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What unites the contributors to this book is an opposition to
Thatcherite policies on education and an agreement upon the need
for the development of democracy in education. This volume
highlights the importance of an area of neglected theoretical and
practical concern: the development of a critique of the philosophy
and policies of the new Right, and of credible alternative
policies.
A new approach to the analysis of cultural reproduction focusing on
the impact of economic change. The book demonstrates the
reinforcement of cultural stereotypes in recruitment caused by
interaction between corporate restructuring and the education
system.; This book is intended for academics, postgraduates and
advanced undergraduates in sociology with an interest in the
sociology of work and the sociology of education as well as
researchers and students within human resource management and
cultural studies.
Originally published 1987 Schooling Ordinary Kids looks at the
'invisible majority' of ordinary working-class pupils. The book
explains why these pupils are now at the centre of a major
educational crisis surrounding the soaring rates of youth
unemployment. The book is a timely examination of educational
inequalities, unemployment, and the new vocationalism. Drawing
extensively the study of schools in the urban centre of South Wales
the book highlights the need for an alternative politics of
education, if we were to meet the educational challenge of the
late-twentieth century. The new vocationalism is revealed here as a
policy for inequality both politically and in the classroom.
Economic Restructuring and Social Exclusion provides a timely
reminder of persisting inequalities of class, race and gender as a
consequence of the changes which have engulfed Europe in less than
a decade. The contributors consider key debates including
democracy, social justice and citizenship. The book also examines
evidence that social and economic polarization is increasing, and
the prospect of a conspicuous and growing "underclass" in Europe's
urban centres is fast becoming a reality. This volume will be
particularly valuable for undergraduate and postgraduate students
in sociology.
Economic Restructuring and Social Exclusion provides a timely
reminder of persisting inequalities of class, race and gender as a
consequence of the changes which have engulfed Europe in less than
a decade. The contributors consider key debates including
democracy, social justice and citizenship. The book also examines
evidence that social and economic polarization is increasing, and
the prospect of a conspicuous and growing "underclass" in Europe's
urban centres is fast becoming a reality. This volume will be
particularly valuable for undergraduate and postgraduate students
in sociology.
For decades, the idea that more education will lead to greater
individual and national prosperity has been a cornerstone of
developed economies. Indeed, it is almost universally believed that
college diplomas give Americans and Europeans a competitive
advantage in the global knowledge wars.
Challenging this conventional wisdom, The Global Auction forces us
to reconsider our deeply held and mistaken views about how the
global economy really works and how to thrive in it. Drawing on
cutting-edge research based on a major international study, the
authors show that the competition for good, middle-class jobs is
now a worldwide competition--an auction for cut-priced
brainpower--fueled by an explosion of higher education across the
world. They highlight a fundamental power shift in favor of
corporate bosses and emerging economies such as China and India, a
change that is driving the new global high-skill, low-wage
workforce. Fighting for a dwindling supply of good jobs will compel
the middle classes to devote more time, money, and effort to set
themselves apart in a bare-knuckle competition that will leave many
disappointed. The authors urge a new conversation about the kind of
society we want to live in and about the kind of global economy
that can benefit workers, but without condemning millions in
emerging economies to a life of poverty.
The Global Auction is a radical rethinking of the ideas that stand
at the heart of the American Dream. It offers a timely expose of
the realities of the global struggle for middle class jobs, a
competition that threatens the livelihoods of millions of American
and European workers and their families."
The study of education and social mobility has been a key area of
sociological research since the 1950s. The importance of this
research derives from the systematic analysis of functionalist
theories of industrialism. Functionalist theories assume that the
complementary demands of efficiency and justice result in more
'meritocratic' societies, characterized by high rates of social
mobility. Much of the sociological evidence has cast doubt on this
optimistic, if not utopian, claim that reform of the education
system could eliminate the influence of class, gender and ethnicity
on academic performance and occupational destinations. This book
brings together sixteen cutting-edge articles on education and
social mobility. It also includes an introductory essay offering a
guide to the main issues and controversies addressed by authors
from several countries. This comprehensive volume makes an
important contribution to our theoretical and empirical
understanding of the changing relationship between origins,
education and destinations. This timely collection is also relevant
to policy-makers as education and social mobility are firmly back
on both national and global political agendas, viewed as key to
creating fairer societies and more competitive economies. This book
was originally published as a special issue of the British Journal
of Sociology of Education.
