Degree | Type | Year |
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2500262 Sociology | OB | 3 |
You can view this information at the end of this document.
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Sociology of Education is organized according to three general objectives:
1) To offer a panoramic view of the main theories in the field of Sociology of Education as a discipline;
2) To present the main authors and explanatory mechanisms to address the relationship between education and society from a theoretical, analytical and conceptual point of view;
3) To use the theoretical-analytical concepts of Sociology of Education as a field to analyse contemporary educational inequalities and debates.
The course is structured under four thematic Sections:
The First Section explains the origin of the Sociology of Education as a specific field of study within Sociology, and illustrates its institutionalization process as a discipline. Simultaneously, it discusses the different ontological and epistemological perspectives from which it has been historically organised and it offers to the students a global framework to position and interpret the different authors and theories. Once the main debates to explain the relationship between education, society and sociology has been explained, this section focuses on the Functionalist approach to Sociology of Education (Durkheim and Parsons) and explains the specificities of the 'Reformist Functionalism' and the 'Human Capital Theory'.
The Second Section focuses on the neo-Marxist critique to the Functionalist approach and it explains the main theories developed in this field. Based on the proposals of authors such as Bowles & Gintis, Baudelot & Establet and Althusser, the mechanisms by which the education system contributes to the reproduction of the social classes and to the legitimation of the social inequalities are addressed. Neo-marxist theories are ontologically opposed to functionalist theories but they maintain a macro focus of study, focusing their analysis in the relationships between education, capitalism and the State.
The Third Section delves into the theory of reproduction, presenting the proposals of two key authors in the sociology of education: Pierre Bourdieu and Basil Bernstein. It also presents what is known as the New Sociology of Education (NSOE) and the crucial shift it represents for the evolution of the Sociology of Education as a discipline. NOSE maintains a critical understanding on the relationship between education and society but it attributes a crucial importance to the processes by which these inequalities are created, thus mostly developing micro and interpretative analysis. This Section adresses Young and Apple's proposals in the area of the sociology of the school knowledge and the sociology of curriculum, as well as Rist' labelling theory. It also devotes a space to presenting the critiques that are made from the Rational Choice Theory (Boudon) to Bourdieu's theory of reproduction and neo-Marxist theories in education. Overall, this Section makes it possible to identify how schools, their pedagogical models, their curriculum or their teachers contribute with their daily practices to the reproduction of social inequality. It also incorporates a feminist perspective in order to understand the role of gender to explain the processes of educational inequalities. The conceptual proposal of Diane Reay is specially addressed in this regards.
The Forth Section focuses on the Resistance Theories and particularly on Willis' proposals around the creative capacity of social agents to transform their social reality. So, maintaining a critical approach to education, these theories analyse the active role of working class students to resist the dominant school culture and to create a counter culture that provides them with collective identity. Overall, this section also presents feminist theories addressed to explain student's attitudes throughout a gender lens.
The thematic organization of Sociology of Education is the following:
SECTION 1: THE ORIGINS OF THE SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION AND THE FUNCTIONALIST PERSPECTIVE
1.1. The relationship between education and sociology
1.2. The sociology of education in the 'classics'
1.3. Education, socialization and forms of cultural transmission (Durkheim)
1.4. Education, social selection and stratification (Parsons)
1.5. The Human Capital Theory and the Reformist Functionalism
SECTION 2. NEO-MARXIST THEORIES: EDUCATION AND THE REPRODUCTION OF SOCIAL CLASSES
2.1. Criticism to functionalism and human capital theory
2.2. Bowles and Gintis and the correspondence theory
2.3. Baudelot and Establet and the theory of educational networks
2.4. Althusser and education as the ideological apparatus of the State.
SECTION 3. BOURDIEU, BERNSTEIN AND THE NEW SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION: OPENING THE BLACK BOX OF EDUCATIONAL INEQUALITIES
3.1 Bourdieu: cultural education and reproduction
3.2. Gendering Bourdieu: Reay's proposal
3.3 The Rational Choic Theory in Education (Boudon)
3.4. Bernstein: sociolinguistic codes and educational codes
3.5. Young &Apple: sociology of curriculum and school knowledge
3.6. Rist: teachers and labeling processes
SECTION 4. RESISTANCE THEORY: YOUNG PEOPLE AND SCHOOL ATTITUDES
4.1. A new analytical framework to understand educational inequality
4.2. Willis: working class' boys and school counterculture
4.3. Gender and school attitudes: beyond Lads
Title | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|
Type: Directed | |||
Master | 23 | 0.92 | 1, 2, 7, 9, 10, 12, 14 |
Seminars | 15 | 0.6 | 1, 3, 12, 15, 16 |
Type: Supervised | |||
Supervised | 20 | 0.8 | 2, 9, 12, 14 |
Type: Autonomous | |||
Autonomous | 77 | 3.08 | 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14 |
Sociology of Education combines theoretical lessons with reading seminars and case studies/forums that are developed both in the classroom and at home.
