of the whole of society). Working class children find that school devalues their culture and views it as ‘rough’ and inferior’. The WC’s lack of cultural capital can lead to exam failure. He also suggests that the education system transmits a message the education system in not meant for working class students through the hidden and formal curriculum by excluding their culture. In doing this working class students start to truant, and try to leave school early and in doing this cultural reproduction occurs and social mobility becomes more difficult. Economic Capital Middle class parents have a better income that working class parents and therefore can provide material goods needed to success at school, for example laptops and access to the internet. They can also afford to pay for cultural experiences such as holidays and museum trips that can all add to educational achievement. They can also pay for the best schools by sending their children to private schools. They can also use their economic and educational capital to move into areas with the best schools so that their children enter the best comprehensive schools- this is known as selection by catchment (remember that selection is the process by choosing students e.g. the 11+ or by a talent like drama or music). They can also pay for extra tuition if their children require it. They are also more likely to have their children attend university as they can help with the financial costs. Educational Capital This can be argued is the biggest reason why the MC’s achieve in the education system as if a WC parent has economic capital they may give the correct attitudes and values of the education system to their child and value education. They may also be able to help with homework thus allowing the cycle of cultural reproduction to be broken. However, many WC parents have been failed by the middle class education system and have a negative opinion of it and this is transmitted to their children. The WC’s are also less likely to be able to understand the league tables which are publishedin MC paper and thus they do not understand the hierarchy of schools in their local schools. They are also put off from attending parent’s evenings as they feel inferior and excluded by the middle class teachers. Does Bourdieu’s Concept Work Today? Alice Sullivan (2001) used questionnaires to conduct a survey of 465 pupils in four schools. She wanted to assess the student’s cultural capital, and in trying to assess it she asked them about a range of activities they did in their spare time. As indicators of cultural capital she asked about reading, watching TV, going on visits to museums, theatres and art galleries. She also used their vocabulary and knowledge as cultural indicators (similar to Bernstein). Research Methods When any research method is used you must begin to evaluate it using the following factors Practical- did it work? Did they use the method as it was the easiest one to use? Ethical- did it break any moral codes? Did it endanger anyone or make them feel uncomfortable? Theoretical- what type of data was collected qualitative or quantitative and what are the advantages and disadvantages of that type of data Reliability- could this research be done again and would you get very similar or the same results? Validity- did it measure what it set out to measure? Does it give an accurate picture of what is occurring? This is a great way to get you into Ao2 marks, and although you wouldn’t spend too much time on evaluating a method in the first half of the paper it is useful to know and may give you a few marks if you can point out issues with the evidence. Plus it all helps for the theory and methods section. She found that those who read complex fiction and watched serious TV documentaries developed a wider vocabulary and greater cultural knowledge, which she suggested shows a greater cultural capital. The children with the greatest cultural capital were children of graduates. These pupils were more likely to be successful at GCSE. Although successful pupils with greater cultural capital were more likely to be middle-class, Sullivan found that cultural capital only accounted for part of the class differences in achievement. Where cultural capital was the same level between a WC and MC student the MC student still did better. In conclusion Sullivan suggests that the greater resources and aspirations of MC families explain why the class gap in achievement is so large. Gewirtz- Marketization and Parental Choice In 1988 the conservative government passed the Education reform act which lead to greater parental choice of schools (marketization is the process where schools became more like a market place where parents could pick and choose the school they wanted rather than just going to the school in your catchment area). Since this act sociologists have been interested in the effect that greater parental choice has had on the education system- for example has greater parental choice benefited all students or just those of the MC’s? Gewirtz (1995) examines the question in a study of class differences in parental choice of secondary school. She studies 14 London schools and used interviews with teachers and parents, and school documents (as secondary data) to explore the impact of marketization. She also uses Bourdieu’s ideas of cultural capital to explain her findings. She found that differences in economic and cultural capital lead to class differences in how far parents can exercise choice of secondary school she identifies 3 main types of parents (see below), who had varying degrees of cultural capital. Privileged-Skilled Choosers • Maily professional middle-class parents who used their economic and cultural capital tp gain educational capital for their children. Being confident and well educated they were able to take full advantage of the choices open to them. The parents had cultural capital, they knew how the schools admissions sytem worked, could use the appeals system and could understand theleauge tables. They also had econimic capilat meaning they could move into areas with the best schools, or even pay for trnasport for their children to go to beeter schools. They saw picking the best school as a way of planning for their childs future. Disconnected- Local Choosers • Working class parents whose choices were resticted by their lack of econimic and cultural capital. They found the schools admissions process difficult and they were less confident in dealing with the school. they were less aware of the opportunities open to them and less able to minipulate the sytem to their advantage. Many of these parents attached more importance to the saftey and quality of school facilites than to league tables or long-term abitions. The location of the school was the bigest concern as they were unable to pay for costly transport. ofen the loac comprehensive was they only option. Semi-Skilled Choosers • Minly working class but unlike disconnected loacl choosers they were abitios for theur children. Hwoever they lacked the cultural capital and found the schools admission process very difficult. They also had little knoeldge of the shcools market and often relied in peoples oppinions rather than the leauge tables. They were often frustrated at the inability to get thier children to the best schools. Gewirtz concludes that MC families with cultural and economic capital are better placed to take advantage of the opportunities available to them- for example moving home, or being able to understand the admission process. In theory marketization gives all parents a better choice; however, in practice it advantages MC parents who possess cultural capital. Whitty suggests that marketization has not led to more opportunities for WC children. Instead it has allowed the middle class to use their wealth and knowledge more effective than before. How to use this information The key to all sociology is to make links with things that you already know, and have already studied. Differentiated educational achievement is the biggest topic in year 12 and you have to be able to make linked to sociological theory (e.g. functionalism and Marxism) and methods (e.g. questionnaires, observations). This pack just deals with class, but you must also link this to gender, ethnicity and social policy. Don’t just think of this as loads of knowledge that you have to learn, just think of this as a document to link to all the other knowledge that you will learn. For example look at the following 20 mark exam question Item A For the last 25 years, the main aim of government education policies has been to create an education market. Marketization policies such as league tables and open enrolment aim to create competition between schools and to increase parental choice. It was claimed that such policies would raise standards. Competition for ‘customers’ in the education market means that teachers and schools now have to work hard to get the best results for their pupils. Schools that do not produce good exam results will lose pupils and funding. However, some government policies, such as Education Maintenance Allowances (EMAs), help educationally disadvantaged social groups. Such policies are more concerned with creating equality of educational opportunity than with producing an education market. Q. Using material from Item A and elsewhere assess the claim that the main aim of education policies in the last 25 years has been to create an education market. This question is not only about the 1988 education reform act but also about class as it mentions EMA and if you look above you can also use Gewirtz work along with Bourdieu. All of this information needs to be linked together so try to make it easy for yourself by making the connections in your notes. You also must use the news as EMA no longer exists and therefore you need to keep up to date. Also use data, look at the map and try to link the data show to the question- that is the mark to a true sociologists. The rates shown are of young people gaining access to university