A new approach to the analysis of cultural reproduction focusing on
the impact of economic change. The book demonstrates the
reinforcement of cultural stereotypes in recruitment caused by
interaction between corporate restructuring and the education
system.; This book is intended for academics, postgraduates and
advanced undergraduates in sociology with an interest in the
sociology of work and the sociology of education as well as
researchers and students within human resource management and
cultural studies.
This book is intended for undergraduate and postgraduate courses in
social structure and political sociology as well as academic
sociologists and libraries. It should have significant appeal to
researchers and students in European studies and others interested
in European integration.
Human capital theory, or the notion that there is a direct
relationship between educational investment and individual and
national prosperity, has dominated public policy on education and
labor for the past fifty years. In The Death of Human Capital?,
Phillip Brown, Hugh Lauder, and Sin Yi Cheung argue that the human
capital story is one of false promise: investing in learning isn't
the road to higher earnings and national prosperity. Rather than
abandoning human capital theory, however, the authors redefine
human capital in an age of smart machines. They present a new human
capital theory that rejects the view that automation and AI will
result in the end of waged work, but see the fundamental problem as
a lack of quality jobs offering interesting, worthwhile, and
rewarding opportunities. A controversial challenge to the reigning
ideology, The Death of Human Capital? connects with a growing sense
that capitalism is in crisis, felt by students and the wider
workforce, shows what's at stake in the new human capital while
offering hope for the future.
What unites the contributors to this book is an opposition to
Thatcherite policies on education and an agreement upon the need
for the development of democracy in education. This volume
highlights the importance of an area of neglected theoretical and
practical concern: the development of a critique of the philosophy
and policies of the new Right, and of credible alternative
policies.
Programming for Electrical Engineers: MATLAB and Spice introduces
beginning engineering students to programming in Matlab and Spice
through engaged, problem-based learning and dedicated electrical
and computer engineering content. The book draws its problems and
examples specifically from electrical and computer engineering,
covering such topics as circuit analysis, signal processing, and
filter design. It teaches relevant computational techniques in the
context of solving common problems in electrical and computer
engineering, including mesh and nodal analysis, Fourier transforms,
and phasor analysis. Programming for Electrical Engineers: MATLAB
and Spice is unique among MATLAB textbooks for its dual focus on
introductory-level learning and discipline-specific content in
electrical and computer engineering. No other textbook on the
market currently targets this audience with the same attention to
discipline-specific content and engaged learning practices.
Although it is primarily an introduction to programming in MATLAB,
the book also has a chapter on circuit simulation using Spice, and
it includes materials required by ABET Accreditation reviews, such
as information on ethics, professional development, and lifelong
learning.
Originally published 1987 Schooling Ordinary Kids looks at the
'invisible majority' of ordinary working-class pupils. The book
explains why these pupils are now at the centre of a major
educational crisis surrounding the soaring rates of youth
unemployment. The book is a timely examination of educational
inequalities, unemployment, and the new vocationalism. Drawing
extensively the study of schools in the urban centre of South Wales
the book highlights the need for an alternative politics of
education, if we were to meet the educational challenge of the
late-twentieth century. The new vocationalism is revealed here as a
policy for inequality both politically and in the classroom.
