1. Parents' Individualist and Collectivist Strategies at the City Technology College, Kingshurst.
- Author
-
Gewirtz, Sharon, Miller, Henry, and Walford, Geoffrey
- Subjects
- *
INDIVIDUALISM , *CITY technology colleges (Great Britain) , *COLLECTIVISM (Social psychology) , *EDUCATION policy , *SCHOOL choice , *COLLEGE choice - Abstract
The article discusses the attitudes to school choice and to City Technology Colleges of a sample of parents of children at the first City Technology College at Kingshurst, Solihull. In examining the views of these parents, wider questions about individualist and collectivist strategies towards education were raised. The City Technology College (CTC), Kingshurst was the first of what was planned to be a network of 20 new independent schools in Great Britain financed by industry and central government. According to a Department of Education and Science (DES) booklet on the scheme, these schools were to serve 11 to 18 year olds within specific catchment areas. The expressions of individualism and collectivism by individuals and families are often complex and contradictory. Such complexity perhaps reflects the individualist and collectivist dimensions of consumption. Sending a child to the CTC does not necessarily imply a commitment to a market system, individualism or a competitive system in education. Nor does it necessarily suggest hostility to Local Education Authorities or to comprehensive education. In many cases the choice of the CTC was simply a pragmatic response to a belief in uneven and inadequate local secondary school provision. Ideologies of individualism and collectivism coexist, with little evidence that the introduction of CTCs has fundamentally altered parents' attitudes.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF