Digitale Bibliotheek
Sluiten Bladeren door artikelen uit een tijdschrift
 
<< vorige    volgende >>
     Tijdschrift beschrijving
       Alle jaargangen van het bijbehorende tijdschrift
         Alle afleveringen van het bijbehorende jaargang
           Alle artikelen van de bijbehorende aflevering
                                       Details van artikel 3 van 9 gevonden artikelen
 
 
  Is it a case of 'We know when we're not wanted'? The parents' perspective on parent-teacher roles and relationships
 
 
Titel: Is it a case of 'We know when we're not wanted'? The parents' perspective on parent-teacher roles and relationships
Auteur: Crozier, Gill
Verschenen in: Educational research
Paginering: Jaargang 41 (1999) nr. 3 pagina's 315-328
Jaar: 1999
Inhoud: Whilst there is now clearly an expectation upon parents to become more involved in schools and to take a greater part in their children's education, there is still little attempt to address the constraints upon achieving such aims. These constraints have been shown to include social class factors, gender relations, ethnicity and power relationships. This paper will take the analysis of some of these constraints further and, in particular, will focus on the views of working-class parents on their relationships with, and role in relation to, their children's secondary school. The paper will explore the reasons for the orientation by working-class parents which would seem to differ markedly from that of middle-class parents. It will be shown that working-class parents are committed to their children achieving educational success, and that they perceive their own role as supportive in a variety of ways. However, their position in relation to schools is to view the school as separate from their everyday social and cultural world and that the parent-teacher role comprises a division of labour. It will be argued that teachers tend to adopt the same strategies for promoting parental involvement irrespective of class, parental needs, individual circumstances, and so on. Hence, because they take no account of differences, and because their strategies are constructed essentially from a logocentric position, then they serve to reinforce the parents' perception of teachers as the professional 'who knows best': as the powerful knower which thus reinforces working-class parents' fatalistic view of schooling and their role as passive. The paper draws on data from a three-year research project into the parents' relationship with their children's secondary school. The data set which formed the basis of the analysis presented here comprises interviews with 58 parents from one of the case-study schools which will be known as Acre Lane, and 15 of the school's teachers.
Uitgever: Routledge
Bronbestand: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details van artikel 3 van 9 gevonden artikelen
 
<< vorige    volgende >>
 
 Koninklijke Bibliotheek - Nationale Bibliotheek van Nederland