The study of education and social mobility has been a key area of
sociological research since the 1950s. The importance of this
research derives from the systematic analysis of functionalist
theories of industrialism. Functionalist theories assume that the
complementary demands of efficiency and justice result in more
'meritocratic' societies, characterized by high rates of social
mobility. Much of the sociological evidence has cast doubt on this
optimistic, if not utopian, claim that reform of the education
system could eliminate the influence of class, gender and ethnicity
on academic performance and occupational destinations. This book
brings together sixteen cutting-edge articles on education and
social mobility. It also includes an introductory essay offering a
guide to the main issues and controversies addressed by authors
from several countries. This comprehensive volume makes an
important contribution to our theoretical and empirical
understanding of the changing relationship between origins,
education and destinations. This timely collection is also relevant
to policy-makers as education and social mobility are firmly back
on both national and global political agendas, viewed as key to
creating fairer societies and more competitive economies. This book
was originally published as a special issue of the British Journal
of Sociology of Education.
This book lifts the veneer of 'employability', to expose serious
problems in the way that future workers are trying to manage their
employability in the competition for tough-entry jobs in the
knowledge economy; in how companies understand their human resource
strategies and endeavor to recruit the managers and leaders of the
future; and in the government failure to come to terms with the
realities of the knowledge-based economy. The demand for
high-skilled, high waged jobs, has been exaggerated. But it is
something that governments want to believe because it distracts
attention from thorny political issues around equality,
opportunity, and redistribution. If it is assumed that there are
plenty of good jobs for people with the appropriate credentials
then the issue of who gets the best jobs loses its political sting.
But if good jobs are in limited supply, how the competition for a
livelihood is organized assumes paramount importance. This issue,
is not lost on the middle classes, given that they depend on
academic achievement to maintain, if not advance the occupational
and social status of family members. The reality is that increasing
congestion in the market for knowledge workers has led to growing
middle class anxieties about how their off-spring are going to meet
the rising threshold of employability that now has to be achieved
to stand any realistic chance of finding interesting and rewarding
employment. The result is a bare-knuckle struggle for access to
elite schools, colleges, universities and jobs. This book examines
whether employability policies are flawed because they ignore the
realities of 'positional' conflict in the competition for a
livelihood, especially as the rise of mass higher education has
arguably done little to increase the employability of students for
tough-entry jobs. It will be of interest to anyone looking to
understand the way knowledge-based firms recruit and how this is
influenced by government policy, be they Researchers, Academics and
Students of Business and Management, Industrial Relations, Human
Resource Management, Politics or Sociology; Human Resource
Management or Recruitment Professionals; or job candidates.
A major contribution to current debates about the future of skill formation in a context of economic globalization, rapid technological innovation, and change within education, training, and the labour market. It represents a major theoretical advance in its holistic approach to the political economy of high skills, and has implications that stand at the core of firm strategies and government policy in Europe, North America, and Asia.
Education: Culture, Economy, and Society is a book for everyone concerned with the social study of education: students studying the sociology of education, foundations of education, educational policy, and other related courses. It aims to establish the social study of education at the centre stage of political and sociological debate about post-industrial societies. In examining major changes which have taken place in the late twentieth century, it gives students a comprehensive introduction to both the nature of these changes and to their interpretation in relation to long-standing debates within education, sociology, and cultural studies. The extensive editorial introduction outlines the major theoretical approaches within the sociology of education, assesses their contribution to an adequate understanding of the changing educational context, and sets out the key issues and areas for future research. The 52 papers in this wide-ranging thematic reader bring together the most powerful work in education into an international dialogue which is sure to become a classic text. Contributors: Professor Michael W. Apple, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA Madeleine Arnot, Cambridge University Professor Stanley Aronowitz, Graduate Centre, City University