Most young people in the UK now stay on in education or training when they finish school. Numbers will continue to increase following the implementation of raising the participation age. Despite an upward trend in further education participation, young people's pathways continue to be shaped by class and gender. This paper explores the choices and decisions made by young people in their final year of compulsory schooling and describes how these class and gender inequalities are reproduced. We also spoke to parents about their own trajectories and their involvement in guiding their children's next steps. Our concern is with young people in ‘the middle’: not most at risk of social exclusion, but certainly not the most privileged. The decision...
This article examines the impact of family background (social class, cultural and economic capital) ...
Quantitative studies of occupational attainment and intergenerational social mobility have often dev...
Extensive literature spanning decades articulates the complexities for young people from ‘lower soci...
Most young people in the UK now stay on in education or training when they finish school. Numbers wi...
Despite rates of participation in post-compulsory full-time education reaching approximately 84% in ...
Parents' values and practices are central to theorising the reproduction of inequality across genera...
In this paper we identify patterns of subject and qualification choices made at age 14. Much of the ...
The United Kingdom’s Coalition government has introduced an education policy that is focused on inc...
This thesis consists of three stand-alone papers which address separate questions regarding the econ...
© 2016 Westburn Publishers Ltd. This article explores how social class is linguistically negotiated ...
© London School of Economics and Political Science 2018. In British social mobility discourse, the r...
This paper draws on research with young people from similar working class backgrounds in a deprived ...
This paper provides a comprehensive account of the way in which cognitive and educational attainment...
This paper examines the impact of family background (social class, cultural and economic capital) an...
This paper reconsiders youth transition regime literature in the context of recent changes to Govern...
This article examines the impact of family background (social class, cultural and economic capital) ...
Quantitative studies of occupational attainment and intergenerational social mobility have often dev...
Extensive literature spanning decades articulates the complexities for young people from ‘lower soci...
Most young people in the UK now stay on in education or training when they finish school. Numbers wi...
Despite rates of participation in post-compulsory full-time education reaching approximately 84% in ...
Parents' values and practices are central to theorising the reproduction of inequality across genera...
In this paper we identify patterns of subject and qualification choices made at age 14. Much of the ...
The United Kingdom’s Coalition government has introduced an education policy that is focused on inc...
This thesis consists of three stand-alone papers which address separate questions regarding the econ...
© 2016 Westburn Publishers Ltd. This article explores how social class is linguistically negotiated ...
© London School of Economics and Political Science 2018. In British social mobility discourse, the r...
This paper draws on research with young people from similar working class backgrounds in a deprived ...
This paper provides a comprehensive account of the way in which cognitive and educational attainment...
This paper examines the impact of family background (social class, cultural and economic capital) an...
This paper reconsiders youth transition regime literature in the context of recent changes to Govern...
This article examines the impact of family background (social class, cultural and economic capital) ...
Quantitative studies of occupational attainment and intergenerational social mobility have often dev...
Extensive literature spanning decades articulates the complexities for young people from ‘lower soci...