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Class notes

Education External and Internal class factors

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This document includes notes for all of education internal and external factors. It includes everything from the book and lots of extra sociologists. This got me an A at AS this year and I got 100/120 in the real AS 2023 exams. Highly recommend as these notes are detailed yet clear and easy to understand and will provide you with tonnes of sociologists that you wont get from the textbook alone for your exams.

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October 7, 2023
Number of pages
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Written in
2023/2024
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Class – internal and external
Internal factors

1. Labelling
2. Self fulfilling prophecy
3. Streaming
4. Pupil subcultures
5. Pupils social class identities



Labelling

 The looking glass self
 Cooley
 States that a persons self grows out of society’s interactions and the perceptions of others
 For example, people shape themselves based on other peoples perceptions
 Labelling means to attach a meaning of definition to someone
 Teachers may label students as smart or dumb
 Research shows teachers attach labels regardless of the students actual abilities and
attitude
 Instead they label students based on stereotyped assumptions about class background
 MC = positive
 WC = negative Interactionalist approach studies interactions such as how people attach labels
and the effects of those labelled
 Becker – ideal pupil
 Interviewed 60 chicago high school teachers
 Teachers judged students based on how closely they fitted how they imagined the ideal
pupil was
 Judgements were made by pupils work, conduct and appearance
 MC seen as closest to ideal compared to WC who were seen as furthest to ideal pupil
 Rist – labelling in primary schools
 American kindergarten study
 Teachers used information about children’s home backgrounds and appearance to place
them into separate groups
 Tigers
 MC
 Clean and neat in appearance
 Determined as fast learners
 Seated closest to the teacher
 Gained lots of praise and encouragement
 Cardinals and Clowns
 WC
 Given lower level books
 Seated furthest away
 Gained little praise and chances to show their ability

,  Dunne and Gazeley
 Interviews in 9 english state secondary schools
 WC underachievement was normalised
 Teachers were unconcerned and believed there was little to do
 WC parents labelled as uninterested
 MC underachievement was seen as fixable
 MC parents labelled as supportive
 This lead to class differences in how teachers dealt with underachieving pupils
 MC given extension activities
 WC entered into lower tier examinations
 WC underestimated as those who were doing well were seen as overachieving

Evaluation of labelling

 Rist
 Only looked at one kindergarten in America so results are difficult to generalise and apply
to other countries and kindergartens
 Only looked at kindergarten level thus making results not generalisable to all ages in the
education system
 Mary fuller
 Studied a group of black schoolgirls who rejected their labels
 They channelled their anger about being labelled into their pursuit of educational
success



Self fulfilling prophecy

 Self-fullfilling prophecy means a prediction that comes true simply as a result of the
expectation that it will come true
 Steps of self fulfilling prophecy
 1 = the teacher labels a pupil and makes predictions based on this
 2 = teacher treats pupil accordingly, acting as if the prediction is true
 3 = pupil internalises teachers expectations and this becomes part of their self image
 They now become the pupil the teacher expected them to be in the first place
 Labelling can lead to a self-fullfilling prophecy or a self-refuting prophecy
 Rosenthal and Jacobsen – Pygmalion effect
 Field experiment in a California primary school
 Told school they had a test which could identify pupils who would ‘spurt’ ahead
 Researchers tested all the pupils (was actually a IQ test) andrandomly picked 20% and
identified them as ‘spurters’
 one year later 47% of those identified as ‘spurters’ had made significant progress
 teachers beliefs about the students had been influenced by those test results thus
interacting with their students differently leading to a self-fullfilling prophecy

Self-fulfilling prophecy evaluation

 field experiment means other factors that weren’t accounted for and controlled could’ve
influenced the results and so it cannot be determined that labelling alone caused these
improvements
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