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This paper, drawing upon a recent study of youth post-compulsory educational and occupational decision-making, argues for a culturalist perspective to understand the persistence of class-based inequalities within [vocational education and training] VET. The paper begins by outlining two broadly distinct perspectives within current research into youth: an 'individualist' approach influenced by the work of Ulrich Beck and a 'culturalist' approach influenced by Pierre Bourdieu. Findings from the author's own study of a sample of [Advanced Vocational Certificate of Education] AVCE students are then employed to interrogate the explanatory utility of these two perspectives. The students, working-class high achievers, exhibited a strong subjective sense of choice and individual responsibility combined with a tacit sense of class voiced in discourses that constructed a 'practical' rather than 'academic' self and which actively resisted the value of higher education. It is concluded from this that a Bourdieu-influenced culturalist methodology offers the greatest potential to understand how class-based educational identities may interrelate with apparently individualised identities.
This paper, drawing upon a recent study of youth post-compulsory educational and occupational decision-making, argues for a ... Show Full Abstract
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Authors: Morrison, Andrew Date: 2008 Geographic subjects: Europe; Great Britain Journal title: Journal of vocational education and training Resource type: Article Subjects: Vocational education and training; Youth; Employment; |
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).