Annotation: Within the schedule set by the centre or degree programme, 15 minutes of one class will be reserved for students to evaluate their lecturers and their courses or modules through questionnaires.
Title | Weighting | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Case studies | 40% | 5 | 0.2 | 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 10, 14, 15, 16 |
Exam | 40% | 5 | 0.2 | 1, 2, 5, 9, 10, 12, 13 |
Reading seminar | 20% | 5 | 0.2 | 9, 11, 12, 14 |
The evaluation of the course Sociology of Education aims to simultaneously fulfill an accrediting or qualifying function with a formative function. To do this, it proposes 3 main assessment activities - the exam, the reading seminars and the case studies - which, in a transversal way, are characterized by the following elements:
1) They are applied at different times of the course, to ensure continuous assessment as a constituent element of pedagogical practice.
2) They combine individual and group activities, to develop the ability to work in a team and at the same time encourage personal reflection.
3) They articulate theoretical and practical elements to ensure the development of complex and meaningful thinking.
4) They encourage feedback as a key mechanism for self-regulation of the learning process and as part of learning itself.
5) Explain the evaluation criteria, both in terms of performance criteria and result criteria.
The exam
The exam is an individual assessment activity, based on an eminently qualifying function that, far from being oriented to check if the students are able to reproduce the transmitted knowledge, is eminently oriented to ascertain whether the students have integrated this knowledge into their thinking structure and are able to apply it to interpret the educational reality from a sociological perspective. To this end, the exam consists of a more conceptual first part where students are expected to be able to answer in a concise, detailed and theoretically informed way, ensuring that the central concepts of the course have been internalized. And a second part where the theoretical repertoires of the course must be mobilized to solve and / or interpret practical cases linked to the educational reality.
The exam represents 40% of the final grade of the subject and it is essential to achieve a minimum grade of 4.5 so that you can average the rest of the assessment activities. Students who do not pass the exam in the first call can take a compensatory test with the same characteristics that is usually done one or two weeks after the regular call.
The specific criteria for evaluating the exam will be available at the beginning of the course.
Reading seminars
Reading seminars are a group-type assessment activity, designed with a strong formative function, although they are also aimed at quantifying and qualifying the learning process. Compulsory readings of the course are distributed in groups of approximately 5 people (depending on the total number of students enrolled) who are responsible for:
a) Prepare and deliver a power point presentation (or similar) (details on will be explained at the beginning of the course) which address, on the one hand, the strengths and weaknesses of the theory in question and, on the other hand, to illustrate its main arguments through data, films, graphic material or other textual or visual resources.
b) Present the work in the classroom and generate a debate with the rest of the classmates.
The distribution of the authors of the course between the different work groups will be done on the first day of class. Depending on the number of students enrolled, it may be the case that two groups work on the same text or that the same group works on two different authors. Details will be specified at the beginning of the course and will have specific features in the morning (01) and afternoon (51) groups dependingon the volume of students enrolled in each case. In any case, no author of the course can be left without working and presenting.
The weight of the seminars is 40% of the final grade, including the presentation, argumentation and debate. The specificevaluation criteria will be explained at the beginning of the course. As in the case of the exam, it is essential to achieve a minimum grade of 4.5 so that you can average the rest of the assessment activities. Students who do not achieve this mark can recover it during the period of compensatory tests established by the Department of Sociology.
Finally, a compulsory meeting (face-to-face or virtual) will be organized with each working group to address the work related to the reading seminars.
Case studies
At the end of each thematic section, a case study will be organized in the classroom where students will be asked to work on the material that has been provided to them.It is, therefore, an assessment activity that, like reading seminars, has a strong formative function that acts in parallel with its qualifying function.
Mechanisms will be enabled to guarantee the active participation of students in class and at the same time it will be required that each student (individually) deliver in writing (details at the beginning of the course) one of these case studies. Students are free to choose the case study they want to submit, but it is recommended that it does not match the topic selected for the reading seminar. In this way, you can work in depth on the different thematic sections of the Program.
Details on the evaluation of the case studies will be presented at the beginning of the course, but it is important to keep in mind that the individual writings that derive from them must have the capacity to interpret the case study from the theoretical concepts and the arguments of the reference theory worked on in the thematic section inwhich the case study is framed. They must also be able to go further and expand the collective debates that have been generated in the classroom.