of New York Professor David Ashton, University of Leicester, UK Professor Stephen J. Ball, King's College, University of London Professor Basil Bernstein, Institute of Education, University of London Professor Jill Blackmore, Deakin University, Australia Professor Allan Bloom, University of Chicago Professor Pierre Bourdieu, College de France, Paris Dr Richard Bowe, King's College, University of London Dr Phillip Brown, Reader in Sociology, University of Kent, UK John E. Chubb, Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution, Washington Professor John Codd, Massey University, NZ Professor James Coleman, Department of Sociology, University of Chicago Professor R.W. Connell, University of California, Santa Cruz Professor Roger Dale, University of Auckland, NZ Linda Darling-Hammond, William F. Russell Professor, Foundation of Education, Columbia University Professor Miriam David, South Bank University Professor William De Fazio, St John's University, New York Lisa D. Delpit, Baltimore City Schools Professor Michelle Fine, Graduate Centre, City University of New York Professor Stephen Fraser, Vice-President and Executive Editor, Basic Books Dr Sharon Gewirtz, King's College, University of London Professor Henry Giroux, Pennsylvania State University Professor John Goldthorpe, Nuffield College, Oxford Dr Liz Gordon, Senior Lecturer, University of Canterbury, NZ Professor Gerald Grace, University of Durham, UK Dr Andy Green, Reader in Education, Institute of Education, University of London, UK Professor A.H. Halsey, Nuffield College, Oxford Professor Andy Hargreaves, The Ontario Institute for Student Education, Toronto,Canada Professor Richard Harker, Massey University, NZ Professor Anthony Heath, Nuffield College, Oxford Professor Carolyn Kelly, Stanford University, California Professor Jane Kenway, Deakin University, Australia Professor Krishan Kumar, University of Kent, UK Professor Annette Lareau, Southern Illinois University Professor Hugh Lauder, University of Bath, UK Professor Henry M. Levin, Stanford University, California Dr Darren McMahon, University College, Dublin Professor Andrew McPherson, Edinburgh University Terry M. Moe, Associate Professor of Political Science, Stanford University, California Professor Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Hamilton College, USA Professor Peter Mortimore, Director, Institute of Education, University of London, UK Professor John U. Ogbu, University of California, Berkeley Professor Robert B. Reich, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Professor I. Serna, Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, UCLA Professor Johnny Sung, University of Leicester, UK Martin Thrupp, Victoria University of Wellington, NZ Dr Harry Torrance, University of Sussex, UK Sietske Waslander, University of Groningen, Netherlands Professor Amy Stuart Wells, UCLA Professor Gaby Weiner, South Bank University, UK Professor Cornel West, Harvard University Professor Geoffrey Whitty, Institute of Education, University of London Professor J. Douglas Willms, University of British Columbia, Canada Professor William Julius Wilson, The University of Chicago Dr Maureen Woodhall, Institute of Education, University of London, UK Michael Young, Institute of Community Studies, London, UK
For decades, the idea that more education will lead to greater
individual and national prosperity has been a cornerstone of
developed economies. Indeed, it is almost universally believed that
college diplomas give Americans and Europeans a competitive
advantage in the global knowledge wars. Challenging this
conventional wisdom, The Global Auction forces us to reconsider our
deeply held and mistaken views about how the global economy really
works and how to thrive in it. Drawing on cutting-edge research
based on a major international study, the authors show that the
competition for good, middle-class jobs is now a worldwide
competition-an auction for cut-priced brainpower-fueled by an
explosion of higher education across the world. They highlight a
fundamental power shift in favor of corporate bosses and emerging
economies such as China and India, a change that is driving the new
global high-skill, low-wage workforce. Fighting for a dwindling
supply of good jobs will compel the middle classes to devote more
time, money, and effort to set themselves apart in a bare-knuckle
competition that will leave many disappointed. The authors urge a
new conversation about the kind of society we want to live in and
about the kind of global economy that can benefit workers, but
without condemning millions in emerging economies to a life of
poverty. The Global Auction is a radical rethinking of the ideas
that stand at the heart of the American Dream. It offers a timely
expose of the realities of the global struggle for middle class
jobs, a competition that threatens the livelihoods of millions of
American and European workers and their families. "A brilliant new
book." - Andrew Reinbach, The Huffington Post "This is a very
important book. Their critique of the present state of global
capitalism is both timely and convincing." - Roger Brown, Times
Higher Education "[A]truly outstanding volume."-Lois Weis,
University of Buffalo, British Journal of Sociology of Education.
