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SOCIOLOGY Richard T. Schaefer

SOCIOLOGY Richard T. Schaefer. 16. Education. 16. Education. Sociological Perspectives on Education Schools as Formal Organizations Social Policy and Education. Sociological Perspectives on Education. Functionalist View. Manifest functions include: Transmission of knowledge

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SOCIOLOGY Richard T. Schaefer

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  1. SOCIOLOGYRichard T. Schaefer 16 Education

  2. 16. Education • Sociological Perspectives on Education • Schools as Formal Organizations • Social Policy and Education

  3. Sociological Perspectives on Education • Functionalist View • Manifest functions include: • Transmission of knowledge • Bestowal of status • Latent functions include: • Transmitting culture • Promoting social and political integration • Maintaining social control • Serving as agent of change

  4. Sociological Perspectives on Education • Functionalist View • Transmitting Culture • Exposing young people to existing beliefs, norms, and values of their culture • Promoting Social and Political Integration • Common identity and social integration fostered by education contribute to societal stability and consensus

  5. Sociological Perspectives on Education • Functionalist View • Maintaining Social Control • Schools teach students punctuality, discipline, scheduling, and responsible work habits, and how to negotiate through a bureaucratic organization • Serving as an Agent of Change • Schools serve as meeting ground where people can share distinctive beliefs and traditions

  6. Sociological Perspectives on Education • Conflict View • Education is an instrument of elite domination • Schools socialize students into values dictated by the powerful

  7. Sociological Perspectives on Education • Conflict View • The Hidden Curriculum • Standards of behavior deemed proper by society are taught subtly in schools • Credentialism • An increase in the lowest level of education needed to enter a field

  8. Sociological Perspectives on Education • Conflict View • Bestowal of Status • Schools tend to preserve social class inequalities in each new generation • Schools can reinforce class differences by putting students in tracks Correspondence Principle: schools promote the values expected of individuals in each social class and perpetuate social class divisions from one generation to the next Tracking: practice of placing students in specific curriculum groups on basis of test scores and other criteria

  9. Sociological Perspectives on Education • Conflict View • Treatment of Women in Education • The U.S educational system long characterized by discriminatory treatment of women

  10. Sociological Perspectives on Education • Conflict View • Treatment of Women in Education • In 20th century, sexism in education included: • Stereotypes in textbooks • Pressure on women to study traditional women’s subjects • Unequal funding for men’s and women’s athletic programs • Employment bias for administrators and teachers

  11. Sociological Perspectives on Education • Interactionist View • Labeling and self-fulfilling prophecy suggest if we treat people in particular ways, they may fulfill our expectations. Teacher-Expectation Effect: impact of teacher expectations and their large role on student performance

  12. Sociological Perspectives on Education Figure 16-1. Percentage of Adults Ages 25 to 64 Who Have Completed Higher Educations, Selected Countries, 2001 Sources: Bureau of the Census 2004a:851

  13. Sociological Perspectives on Education Table 16-1. Sociological Perspectives on Education

  14. Schools as Formal Organizations • Weber noted five characteristics of bureaucracy: • Division of labor • Hierarchy of authority • Written rules and regulations • Impersonality • Employment based on technical qualifications • Bureaucratization of Schools

  15. Schools as Formal Organizations • Teachers’ academic assignments have become more specialized • Still must control social order • 20% of new teachers quit within 3 years • Fewer students choose teaching as career due to perceived low income • Teachers: Employees and Instructors

  16. Schools as Formal Organizations • Homeschooling • More than 1.6 million children homeschooled • Good alternative for children with ADHD and LD • Lacks universal uniform standards from state to state • Research shows homeschooled children score higher on standardized tests • Some theorist cite lack of social involvement as problem with home schooling

  17. Social Policy and Education • No Child Left Behind Program • The Issue • In 2001, No Child Left Behind (NCLB) enacted by Congress • By mid 2005, Utah threatened to opt our • 37 other states demanded major changes

  18. Social Policy and Education • No Child Left Behind Program • The Setting • Schools locally run and finances with some federal and state aid • 1990’s establish national educational standards • By mid 2005, Utah threatened to opt our • 37 other states demanded major changes • States insist they require more federal funds

  19. Social Policy and Education • No Child Left Behind Program • Sociological Policy • Validity: the degree to which a scale or measure truly reflects the phenomenon under study • Reliability: extent to which a measure provides consistent results • Reliability and validity of tests are major issues in controversy of NCLB

  20. Social Policy and Education • No Child Left Behind Program • Policy Initiatives • Educational reformers have yet to find solution that fits all schools in all states • Many educators see NCLB as their best hope

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