Cultural capital or habitus? Bourdieu and beyond in the explanation of enduring educational inequality

Evidence for Bourdieu’s social reproduction theory and its contributions to understanding educational inequality has been relatively mixed. Critics discount the usefulness of core concepts such as cultural capital and habitus and most studies invoking these concepts have focused only on one or the o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Theory and research in education 2014-07, Vol.12 (2), p.193-220
Hauptverfasser: Edgerton, Jason D., Roberts, Lance W.
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description Evidence for Bourdieu’s social reproduction theory and its contributions to understanding educational inequality has been relatively mixed. Critics discount the usefulness of core concepts such as cultural capital and habitus and most studies invoking these concepts have focused only on one or the other, often conflating the two, to the detriment of both. We disentangle cultural capital and habitus, and argue that taken together – in conjunction with practice and field – they hold significant explanatory potential. Moreover, we argue that these concepts can be incorporated into a scientific realist ‘structure–disposition–practice’ explanatory framework that seeks to address the misalignment between Bourdieuian relational constructs and standard positivist quantitative research methods. This reframing can help generate practical, actionable knowledge of the mechanisms underlying persistent socioeconomic disparities in educational attainment.
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subjects Cognitive Ability
Conceptualization
Cultural Capital
Education
Educational Attainment
Equal Education
Guidelines
Habitus
Practice
Quantitative analysis
Research methods
Social Capital
Social Structure
Social Theories
Socioeconomic Influences
Statistical Analysis
title Cultural capital or habitus? Bourdieu and beyond in the explanation of enduring educational inequality
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