The paper examines processes of class formation in Post Compulsory Education and Training (PCET). Initially, it considers the broader policy context in which PCET is placed, examining the model of class implicit within policy documents and New Labour thinking. It notes that class relations and patterns of inequality have deepened. Class as a structural feature of the social formation has been obscured as a result of individualisation and compounded by theorisations of Giddens and Beck. Whilst class may be obscured, it remains a salient feature of social relations. The personalisation of the curriculum and changes to 14-19 education are related to class formation as well as the on-going generation of inequality. The final sections of the pap...
Marketisation and standards-based reforms are the two policy levers that have been promoted in educa...
The paper places youth transitions and vocational education and training (VET) within the global pol...
Class and class divisions remain central forces in shaping the ways we live. Indeed, arguably, in ne...
The paper considers the broader policy context in which English Post Compulsory Education and Traini...
The paper sets itself three key tasks. Firstly, to set post compulsory education and training in its...
The paper addresses a number of issues concerning policy and curriculum in post-compulsory education...
Contemporaneously, social theorists and commentators tend to see education as an avenue for either ...
This chapter locates the classed nature of education within a critical socio-historical framework, a...
This article aims to create intellectual space in which issues of social inequality and education ca...
This article aims to create intellectual space in which issues of social inequality and education ca...
This book provides an inclusive and incisive analysis of the experiences of working-class young peop...
This book takes a theoretically informed look at British education policy over the last sixty years ...
We investigate claims originating in the work of Daniel Bell that in post-industrial societies educa...
A spectre is haunting Britain, not the spectre of communism, and yet the UK’s most significant curre...
This thesis sets out to explore the experiences of adult learners and how they have negotiated class...
Marketisation and standards-based reforms are the two policy levers that have been promoted in educa...
The paper places youth transitions and vocational education and training (VET) within the global pol...
Class and class divisions remain central forces in shaping the ways we live. Indeed, arguably, in ne...
The paper considers the broader policy context in which English Post Compulsory Education and Traini...
The paper sets itself three key tasks. Firstly, to set post compulsory education and training in its...
The paper addresses a number of issues concerning policy and curriculum in post-compulsory education...
Contemporaneously, social theorists and commentators tend to see education as an avenue for either ...
This chapter locates the classed nature of education within a critical socio-historical framework, a...
This article aims to create intellectual space in which issues of social inequality and education ca...
This article aims to create intellectual space in which issues of social inequality and education ca...
This book provides an inclusive and incisive analysis of the experiences of working-class young peop...
This book takes a theoretically informed look at British education policy over the last sixty years ...
We investigate claims originating in the work of Daniel Bell that in post-industrial societies educa...
A spectre is haunting Britain, not the spectre of communism, and yet the UK’s most significant curre...
This thesis sets out to explore the experiences of adult learners and how they have negotiated class...
Marketisation and standards-based reforms are the two policy levers that have been promoted in educa...
The paper places youth transitions and vocational education and training (VET) within the global pol...
Class and class divisions remain central forces in shaping the ways we live. Indeed, arguably, in ne...