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This article examines the role of vocational curricula in the formation of class and ‘whiteness’ and its implications for educational progression. Using the concept of racialisation, I discuss how the formation of white racialisation has often been linked to processes of class formation, crisis and development of the welfare state. However, within this framework there needs to be some sensitivity to locality and how forms of whiteness are deployed as ‘class strategy’. Based on an ethnographic study in an Essex further education (FE) college, I show how vocational students are regulated in ways that correspond to working class ‘differently white’ identities as compared to notions of ‘respectable whiteness’ attached to students on academic tracks. In Bourdieu’s terms, the cultural capital of white, working class students is valued differently by the college. Negative ascriptions also cut across those of non-white ethnicity, delineating on the basis of class and serving to discriminate further against ethnic minorities. The article concludes by assessing the ways in which colleges selectively accommodate cultural forms of resistance employed by working class vocational students. I additionally discuss the limitations of an approach based on ‘new ethnicities’ and ‘discourse’ alone in constructing a practical project for educators interested in access or widening participation. The realisation of social justice aims, such as those implicit in widening participation strategies, requires a re-engagement with class and racialisation as materially and historically-based phenomena.
This article examines the role of vocational curricula in the formation of class and ‘whiteness’ and its implications for ... Show Full Abstract
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Authors: Preston, John Date: 2003 Geographic subjects: Europe; Great Britain Journal title: Widening participation and lifelong learning Resource type: Article Subjects: Vocational education and training; Participation; Research; |
VITAL Object
VOCEDplus is produced by the National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER), which together with TAFE South Australia, is a UNESCO regional Centre of Excellence in technical and vocational education and training (TVET). VOCEDplus receives funding from the Australian Government Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR).