Scholars typically view class socialization as an implicit process. This study instead shows how parents actively transmit class-based cultures to children and how these lessons reproduce inequalities. Through observations and interviews with children, parents, and teachers, I found that middle-and working-class parents expressed contrasting beliefs about appropriate classroom behavior, beliefs that shaped parents' cultural coaching efforts. These efforts led children to activate class-based problem-solving strategies, which generated stratified profits at school. By showing how these processes vary along social class lines, this study reveals a key source of children's class-based behaviors and highlights the efforts by which parents and children together reproduce inequalities.
Coached for the Classroom: Parents' Cultural Transmission and Children's Reproduction of Educational Inequalities
Literatuur
Auteur(s)
Calarco, JM
Jaar
2014
Bron
American Sociological Review 79(5): 1015-1037 Oct 2014