"The Global Auction is a must-read for parents, college students,
and policymakers. We press the message to our children: 'Study. Get
degrees. Get a good job. And you will live the good life.' But such
claims are strikingly at odds with the realities of income
stagnation and poor job prospects. The authors explain how this
dramatic breakdown between rhetoric and reality happened and how we
might reconstruct an alternative future in which education becomes
meaningful and fulfilling in its own right." -Henry M. Levin,
Columbia University "This is a challenging and very timely book.
The gauntlet is thrown down to economists wedded to human capital
theory and to sociologists who see education as the great engine of
social mobility." -John Goldthorpe, University of Oxford "The
Global Auction deals with one of the most pressing issues of our
times: how the significant expansion in the labor supply available
to multinational corporations is leading to dramatic shifts in the
location of employment around the world. It draws on years of
in-depth research, offering valuable insights for both academics
and business leaders."-David Finegold, Rutgers, The State
University of New Jersey "Brown, Lauder, and Ashton's book is
brilliantly argued and provides a wakeup call to global citizens
everywhere. There is no substitute for the regulation of global
capitalism in the interests of the many rather than the few, and
this book slams the door on the last set of excuses for maintaining
the current system-that somehow the educated will escape the race
to the bottom."-Kevin Leicht, University of Iowa
Human capital theory, or the notion that there is a direct
relationship between educational investment and individual and
national prosperity, has dominated public policy on education and
labor for the past fifty years. In The Death of Human Capital?,
Phillip Brown, Hugh Lauder, and Sin Yi Cheung argue that the human
capital story is one of false promise: investing in learning isn't
the road to higher earnings and national prosperity. Rather than
abandoning human capital theory, however, the authors redefine
human capital in an age of smart machines. They present a new human
capital theory that rejects the view that automation and AI will
result in the end of waged work, but see the fundamental problem as
a lack of quality jobs offering interesting, worthwhile, and
rewarding opportunities. A controversial challenge to the reigning
ideology, The Death of Human Capital? connects with a growing sense
that capitalism is in crisis, felt by students and the wider
workforce, shows what's at stake in the new human capital while
offering hope for the future.
This book lifts the veneer of 'employability', to expose serious
problems in the way that future workers are trying to manage their
employability in the competition for tough-entry jobs in the
knowledge economy; in how companies understand their human resource
strategies and endeavor to recruit the managers and leaders of the
future; and in the government failure to come to terms with the
realities of the knowledge-based economy. The demand for
high-skilled, high waged jobs, has been exaggerated. But it is
something that governments want to believe because it distracts
attention from thorny political issues around equality,
opportunity, and redistribution. If it is assumed that there are
plenty of good jobs for people with the appropriate credentials
then the issue of who gets the best jobs loses its political sting.
But if good jobs are in limited supply, how the competition for a
livelihood is organized assumes paramount importance. This issue,
is not lost on the middle classes, given that they depend on
academic achievement to maintain, if not advance the occupational
and social status of family members. The reality is that increasing
congestion in the market for knowledge workers has led to growing
middle class anxieties about how their off-spring are going to meet
the rising threshold of employability that now has to be achieved
to stand any realistic chance of finding interesting and rewarding
employment. The result is a bare-knuckle struggle for access to
elite schools, colleges, universities and jobs. This book examines
whether employability policies are flawed because they ignore the
realities of 'positional' conflict in the competition for a
livelihood, especially as the rise of mass higher education has
arguably done little to increase the employability of students for
tough-entry jobs. It will be of interest to anyone looking to
understand the way knowledge-based firms recruit and how this is
influenced by government policy, be they Researchers, Academics and
Students of Business and Management, Industrial Relations, Human
Resource Management, Politics or Sociology; Human Resource
Management or Recruitment Professionals; or job candidates.
A major contribution to current debates about the future of skill formation in a context of economic globalization, rapid technological innovation, and change within education, training, and the labour market. It represents a major theoretical advance in its holistic approach to the political economy of high skills, and has implications that stand at the core of firm strategies and government policy in Europe, North America, and Asia.
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