Pupil Strategies (RLE Edu L)
Title | Pupil Strategies (RLE Edu L) PDF eBook |
Author | Peter Woods |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 226 |
Release | 2012-05-16 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1136462996 |
What do pupils actually do in school? There are remarkably few studies that take the pupils’ perspective and reconstruct experience from their point of view within the context of their own cultures and careers. This volume brings together a number of research studies on various aspects of how pupils cope with schools. The theoretical papers consider amongst other issues a developmental model of the growth of pupil strategies based on primary and secondary socialisation; a discussion of ‘interactionist empiricism’ which argues for co-ordinated research between micro and macro perspectives and an extended overview of the general sociological background of work on teacher and pupil strategies. The empirical articles consider a number of themes ranging from strategies employed in answering teacher questions to the power and influence of the pupil peer group in the development of attitudes and behaviour.
Teacher Strategies (RLE Edu L)
Title | Teacher Strategies (RLE Edu L) PDF eBook |
Author | Peter Woods |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 290 |
Release | 2012-05-16 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1136462783 |
This book takes as its focus the key interactionist concept of ‘strategy’, a concept fundamental to many current concerns in the sociology of the school, including the understanding of the links between society and the individual, a more accurate description of certain areas of school life and implications for the practice of teaching. ‘Strategy’ bears on all these issues. It concerns both goals, and ways of achieving them and short-term, immediate aims as well as long-term ones. The essays in this book share a common concern with teacher strategies, emphasizing the discovery of intentions and motives, alternative definitions of situations and the hidden rules that guide our behaviour. Amongst the areas investigated are the influence of factors outside the school in determining the role of the teacher, and the nature and influence of teacher commitment. The implications for practical action and policy making are stressed throughout, and by recognising and exploring the constraints and influences that operate on teachers, this work constructs a realistic appraisal of the teaching situation.
Classroom Control (RLE Edu L)
Title | Classroom Control (RLE Edu L) PDF eBook |
Author | Martyn Denscombe |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 242 |
Release | 2012-05-04 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1136470557 |
Survival as a school teacher depends on an ability to achieve classroom control. In the years since this book was first published little has changed in this respect. Classroom control continues to lie at the heart of competent teaching. Teachers know it, pupils know it. They know it implicitly because they experience it as a normal part of their daily lives in schools. But, in this book, the author stands back from our everyday knowledge about how things work in classrooms to ask what control actually consists of. What is it? How is it recognized? How is it challenged by pupils? How is done by teachers? How is it negotiated? Drawing on extensive ethnographic fieldwork in three large secondary schools in England Martyn Denscombe explores the meaning of classroom control. He looks at the influence of teacher training and the role of school organization in establishing expectations about control, and then shows how control is played out through the interaction of teachers and pupils in class. His analysis travels well across the many contexts in which teaching occurs and provides an illuminating insight into the work of teaching and the nature of classroom life. His evidence is drawn from ethnographic fieldwork in three schools in England, and secondary sources covering the phenomenon of classroom control in the UK, USA and Australia.
Sociology and the School (RLE Edu L)
Title | Sociology and the School (RLE Edu L) PDF eBook |
Author | Peter Woods |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 226 |
Release | 2012-05-16 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1136465022 |
This is an introduction to interactionist work in education during the 1970s and 80s. The interactionist viewpoint concentrates on how people construct meanings in the ebb and flow of everyday life – what they think and do, how they react to one another – and has in recent years established itself as one of the leading approaches in education. It has generated illuminating research studies which, by being firmly based in the real world of teaching and dealing with the fine-grained details of school life, have helped to break down the barriers between teacher and researcher. This volume presents the results of this valuable work, within a coherent theoretical framework, by focusing on the major interactionist concepts of situation, perspectives, cultures, strategies, negotiation and careers. By bringing them together in this way, the author demonstrates their collective potential for the deeper understanding of school life and the possibilities for sociological theory. His book therefore offers both a summary of and a reflection on achievement in the area of interactionism as it relates to schools.
Maladjusted Schooling (RLE Edu L)
Title | Maladjusted Schooling (RLE Edu L) PDF eBook |
Author | John F Schostak |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 250 |
Release | 2012-05-16 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1136465162 |
The problems this book discusses are the same now as they were 25 years ago: unemployment, poor housing, inadequate facilities, poverty, racism, violence. What is the function of a school in such a situation? Although many schools hold reformist ideals, their practice is constrained by organisational demands. School organisation is based upon a coercive theory of social control which is intolerant of expressions of individuality by teachers and pupils. Needs for individuality may be mistaken for deviance, and deviance is at least in part produced by, or exacerbated by, school organisation. The author maintains that schooling is therefore largely maladjusted to the needs of individuals.
The Research Process in Educational Settings (RLE Edu L)
Title | The Research Process in Educational Settings (RLE Edu L) PDF eBook |
Author | Robert G Burgess |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 298 |
Release | 2012-05-04 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1136459987 |
This book presents a series of research biographies based on research experiences in the study of educational settings. The main aim is to provide a set of first person accounts on doing research that combine analysis with description. The contributors have been drawn from the disciplines of sociology and educational studies and have all conducted ethnographic work or case studies in a variety of educational settings.
Cultures of Schooling (RLE Edu L Sociology of Education)
Title | Cultures of Schooling (RLE Edu L Sociology of Education) PDF eBook |
Author | Mary Kalantzis |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 282 |
Release | 2012-05-04 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1136468315 |
This volume examines the ways schools respond to cultural and linguistic diversity. A richness of accumulated experience is portrayed in this study of six Australian secondary schools; partial success, near success or instructive failure as the culture of the school itself was transformed in an attempt to meet the educational needs of its students. Set in the context of a general historical background to the development of multicultural education in Australia, a theoretical framework is developed with which to analyze the move from the traditional curriculum of cultural assimilation to the progressivist curriculum of cultural pluralism. The book analyzes the limitations of the progressivist model of multicultural education and suggests a new ‘post-progressivist’ model, in evidence already in an incipient and as yet tentative ‘self-corrective’ trend in the case-study schools.