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Class Degrees - Smart Work, Managed Choice, and the Transformation of Higher Education (Hardcover, New)
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Class Degrees - Smart Work, Managed Choice, and the Transformation of Higher Education (Hardcover, New)
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Since the 1980s there has been considerable discussion of the
"vocationalizing" of universities in the U.S. Critics see a
narrowing of focus to career objectives at the expense of a more
broad-based humanities education and the citizenship training
necessary to a democracy. There has been much less discussion,
however, of the reform initiatives intended to change actual
vocational education programs. In its beginnings early in the 20th
century vocational education was designed to train a working class
for massive industrialization. Influential figures like Charles
Prosser insisted on a rigid separation between vocational and
academic training. Students were to be taught limited and very
job-specific skills. The reforms of the 1980s and 1990s in contrast
were directed not only at making vocational training more
"academic" in content, but also at transforming the psychology of
student expectations toward the idea of middle class careers. This
book argues that the complexities of vocational education reform
can explain a great deal about how universities have changed.
Rather than those paradise lost narratives that target training for
jobs as the original sin, the argument is that both vocational
education and university education must be understood within a
larger context of class formation and structure. The reshaping of
class processes signaled by vocational education reform initiatives
has altered relations throughout the broad range of postsecondary
education institutions, from technical schools to research
universities. Thus it becomes especially important for those of us
teaching in the humanities to understand significant structural
shifts that affect our fields. As continuallydwindling cultural
capital fails to sustain fields like literary study, the role of
the humanities becomes increasingly managerial. Humanities faculty
are positioned to manage, assess, and ultimately attempt to contain
the often contradictory effects imposed by the educational
production of labor in the terms required by class formation.
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