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June 07

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... equal opportunities policies in education. A further two marks for each of these explained, ... decline of men.s jobs/nothing to aspire to; ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: June 07


1
June 07
  • (a) Explain what is meant by .social solidarity.
    (Item 1A, line 2). (2 marks)

2
Ans
  • Two marks for an appropriate explanation or
    definition, such as individual members in
    society feeling part of a wider community, a
    sense of belonging etc.

3
  • (b) Suggest two ways in which schools are .based
    on meritocratic principles. (Item 1A, line 7) (4
    marks)

4
  • Two marks for each of two ways suggested, such
    as
  • education is free
  • educational success is measured against
    external national standards (ie exams)
  • those that work hard achieve success
  • the most intelligent are the most successful
  • the education system treats everyone fairly, eg
    same rules apply to all
  • everyone has the same opportunity to, eg take
    an exam, take a subject
  • schools reward ability, eg sporting or
    academic
  • teachers are promoted according to their worth.

5
  • (c) Suggest three ways in which school prepares
    pupils for work Item 1A. (6 marks)

6
  • Two marks for each of three appropriate ways
    suggested, such as
  • teaching specific skills
  • socialising pupils into appropriate values
  • teaching them social skills
  • role allocation/social selection
  • learn to work in hierarchy
  • motivation by extrinsic rewards
  • rules and regulations, eg punctuality, dress
    code.

7
  • (d) Identify and briefly explain two criticisms
    that may be made of the functionalist view of the
    role of the education system (Item 1A). (8 marks)

8
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate criticisms
    identified, such as
  • wrongly assumes education instils consensual
    values
  • deterministic
  • equal opportunities do not exist
  • education system fails to prepare young people
    adequately for work.
  • Continued..............

9
  • A further two marks for each of these explained,
    such as
  • deterministic many functionalists wrongly
    assume that pupils passively accept the values
    they are taught and never reject them
  • equal opportunities do not exist achievement
    is greatly influenced by social backgrounds such
    as class, ethnicity etc
  • education system fails to prepare young people
    adequately for work from a New Right perspective
  • the education system fails to prepare pupils
    adequately for work because of a failure to teach
    the appropriate skills/values/attitudes etc.

10
Jan - 07
  • (a) Explain what is meant by .deferred
    gratification. (Item 1A, line 8) (2 marks)

11
Ans
  • Two marks for an appropriate explanation or
    definition, such as
  • the ability to postpone satisfaction
  • future-time orientation or similar

12
  • (b) Identify two features of .anti-school
    subcultures. (Item 1A, line 10). (4 marks)

13
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate features,
    such as
  • lack of respect for teachers or the school
  • truancy
  • habitual rule breaking
  • lack of interest in academic work eg failure to
    do homework
  • poor exam results
  • immediate gratification
  • collectivism
  • likely to be boys
  • likely to be working class.

14
  • (c) Suggest three ways in which childrens
    cultural background may fail .to equip them to
    meet the demands of schooling. (Item 1A, lines 6
    . 7). (6 marks)

15
  • Two marks for each of three appropriate ways,
    such as
  • lack of positive role models
  • parents may not be supportive
  • parents with low levels of education may not be
    able to offer help with homework etc
  • friends/peers may discourage educational
    ambitions
  • schools/teachers may make negative assumptions
    based on cultural background
  • fatalism
  • lack of cultural capital
  • restricted code.

16
  • (d) Identify and briefly explain two reasons,
    apart from those referred to in Item 1A, which
    might explain why boys .tend to do less well than
    girls. in school (Item 1A, line 9).
  • (8 marks)

17
  • Two marks for each of two reasons identified,
    such as
  • examination system may favour girls
  • the school may not make sufficient allowance
    for boys. interests
  • girls. performance has improved as more
    employment opportunities become available to
    them
  • family structure.
  • Continued

18
June 06
  • (a) Explain what is meant by .universalistic
    norms. (Item 1B, line 7). (2 marks)

19
Ans
  • Two marks for an appropriate explanation or
    definition, such as that there is one set of
    rules for everyone that everyone is judged by
    the same standards, or similar.
  • One mark for an example only, eg all having to
    wear school uniform, equal opportunity.

20
Ques
  • (b) Identify two policies that have .aimed to
    introduce .market forces. into education. (Item
  • 1A, lines 1 . 2). (4 marks)

21
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate policies
    suggested, such as
  • league tables/SATS/exam results
  • formula funding
  • diversity of schools eg faith, specialist,
    private, grant maintained etc
  • school control of own admissions criteria
  • school control of own discipline/exclusions
    policies (allows them to get rid of .liability
    students.)
  • schools. promotional activities
  • LMS/LMC
  • tuition fees
  • National Curriculum
  • Ofsted.

22
Ques
  • (c) Suggest three reasons, why boys tend to
    under-achieve in school compared with girls (Item
    1A, lines 9 . 10). (6 marks)

23
  • Two marks for each of three appropriate reasons
    suggested, such as
  • boys have more behavioural problems
  • male anti-school subcultures
  • role models at home many boys come from
    female-headed lone parent families
  • role models at school most teachers are
    female
  • decline of men.s jobs/nothing to aspire to
  • labelling by schools
  • coursework favours girls
  • girls. earlier intellectual maturity/greater
    concentration span
  • girls. greater linguistic ability.

