Throughout the semester thus far,
many concepts pertaining to school have sparked my interest. One idea that has been consistent through the
readings is the correlation between social class and level of education and how
students behaved in school. Many
arguments and studies have been conducted to prove this issue. The majority of
these articles focus on the working class and their specific educational practices. In Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum of
Work, the author Jean Anyon visits a working class school to observe the level
of education these students were receiving. Anyon speaks in particular about the
role of the teacher in the students’ learning.
The teachers were not put into place to drive the students to expand
their knowledge past simple ideas. Instead, they taught a particular set of
rules to solve problems and were set to memorize those rules instead of looking
further into the concepts. The author argues that the teachers talk down to the
students and do not allow them to be creative because of their low social
status (Anyon). Similarly, in On the Uses of Liberal Education, the author
states that the working class has been cheated in their education. He says, “Rich
people learn the humanities, and the poor do not. The humanities are the
foundation for getting along in the world, for thinking, for learning to
reflect on the world instead of reacting to whatever force is turned against
you (Shorris).” The author has the same argument as Anyon in Social Class and
The Hidden Curriculum of Work: that the working class is not taught the basic
ideas for life like the upper class. Anyon states, “The environment in working
class schools is mechanical, involving rote behavior and very little decision
making or choice.” Moreover, both authors believe that the poor are taught a
basic process of how to learn, but not how to think for themselves enough to
make it in the world (Anyon).
In
On the Uses of Liberal Education, the author explains some of the working class
students that he encountered, some of which included people who have been in
jail, were homeless, or were pregnant (Shorris). In the article Women without Class, Julie
Bettie describes her encounter with the same types of behavior in younger
females. Due to some of the teaching
practices of working class schools previously mentioned from Social Class and
the Hidden Curriculum of Work, the students were not prepared for further
education after high school. This pushed
some of the younger girls into premature adulthood, Bettie argues. She explains that “girls who do not have
college and career to look forward to as signs of adulthood, motherhood and the
responsibility that comes along with it can be employed to gain respect,
marking adult status (Bettie).” Both
Bettie and Shorris are arguing that because of the education practices found in
working class schools, students are not invested in their future enough to make
proper long term decisions.
In
Women without Class, Bettie also studies students who were raised in middle
class schools. These girls were college bound and had very clear plans of how
they were going to get into college. They kept a planner of important events to
make sure they stayed on track. She found that this is due to their different educational
experiences (Bettie). In Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum, Anyon also
found a significant change in the education presented to middle class schools.
The students he studied were allowed to make decisions and were given choices.
They were given the freedom to think for themselves and figure out why they are
given certain assignments. Their schoolwork focused on the expansion of ideas
instead of following steps to get a solution. For example, the students were able
to find their own steps and explain how they would work. This learning process
prepared them for a higher education necessary for success in today’s advanced
job market, unlike lower class schools (Anyon).
These
articles also mention the specific way that the rich are taught. In Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum,
the author visits an executive elite school. In this school, work is “developing one’s
analytical intellectual powers.” They are
given problems and are expected to reason through them. The thought processes developed by these students
result in rules that fit together in systems, and then applying the rules into
solving a problem. The way they are
taught prepares them for life full of achieving goals and excelling in their
intellectual abilities. The students are
allowed to challenge the answers to certain questions if they do not agree. Unlike
the lower class schools, they did not analyze questions by whether they were
right or wrong. They focused more on if
they agreed or disagreed with the answer given. Moreover, the students were taught valuable
skills in order to succeed in higher education (Anyon). Similarly, as mentioned
earlier, in On the Uses of Liberal Education, the author states that the rich
are taught about the humanities in school, as the poor are not. He explains that “rich people learn the
humanities in private schools and expensive universities, and that is one of
the ways in which they learn of the political life.” The poor are cheated in their education
because they are taught this way. The author takes this way of teaching and
brings it to a poor environment in attempts to give the students a better
life. He tells them that unlike the rich, they will
not simply be given this opportunity; they will have to work for it. They will
have to participate because “they want a particular kind of life and a richness
of mind and spirit.” After the course is completed, a majority of the students
who came from poor backgrounds go on to attend four year universities and receive
scholarships, bridging the gap between their upbringings and their futures (Shorris).
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