Social Institutions: Education

Chapter 16: Sociology, Schaefer, 1995-2012

American Education

Mass Education

  1. Basic Right, necessity for democratic society
  2. USA-first free schools
  3. ~85% High School, 50% some college, 28% degree (2009)( 88%, 57%, and 31% in 2012)(other countries)(Education Index)(Worldwide--50% illiteracy)
    1. Urbanism and Education
    2. Urbanism and Education 2
  4. We pay the price--lower standards
  5. Also, compulsory.
  6. All pay--education benefits all.

Utilitarian Emphasis

  1. Variety of Goals:
  2. Democracy
  3. Solve social problems
  4. Assimilation
  5. Little success, especially as problem solver
  6. Still, we have faith in education as a cure all

Community Control

  1. Financing
  2. Curriculum

Education and/as Consumption
(from: Wiedenhoft Murphy, Wendy. 2017. Consumer Culture and Society. Los Angeles, CA: Sage. Chapter 7: Higher Education, pages 119-137.)

  1. Higher Education Act of 1972: students as consumers (direct recipients of federal aid)
  2. Shift from industrial to postindustrial economy: demand for credentials
  3. Higher Education as a "field" of struggle. Competition among various institutions: capital--prestige.
  4. Corporate Colonization
  5. Higher Education as an Object of Consumption
  6. Students as Consumers:

America as 100 college students, Washington Post, Grade Point Analysis, June 8, 2016

Functionalism

Conflict

Interactionism

Schools as Formal Organizations

Bureaucratization: Specialization, rules, hierarchies, impersonal (large classes), technical competence (publish or perish)

  1. Money and work--employee, yet professional
  2. Burnout

Student Subculture-Youth subculture

Trends:

Political Economy

Religion

URL: http://www.umsl.edu/~keelr/010/eduction.html
Owner: Robert O. Keel rok@umsl.edu
References and Credits for this Page of Notes
Monday, November 6, 2017 13:45