24
  • (d) Identify and briefly explain two reasons for
    ethnic differences in educational achievement,
    apart from marketisation policies (Item 1A). (8
    marks)

25
Ans
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate reasons
    identified, such as
  • ethnocentric curriculum
  • teacher racism/stereotyping
  • poverty
  • cultural deprivation
  • English as a second language.
  • Continued..................

26
  • A further two marks for each of these explained,
    such as
  • Ethnocentric curriculum the curriculum
    devalues or ignores minority cultures, causing
    low self-esteem and under-achievement.
  • Poverty Bangladeshis, Pakistanis,
    Afro-Caribbeans are more likely to face material
    hardships eg than whites and this leads to early
    leaving, inability to afford educational aids
    etc.
  • Cultural deprivation some minorities fail to
    socialise their children appropriately . eg
    lacking appropriate language skills or
    achievement orientation needed for educational
    success.

27
January 06
  • (a) Explain what is meant by .cultural capital.
    (Item 1A, line 8). (2 marks)

28
  • Two marks for an appropriate explanation or
    definition, such as the values, knowledge,
    attitudes, skills, tastes etc. possessed by the
    upper/middle class, or the values, knowledge etc.
    that give one class an educational advantage.

29
  • (b) Suggest two criticisms that could be made of
    Marxist views of education (Item 1A).
  • (4 marks)

30
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate criticisms
    identified, such as
  • neglects gender inequalities
  • neglects ethnic inequalities
  • too deterministic
  • romanticises working-class pupils as
    .revolutionaries.
  • doesn.t explain satisfactorily why some
    working-class pupils do succeed
  • explanations/concepts untestable or
    unsupported by evidence (e.g. Halsey on cultural
    capital).

31
Ques
  • (c) Identify three features of the restricted
    speech code (Item 1A, lines 10-11). (6 marks)

32
  • Two marks for each of three appropriate features
    identified, such as
  • used by the working class
  • short/incomplete sentences
  • often reduced to gestures
  • context-bound/particularistic meanings/speaker
    assumes audience shares same frame of reference
  • not used in education
  • a product of repetitive, unskilled work
  • a product of positional/rigid family
    structures.

33
Ques
  • (d) Identify and briefly describe two ways in
    which schooling in capitalist society may mirror
  • the world of work (Item 1A, line 4). (8 marks)

34
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate ways
    identified, such as that both school and work are
  • characterised by
  • hierarchy of authority
  • alienation
  • extrinsic satisfaction
  • fragmentation/compartmentalisation
  • competition and division
  • levels of autonomy/supervision vary for
    different groups.
  • Continued......................

35
  • A further two marks for each of these
    satisfactorily described, such as
  • Hierarchy of authority the schools. hierarchy
    of head . teachers . pupils etc. mirrors that of
    work boss . supervisors . workers etc.
  • Alienation pupils lack control over their
    education (e.g. timetabling, what to study)
    workers lack of control over production (e.g.
    what to produce, how, when, where etc.).
  • Extrinsic satisfaction pupils study to gain
    grades, not from interest in the subject itself
    workers work to gain wages, not for the
    satisfaction of doing the job itself.
  • Fragmentation/compartmentalisation knowledge
    is fragmented into apparently unconnected
    subjects the division of labour fragments work
    into small, meaningless, apparently unconnected
    tasks

36
Ques
  • (a) Explain what is meant by .streaming. (Item
    1A, line 3). (2 marks)

37
Ans
  • Two marks for an appropriate explanation or
    definition, such as separating children of
    different ability into different classes, or
    teaching pupils of similar ability in the same
    class etc.

38
Ques
  • (b) Identify and briefly explain one criticism
    made of the labelling theory of educational
    under-achievement. (4 marks)

39
  • Two marks for an appropriate criticism
    identified, such as that it
  • is deterministic
  • assumes no other causes are important
  • assumes those labelled are aware of the label
  • doesn.t explain origins of labels
  • doesn.t explain consistency of labels/groups
    labelled
  • relies on a flawed methodology.
  • Continued.............................

40
Ques
  • (c) Suggest three examples of how the curriculum
    and/or the ways school is organised may be
    ethnocentric. (Item 1A, lines 3 . 4). (6 marks)

41
  • Two marks for each of three appropriate examples,
    such as
  • dress/uniform requirements based on western
    norms
  • not providing halal meals
  • religious assemblies based on one religion
    only
  • holidays based on the Christian calendar
  • arrangements for PE/games (showers, changing
    etc)
  • subject content note that specific features
    of different subjects count as separate examples,
    e.g. from
  • literature, foreign languages, history,
    geography, art, music, RE.

