ABSTRACT

In this ethnographic study of a secondary school in the UK, the author presents an incisive account of school life from the various points of view of the pupils, teachers and parents. He describes and analyses major areas of experience and methods of adapting to school for both the children and their teachers; school experience is shown to be widely varying from boredom, despair and humiliation, to gaiety, exultation and comradeship some of it officially and some of it unofficially sponsored. The description reveals a number of marked and interpenetrating divisions within schools: between teachers and pupils, parents and teachers, parents and children and between pupils themselves. These divisions are explored, analysed and related both to institutional factors and to factors outside the school. The study suggests how these factors influence pupil and teacher strategies, and hence how the details of school life relates to wider society.

 

 

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter |15 pages

Theoretical approach

chapter |38 pages

Patterns of choice*

chapter |21 pages

Pupil adaptations

chapter |18 pages

Pupils' views*

chapter |19 pages

Having a laugh*

chapter |19 pages

Showing them up*

chapter |30 pages

The hidden pedagogy of survival

chapter |40 pages

The professionalism of school reports

chapter |27 pages

The meaning of staffroom humour

chapter |23 pages

Summary and conclusion