Choosing to Labour?

School-Work Transitions and Social Class

Wolfgang Lehmann author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press

Published:6th Aug '07

Should be back in stock very soon

Choosing to Labour? cover

How social class influences the educational decisions and experiences of vocational and academic-track youth in Canada and Germany.

Offers an analysis of the inter-relationships between social class, institutional structures, and individual educational and career choices. This book shows how the range of school-work transition options are defined by both gender and social class. It highlights the importance of the institutional context in understanding school-work transitions.Young people about to leave high school argue that they are determining their own destinies. Scholarly debates also suggest that the influence of structural factors such as social class on an individual's life course is decreasing. Wolfgang Lehmann challenges this view and offers a detailed comparative analysis of the inter-relationships between social class, institutional structures, and individual educational and career choices. Through a qualitative study of academic-track high school students and participants in youth apprenticeships in Germany and Canada, Lehmann shows how the range of available school-work transition options are defined by both gender and social class. Highlighting the importance of the institutional context in understanding school-work transitions, particularly in relation to Germany's celebrated apprenticeship system, which rests on highly streamed secondary schooling and a stratified labour market, Lehmann argues that social inequalities are maintained in part by the choices made by young people, rather than simply by structural forces. Choosing to Labour? concludes with an exploration of how public policy can meet the dual challenge of providing young people with meaningful and equitable educational experiences, while simultaneously fulfilling the need for a skilled workforce.

"Choosing to Labour? makes a major contribution to our understanding of how different groups of adolescents make the transition from school to adult life. It is the most stimulating and thought-provoking piece of sociological research that I've read in a long time." Julian Tanner, University of Toronto at Scarborough

ISBN: 9780773533066

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 344g

232 pages