British secondary education has changed in major ways since
1945. This book examines some consequences and implications of both
change and stability, drawing on a unique series of national
surveys of school leavers in Scotland. The authors provide an
empirical and theoretical account of central problems of
contemporary schooling. Their analysis covers: certification,
curriculum and selection; the effects of educational expansion;
trends in educational inequality; the impact of comprehensive
reorganisation; truancy and alienation from schooling; the
explanation of differences in performance between schools and the
implications for the public accountability of schools. From these
analyses the authors develop a critique of the theory of the
education system that underpinned expansion. They examine this
theory 's logical and empirical status as myth and elaborate how
the political system and social science might jointly overcome some
of the methodological difficulties that beset social and
educational research.
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