Degrees of Choice : Class, Race, Gender and Higher Education

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2005-07-30
Publisher(s): Stylus Pub Llc
List Price: $34.95

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Summary

"Degrees of Choice" provides a sophisticated account of the overlapping effects of social class, ethnicity and gender in the process of choosing which university to attend. The shift from an elite to a mass system has been accompanied by much political rhetoric about widening access, achievement-for-all and meritocratic equalisation. This book gives a full and different picture, drawing on qualitative and quantitative data to show how the welcome expansion of higher education has also deepened social stratification, generating new and different inequalities. While gender inequalities have reduced, those of social class remain and are now reinforced by racial inequalities in access. Employing perspectives from the sociology of education and particularly Bordieu's work on distinction and judgement, the book links school (institutional habitus) and family (class habitus) with individual choice making in a socially informed dynamic.The contradictions and tensions arising from attempts to expand student numbers rapidly are vividly brought alive through the narratives of prospective applications to higher education. Students are seen to confront vastly different degrees of choice that are powerfully shaped by their social class and race.This rich empirical study of 500 applicants to higher education draws on an award winning British Economic and Social Research Council funded study. It will be essential reading in sociology, social policy and education, and important to higher education providers and careers teachers.

Author Biography

Dr Diane Reay is Professor of Education at London Metropolitan University Dr Miriam E. David is Professor of Policy Studies in the Department of Education at Keele University and author of Personal and Political (Trentham 2003) Dr Stephen Ball is Karl Mannheim Professor at the London Institute of Education

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements vi
Introduction vii
Chapter 1 Setting the scene 1(18)
Chapter 2 Conceptualising choice of higher education 19(16)
Chapter 3 Making a difference: institutional habituses 35(26)
Chapter 4 Parents and higher education choice 61(22)
Chapter 5 Working class students 83(26)
Chapter 6 Culture, community and choice: ethnic minority students 109(30)
Chapter 7 Illuminating the field? Information, marketing and higher education decision making 139(20)
Chapter 8 Conclusion 159(6)
References 165(12)
Author Index 177(2)
Subject Index 179

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