1 (7192/1: Education With Theory And
Methods) ACUAL EXAM 2025/2026 ||
QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT DETAILED
ANSWERS || 100% GUARANTEED PASS
<LATEST UPDATE>
1. Archer et al - ANSWER ✓ focused on the interaction between working class
pupil's indentities and school
2. Gillborn and Mirza - ANSWER ✓ Indian pupils do well in education despite
english not being their first language
3. Murray - ANSWER ✓ high rate of lone parenthood and a lack of positive
male role models lead to te underachievement of some minorities
4. Pyrce - ANSWER ✓ ethnic difference in education is a result of colanialism
5. Hastings - ANSWER ✓ White pupils may eventually become the most
under-performing ethnicity
6. three main functionalist perspectives on education - ANSWER ✓ durkheim -
social solidarity and learning specialist skills
parsons - meritocracy
davis and moore - role allocation
7. durkheim describes school as - ANSWER ✓ society in miniature
,8. parsons describes school as acting as a - ANSWER ✓ bridge between family
and wider society
9. davis and moore argue inequality is - ANSWER ✓ essential for making sure
the most talented people get the best jobs
10.The new right theorists, chubb and moe - ANSWER ✓ state run education in
the US has failed because its failed the needs of disadvantaged groups
11.Two main marxists theorists on education - ANSWER ✓ althusser - school
is an ideological state apparatus which controls peoples ideas and vakues
bowles and gintis - education produces an obedient workforce
12.4 main education policies - ANSWER ✓ 1944 tripartite system
1988 national curriculum
2000 introduction of academies
2010 pupil premium
13.Allen - ANSWER ✓ Free schools only benefit those from educated families
14.Ball (2011) - ANSWER ✓ Fragmentation
centralisation of control
15.Hall - ANSWER ✓ academisation is handing over public services to private
capitalis
Functionalist 4 functions - ANSWER ✓ Creating social solidarity
Teaching skills necessary for work
Teaching core values
Role allocation + Meritocracy
16.Creating Social Solidarity - ANSWER ✓ Durkheim- school makes us feel
like a part of something bigger
= sense of identity
'School is a society in miniature' preparing us for wider society
17.Learning specialist skills for work - ANSWER ✓ Durkheim- advanced
industrial economy requires massive + complies divisions of labour
, School teaches diverse skills (GCSEs allowing specialisation)
18.Teaching core values - ANSWER ✓ Parsons- 'focal socialising agency' for
secondary socialisation
Family= particularistic standards (rules adapted to suit unique abilities of
child)
School/wider society= universalistic standards (rules + laws applied equally)
19.Role Allocation + Meritocracy - ANSWER ✓ Education allocated people to
most appropriate job role for their talents (exams/qualifications)
Most talented allocated to occupations most important for society
Fair= equality of opportunity
20.Arnot - ANSWER ✓ black boys are influenced by rap lyrics and MTV
videos to become anti-school because they are expected to be ultra-ghetto
21.Evans - ANSWER ✓ Street culture in White working-class can be brutal and
forces people to withstand intimidation and intimidate others. School can be
an environment to show the power that someone has.
22.Lawrence - ANSWER ✓ criticises Pryce
Black pupils don't under-achieve because of a weak culture or lack of self-
esteem but because of racism
23.Driver - ANSWER ✓ criticises cultural deprivation theory
>cultural deprivation theory ignores the positive effects of ethnicity on
education
Carribean families are often single-parent maternal run families.
24.Material deprivation - ANSWER ✓ Lacking basic necessities due to
poverty.
25.Cultural deprivation - ANSWER ✓ Inadequate socialisation in the home.
26.Material deprivation's effects on education - ANSWER ✓ 90% of failing
schools are in deprived areas. Dpt of Education (2012) barely 1/3 of students
, eligible for free school meals achieve 5 or more GCSE's at A*-C. These
students are more likely to be excluded and truant.
27.Effects of housing on educational achievement - ANSWER ✓ Direct -
overcrowding makes it difficult for a child to study, disturbed sleep from
sharing beds or rooms. Indirect - effects on health and welfare e.g. children
in crowded house run a greater risk of having an accident. Cold or damp
house leads to infections or illness.
28.Effects of diet and health on educational achievement - ANSWER ✓
Howard (2001) kids from poorer homes have a lower intake of energy,
vitamins and minerals. Wilkinson (1999) kids from poorer backgrounds are
more likely to have emotional/ behavioural problems. Blanden and Machin
(2007) found children from poorer backgrounds more likely to engage in
fights or temper tantrums.
29.University and social class - ANSWER ✓ Callender and Jackson (2005) w/c
students more likely to see debt negatively.
30.Bernstein (1973) - ANSWER ✓ w/c students underachieve because they are
socialised into a restricted language code whereas schools favour an
elaborated language code which middle class students are socialised into.
31.Marketization - ANSWER ✓ process of introducing market forces of
consumer choice and competition in education.
32.Bernstein and Young (1967) - ANSWER ✓ better educated parents have
higher incomes and spend them on promoting education to their children, via
educational trips or toys.
33.Douglas (1964) - ANSWER ✓ w/c parents place less value on education -
less ambitious for their children and give them less encouragement.
34.Bourdieu (1984) - ANSWER ✓ cultural capital refers to the knowledge,
tastes, language, attitudes and values of the middle class.