Title: Argument of Jocks and Burnouts
1Argument of Jocks and Burnouts
2Eckert, Jocks and Burnouts, p. 6
- While many of the origins of the Jock-Burnout
split are in the adult economy, that split is
made real by adolescent social dynamics. Adults
do not impose their class system and ideologies
on adolescents they provide the means by which
adolescents can do it themselves.
- What do you agree or disagree with here?
3Eckert, Jocks and Burnouts, p. 6
- While many of the origins of the Jock-Burnout
split are in the adult economy, that split is
made real by adolescent social dynamics. Adults
do not impose their class system and ideologies
on adolescents they provide the means by which
adolescents can do it themselves.
- If one were writing a paper about gender
socialization, how could one use this statement?
How could one re-write it? -
4Adolescent social category is the adolescent
interpretation of . . . parents socioeconomic
class (Eckert 1989, p. 99).
- Why not just say
- Adolescent social category adult social class
- ?
5Peer Social Category and Social Class
Eckert, P. (1989). Jocks and Burnouts Social
Categories and Identity in High School. New York
Teachers College Press.
6Status
- The local term for status in adolescent
cultures is popularity. -
- Popularity is not about being liked but
- being visible and being known.
7Three Characteristics of Status Systems
- Status. . .
- Comes from conformity to group norms
- Comes from social associations
- Is limited