The case studies represent 20% of the final grade of the course which includes the individual delivery and the preparation of the collective debate in the classroom.As with all assessment activities, it is essential to achieve a minimum grade of 4.5 so that they can average the rest of the assessment activities. Students who do not achieve this grade may retake it during the compensatory testing period established by the Department of Sociology.
Summary
Ítem |
Typolgy |
Weigh |
Exam |
Individual |
40% |
Reading Seminars |
Grupal |
20% |
Case studies |
Individual |
40% |
Transversal aspects.
• It is necessary to deliver the activities in the dates established by the teachers and that will communicate to the students to the start of course.
• Corrections of assessment activities will be returned approximately 15 days after delivery. In the event that someone fails the exam or any of the course deliveries, they will be entitled to recovery during the test clearing period established by the Faculty.
• The minimum grade for the activities to be able to do an average is 4.5, with a lower grade, thesuspended activity must be recovered during the recovery period.
• Evaluation marks are not saved from one year to the next.
Assistance
• Class attendance is compulsory and the active participation of students in both theoretical and practical sessions will be taken into account. The criteria will be explained at the beginning of the course.
Single assessment:
BASIC
Althusser, L. (1985) “El aparato ideológico del estado escolar como aparato dominante” en Gras, A.(ed.) Sociología de la educación. Textos fundamentales. Madrid: Narcea.
Apple, M.W. (1993) ¿De quién es el conocimiento que tienen más valor? Revista de Educación, 301, 109-122
Bernstein, B. (1985 a) “Clases sociales, lenguaje y socialización” en Revista Colombiana de Educación. Vol. 15.
Bernstein, B. (1985 b) “Clasificación y enmarcación del conocimiento educativo” en Revista Colombiana de Educación. Vol. 15.
Bourdieu, P (1998) “Las estrategias de conversión” (extret de la distinció) a Fernández Enguita, M (comp.) Sociología de la educación. Textos fundamentales. Barcelona, Ariel
Bowles, S.& Gintis, H. (1983) “El problema de la teoría del capital humano: una crítca marxista” en Educación y sociedad. Vol. (1)
Parsons, T. (1990) “El aula como sistema social: Algunas de sus funciones en la sociedad americana” en Educación y Sociedad vol. (6).
Rist, R.G. (1990) “Sobre la comprensión del proceso de escolarización. Aportaciones de la teoría del etiquetaje” en Educación y sociedad, vol. 9.
Thurow, L. (1983) “Educación e igualdad económica” en Educación y Sociedad. Vol.(2).
Willis, P. (1986) “Producción cultural y teorías de la reproducción” en Educación y sociedad, vol. 5.Willis, P. (1988) Aprendiendo a trabajar. Madrid: Akal.
ADDITIONAL:
Acker, S. (1994) Género y educación. Reflexiones sociológias sobre mujeres, enseñanza y feminismo. Madrid: Narcea. Parte 2.
Anyon, J. (1980) “Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum of Work” en Journal of Education. Vol. 162 (1).
Apple, M.W. (1985) “El marxismo y el estudio reciente de la educación” en Educación y Sociedad. Vol. (4).
Apple, M.W. (1986) Ideología y curriculum. Madrid: Akal.
Apple, M.W. (1987) Educación y Poder. Barcelona: Paidós/MEC.
Arnot, M. (1980) “Socio-cultural Reproduction and Women’s Education” en Deem, R. (ed.) Schooling for Women’s Work. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Arnot, M. (2002) Reproducing Gender? Critical essays on educational theory and feminist politics, London: RoutledgeFalmer.
Arnot, M. & Weiner, G. (1987) Gender and the Politics of Schooling. Londres: Hutchinson.
Baudelot, C.& Establet, R. (1987) La escuela capitalista en Francia. Madrid: Siglo XXI.
Bernstein, B. (1989) “Una crítica al concepto de educación compensatoria” en Clases, códigos y control. Vol. 1. Madrid: Akal.
Bonal, X. (1998) Sociología de la educación. Una aproximación crítica a las corrientes contemporáneas. Barcelona: Paidós. Pàg: 76-86
Boudon, R. (1983) La desigualdad de oportunidades. Barcelona: Laia. (selecció capítol)Bourdieu, P. & Passeron, J.C. (1977) La reproducción. Elementos para una teoría del sistema de enseñanza. Barcelona: Laia.
Bourdieu, P. & Passeron, J.C. (1973) Los estudiantes y la cultura. Buenos Aires: Nueva Colección Labor.
