Transcending Boundaries: Educational Trajectories, Subject Domains, and Skills Demands

Author(s):  
Dirk Van Damme
2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (95) ◽  
pp. 174-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugene V. Malakhov ◽  
◽  
Denys O. Shchelkonogov
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 71-86
Author(s):  
Cinthia Torres Toledo ◽  
Marília Pinto de Carvalho

Black working-class boys are the group with the most significant difficulties in their schooling process. In dialogue with Raewyn Connell, we seek to analyze how the collective conceptions of peer groups have influenced the school engagement of Brazilian boys. We conducted an ethnographic research with students around the age of 14 at an urban state school in the periphery of the city of São Paulo. We analyzed the hierarchization process between two groups of boys, demonstrating the existence of a collective notion of masculinity that works against engagement with the school. Well-known to the Anglophone academic literature, this association is rather uncommon in the Brazilian literature. We have therefore attempted to describe and analyze here the challenges faced by Black working-class Brazilian boys to establish more positive educational trajectories.


Sociology ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 003803852096656
Author(s):  
Çetin Çelik

Institutional habitus is a useful concept for analysing how schools adopt certain dispositions and influence students’ educational trajectories. The literature, however, reduces its source to collective social class mediated by an institution and only employs it to explain the reproduction of inequalities. Instead, I offer a relational framework that ties the concepts of institutional habitus, field and capital, and investigate how a secondary school improves the educational engagement of working-class, second-generation Turkish immigrant youth in Germany. The findings reveal that the school’s institutional habitus combines the communal values of the immigrant community and the middle-class academic practices; the former narrows the gap between home and school, and the latter modifies the classed feelings of students. The relational framework discloses that schools’ educational status in the educational field constitutes the source of institutional habitus, and that the institutional habitus can also explain the reduction of inequalities by schools.


2015 ◽  
Vol 135 ◽  
pp. 67-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Dumas ◽  
I. Cailbault ◽  
C. Perrey ◽  
O. Oberlin ◽  
F. De Vathaire ◽  
...  

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