ABSTRACT

Class Strategies and the Education Market examines the ways in which the middle classes maintain and improve their social advantages in and through education.
Drawing on an extensive series of interviews with parents and children, this book identifies key moments of decision making in the construction of the educational trajectories of middle class children. Stephen J. Ball organises his analysis around the key concepts of social closure, social capital, values and principles and risk, while bringing a broad range of up-to-date sociological theory to bear upon his subject. From this thorough analysis, valuable and thought-provoking insights emerge into the assiduous care and considerable effort and expenditure which goes into ensuring the educational success of the middle class child
The middle classes are a sociological enigma, presenting the social researcher with considerable analytic and theoretical difficulties. Class Strategies and the Education Market provides a set of working tools for class analysis and the examination of class practices. Above all, it offers new ways of thinking about class theory and the relationships between classes in late modern society.

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

Between structure and hermeneutics

chapter 2|11 pages

Class and strategy

chapter 3|28 pages

Class and policy

chapter 4|26 pages

Social class as social closure

A strategic approach

chapter 5|32 pages

Social capital, social class and choice

chapter 6|37 pages

Values and principles

Social justice in the head

chapter 7|19 pages

Risk, uncertainty and fear

chapter 8|14 pages

Class practices and inequality