Bowles, S.& Gintis, H (1983) “La educación como escenario de las contradicciones en la reproducción capital-trabajo” en Educación y sociedad. Vol. (2).
Bowles, S. & Gintis, H (1985) La instrucción escolar en la América capitalista. Madrid: Siglo XXI.
Carnoy, M. (1982) La educación como imperialismo cultural. México: Siglo XXI.
Carnoy, M.&L. Henry M. (1985) Schooling and Work in the Democratic State. State. Standford, CA: Standford University Press.
Collins , R.(1989) La sociedad credencialista. Madrid: Akal.
Durkheim, E. (1982) Historia de la educación y las doctrinas pedagógicas. Madrid: La Piqueta.
Durkheim, E. (1990) Educación y sociología. Barcelona: Península.
Fernández Enguita, M. (1985) Trabajo, escuela e ideología. Marx y la crítica de la educación. Madrid: Akal.
Fdez. Enguita, M. (1989) “El rechazo escolar: ¿alternativa o trampa escolar?” en Ortega, F. et al. (Ed.) Manual de sociología de la educación. Madrid: Visor.
Fernández Enguita, M. (1990) La cara oculta de la escuela. Madrid: Siglo XXI.
Freire, P. (1990) La naturaleza política de la educación. Cultura, poder y liberación. Barcelona: Paidós-MEC.
Giroux, H.A. (1983) Theory and Resistance in Education. A Pedagogy for the Opposition. New York: Bergin & Garvey.
Giroux, H.A. (1990) Los profesores como intelectuales. Hacia una pedagogía crítica del aprendizaje. Barcelona: Paidós-MEC, Caps. 9 y 12.
Harris, A. (2004). All about the girl. Culture, power and identity. London: Routledge
Jackson, C. (2006) Lads and Ladettes in School. Gender and Fear of Failure.London: Open University Press
Lerena, C. (1981) “Acerca del desarrollo teórico de la sociología de la educación” en Revista Internacional de Sociología vol.(39).
Lerena, C. (1986) Escuela, ideología y clases sociales en España. Barcelona: Ariel.
McRobbie, A. and Garger, J. (2003) Girls and subcultures: an exploration. In: Stuart Hall and Tony Jefferson (eds) Resisting trough rituals. Youth sucultures in postwar britain. London: Routledge
Reay, D (2005) Gendering Bourdieu's concepts of capitals? Emotional capital, woman and social class. The Sociological Review
Rosenthal, R. & Jacoboson, L.F.(1985) “Pigmalion en clase” en Gras, A. (ed.) Sociología de la educación. Textos fundamentales. Madrid: Narcea.
Subirats, M. & Brullet, C. (1988) Rosa y azul. La transmisión de los géneros en la escuela mixta. Madrid: Ministerio de Cultura. Institutode la Mujer.
Schultz, T.W. (1983) “La inversión en capital humano” en Educación y Sociedad. Vol. (1).
Tarabini, A. (2019). The conditinoms for school success: Examining educational exclusion and dropping out. London: Palgrave
Young, M.F.D. (1971) knowledge and Control. New Directions for the Sociology of Education. London: Collier MacMillan.
Willis, P. (1988) Aprendiendo a trabajar. Madrid: Akal.
Walkerdine, V., Lucey, H., Melody, J. (2001) Growing up Girl. Psychological explorations of gender and class. London: Pagrave McMillan.
Other useful resources:
Fundació Jaume Bofill: https://www.fbofill.cat/
El Diari de l'Educació: https://diarieducacio.cat/
El Diario de la Educación: https://eldiariodelaeducacion.com/
Associació de Mestres Rosa Sensat: https://www.rosasensat.org/
Federació d'Associacions de Pares i Mares d'Alumnes de Catalunya (FAPAC): https://fapac.cat/
Departament d'Educació de la Generalitat de Catalunya: http://ensenyament.gencat.cat/ca/inici
Diputació de Barcelona. Àrea d'Educació: https://www.diba.cat/es/web/educacio
UNESCO i educació: https://en.unesco.org/themes/education
Research Groups from the UAB Sociology Department specialized in education:
Grup de Recerca en Globalització, Educació i Polítiques Socials (GEPS): https://geps-uab.cat/
Grup de Recerca en Educació i Treball (GRET): https://grupsderecerca.uab.cat/gret/
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Name | Group | Language | Semester | Turn |
---|---|---|---|---|
(SEM) Seminars | 1 | Catalan | first semester | morning-mixed |
(SEM) Seminars | 51 | Spanish | first semester | afternoon |
(TE) Theory | 1 | Catalan | first semester | morning-mixed |
(TE) Theory | 51 | Spanish | first semester | afternoon |