an article by Nigel Charles Kettley and and Joan M. Whitehead (University of Cambridge, UK) published in Educational Review Volume 64 Issue 4 (November 2012)
Abstract
This paper provides a critique of recent Bourdieusian research into the higher education (HE) choice process. Specifically, Ball et al. (2002) maintain that class-related differences in students’ psycho-social dispositions in Years 12 and 13, the “landscape of choice”, shape their intentions or “decisions” to participate in HE and their selection of high or lower status universities.
However, drawing on a national survey of Year 12 students we find that paternal occupation is a poor predictor of intended participation in HE.
Furthermore, those psycho-social factors shaping students’ aspirations to participate in HE and their selection of university type exhibit substantial class convergence.
We argue that the research of Ball et al. (2002) analyses data from an atypical sample and deploys a dichotomous narrative of class. These practices exaggerate class-related differences in the HE choice process, at this level of education, and tend to confirm the Bourdieusian thesis.
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