Opportunity and Justice: building a valuable and sustainable educational experience for disenfranchised and disengaged youth
Opportunity and Justice: building a valuable and sustainable educational experience for disenfranchised and disengaged youth
Building a valuable and sustainable educational experience for disenfranchised and disengaged youth remains a challenge for secondary schools. This article examines successful schools located in areas of deprivation through the lens of Rawlsianism, particularly those ideas stated in A Theory of Justice (1971). Case studies from 16 schools located in England and Wales are examined for characteristics identified by heads, teachers and pupils which support their overcoming low performance, poverty and social disadvantage. The article reports both the 15-year quantitative outcomes of the schools on national performance measures and qualitative findings on strategies used by the schools and students to reach comparatively higher levels of success than students at more privileged schools reach. Central to these characteristics is the schools' ability to offer adequate basic rights or opportunities to all pupils. These schools were able to diminish social and economic inequalities for the least-advantaged students without diminishing these same opportunities for all students.
52-63
Schaffer, Eugene C.
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Stringfield, Sam
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Reynolds, David
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Schaffer, Justin
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March 2013
Schaffer, Eugene C.
79e73a4e-89b1-4842-a0cb-9fb0aaeb607e
Stringfield, Sam
4ba3cd75-3666-429d-9d0e-8ec2c8300f14
Reynolds, David
7761a0ea-0758-4410-8ce0-048db979902e
Schaffer, Justin
2d106e5b-286d-4d47-acd8-f2b530fa19fb
Schaffer, Eugene C., Stringfield, Sam, Reynolds, David and Schaffer, Justin
(2013)
Opportunity and Justice: building a valuable and sustainable educational experience for disenfranchised and disengaged youth.
Power and Education, 5 (1), .
(doi:10.2304/power.2013.5.1.52).
Abstract
Building a valuable and sustainable educational experience for disenfranchised and disengaged youth remains a challenge for secondary schools. This article examines successful schools located in areas of deprivation through the lens of Rawlsianism, particularly those ideas stated in A Theory of Justice (1971). Case studies from 16 schools located in England and Wales are examined for characteristics identified by heads, teachers and pupils which support their overcoming low performance, poverty and social disadvantage. The article reports both the 15-year quantitative outcomes of the schools on national performance measures and qualitative findings on strategies used by the schools and students to reach comparatively higher levels of success than students at more privileged schools reach. Central to these characteristics is the schools' ability to offer adequate basic rights or opportunities to all pupils. These schools were able to diminish social and economic inequalities for the least-advantaged students without diminishing these same opportunities for all students.
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Published date: March 2013
Organisations:
Southampton Education School
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Local EPrints ID: 386226
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/386226
ISSN: 1757-7438
PURE UUID: a1669a6b-1180-4550-845f-e9c86f40f37c
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Date deposited: 21 Jan 2016 12:06
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 22:28
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Author:
Eugene C. Schaffer
Author:
Sam Stringfield
Author:
David Reynolds
Author:
Justin Schaffer
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