42
Ques
  • (d) Identify and briefly explain two factors
    apart from those referred to in Item 1A that may
    account for the educational under-achievement of
    boys. (8 marks)

43
Ans
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate factors
    identified, such as
  • lack of male role models in lone parent
    families
  • education perceived as feminine
  • anti-school subcultures
  • lack of male job opportunities
  • over-confidence in own abilities
  • more behavioural problems.
  • Continued.........................................
    ...

44
  • A further two marks for each of these
    satisfactorily explained, such as
  • Education perceived as feminine e.g. mothers
    not fathers read to children teaching is an
    increasingly feminised profession, so few
    educational male role models.
  • Anti-school subcultures boys. subcultures are
    often macho and anti-school and those who appear
    to take school seriously may be bullied.
  • Lack of male job opportunities decline of
    traditional male jobs de-motivates boys who
    conclude there is nothing to strive for in
    school.
  • More behavioural problems means boys are more
    likely to be put in remedial groups, excluded,
    not favoured by selective/successful schools.

45
Jan 05
  • (a) Explain what is meant by .material
    deprivation. (Item 1A, line 1). (2 marks)

46
  • (b) Suggest two reasons why many working-class
    parents may fail to attend parents evenings,
    apart from lack of interest (Item 1A, lines 5 .
    6). (4 marks)

47
Ans
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate reasons
    suggested, such as
  • feelings of social inferiority to teachers
  • lack of education/unable to understand the
    schoolwork
  • cannot afford childminders for other children
  • have to work longer hours to make living wage
  • more likely to be shift workers.
  • Note No marks for parents don.t value education.

48
Ques
  • (c) Identify three policies that government or
    educational bodies have introduced to overcome
    children.s cultural deprivation (Item 1A, lines 8
    . 9). (6 marks)

49
Ans
  • Two marks for each of three appropriate policies
    identified, such as
  • Headstart
  • Sure Start
  • EAZs
  • parenting classes
  • parental basic education provision
  • pre-school provision
  • educational TV programmes.

50
Ques
  • (d) Identify and briefly explain two reasons why
    girls are .now generally out-performingboys at
    all levels of schooling. (Item 1A, line 13). (8
    marks)

51
Ans
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate reasons
    identified, such as
  • introduction of coursework
  • changes in the family
  • changes in the labour market
  • the impact of feminism
  • equal opportunities policies in education.

52
  • A further two marks for each of these explained,
    such as
  • Introduction of coursework has enabled girls
    to do better as they are more organised,
    meticulous, persistent, etc than boys and this is
    rewarded in coursework.
  • Changes in the family e.g. more divorce has
    given girls a greater incentive to gain useful
    qualifications, as they cannot now expect to be
    full-time housewives permanently provided for by
    their husbands.
  • Changes in the labour market e.g. greater
    numbers of women working and opportunities for
    promotion have given girls the incentive to
    achieve qualifications with which to pursue a
    career.

53
June 04
  • (a) Explain what is meant by the .self-fulfilling
    prophecy. (Item A, line 7). (2 marks)

54
Ans
  • Two marks for an appropriate explanation or
    definition, such as when a pupil comes to live
    up to the label given to him/her.

55
Ques
  • (b) Identify two other factors or processes
    within schools, that may negatively affect
    working-class pupils. achievement. (4 marks)

56
Ans
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate
    factors/processes, such as
  • anti-school pupil subcultures
  • streaming/banding
  • setting
  • truancy
  • bullying

57
Ques
  • (c) Suggest three .material factors. that may be
    responsible for working-classunder-achievement in
    education (Item A, line 9). (6 marks)

58
  • Two marks for each of three appropriate factors,
    such as
  • overcrowding
  • insecure accommodation (eg BB)
  • inadequate diet (illness/absence hunger/lack
    of concentration in class)
  • cannot afford home learning resources (toys,
    books, computer)
  • having to earn money so cannot study (too
    tired early leaving/university drop-out)
  • moving house into different catchment areas
  • essential for schools . eg geometry sets
  • cannot afford private provision
  • stigma of free school meals leading to
    non-attendance etc
  • H E fees
  • travel costs
  • working class parents. lack of time.

59
Ques
  • (d) Identify and briefly explain two .cultural
    differences between the classes. that may explain
    class differences in achievement (Item A, line
    10). (8 marks)

60
ANS
  • Two marks for each of two appropriate differences
    identified, such as
  • language/speech codes
  • parental encouragement/attitudes to education
  • cultural capital/parental knowledge of
    education
  • immediate vs deferred gratification
  • present- vs future-time orientation.
  • Continued....................................

61
A further two marks for each of these
satisfactorily explained, such as
  • Language/speech codes middle class use the
    same elaborated code as teachers, textbooks, exam
    papers etc, so are better equipped for success
    than working class who only have the restricted
    code.
  • Cultural capital/parental knowledge of
    education middle class parents, being better
    educated themselves, have better knowledge/skills
    with which to negotiate the system/choose more
    effectively.
  • Present- vs future-time orientation middle
    class are future-oriented, so more likely to see
    education as a meaningful part of a long-term
    career plan, whereas working class or
    present-oriented (reflecting realities of
    working-class life), so don.t see education as a
    stepping stone to the future.
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