Skip to product information
1 of 1

On What Is Learned in School

Regular price £30.00
Sale price £30.00 Regular price £30.00
Sale Sold out
This volume focuses on the nature of schooling and its links with the family, occupations, and politics. Robert Dreeben emphasizes the relationship between school structure and learning outcomes, t...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 31 December 2002
View Product Details


This volume focuses on the nature of schooling and its links with the family, occupations, and politics. Robert Dreeben emphasizes the relationship between school structure and learning outcomes, the importance of these outcomes to other social institutions, and the contrasts between school structure and other socializing agencies. A new prologue by the author places the book into the context of subsequent developments in sociology of education. Originally published by Addison-Wesley in 1968.






files/i.png Icon
Price: £30.00
Pages: 194
Publisher: Eliot Werner Publications
Imprint: Eliot Werner Publications
Series: Foundations of Sociology
Publication Date: 31 December 2002
ISBN: 9780971958708
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Society and culture: general, Sociology

REVIEWS Icon


'Robert Dreeben’s work cuts across many aspects of the sociology of education and is at the background of a whole range of discussions in the field. In this context On What Is Learned in School remains a most important document. The book has been my on own course reading list for decades and remains there now. It has many followers and is a landmark achievement.' (John W. Meyer, Stanford University)



'[O]ne of the very best books written about the sociology of schools. The book benefits from a clear theoretical perspective, which illuminates the dynamics of a personality as it passes from the world of the family of origin to the adult world of work and politics.' (Amitai Etzioni, Sociology of Education)



 Dreeben has fleshed out . . . the bare bones of an argument that Parsons first advanced in an article on the school class as a social system . . . and has contributed his own theoretical insights into the relationship of the structure of the school to the socialization process.' (Jan J. Loubser, Sociology of Education)



Prologue to the Percheron Press Edition

Chapter 1. Introduction

Chapter 2. The Social Structure of Family and School Settings

Chapter 3. Patterns of Conduct in Families and Schools

Chapter 4. Normative Outcomes of Schooling

Chapter 5. The Contribution of Schooling to the Learning of Norms: Independence, Achievement, Universalism, and Specificity

Chapter 6. Schooling and Citizenship

Chapter 7. Schooling, Work, and Politics

Author Index

Subject Index