Nationhood, Modernity and Social Class in Israeli Education

The Israeli education system, from its inception at the beginning of the century, strove to consolidate and disseminate a new national identity. These efforts met with considerable success, although patterns of cultural and social differentiation were concurrently formed in the schools between youth...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of sociology of education 1998-09, Vol.19 (3), p.355-364
1. Verfasser: Kashti, Yitzhak
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description The Israeli education system, from its inception at the beginning of the century, strove to consolidate and disseminate a new national identity. These efforts met with considerable success, although patterns of cultural and social differentiation were concurrently formed in the schools between youths from European backgrounds and those of Middle Eastern origin. The reform of secondary education in the direction of comprehensive schools in the 1960s and 1970s was expected to eliminate cultural 'gaps' and equalize educational opportunities for all. These goals were achieved only in part because of the operation of new selection mechanisms inside secondary education, which became universal following the reform. The 'autonomization' of schools as not-for-profit organizations and their opening to parental choice have in the past few years been presented as freeing Israeli education from its centralistic-bureaucratic bonds. Analysis of the politico-cultural and socio-economic changes over the last two decades in Israel indicates that these steps are in line with the traditional structural differentiation in education on the basis of class and cultural background. The new arrangements-like the old ones-strive to secure secondary-school tracks leading to university education in order to preserve the status of youth from the well-established middle classes.
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Analysis of the politico-cultural and socio-economic changes over the last two decades in Israel indicates that these steps are in line with the traditional structural differentiation in education on the basis of class and cultural background. 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These efforts met with considerable success, although patterns of cultural and social differentiation were concurrently formed in the schools between youths from European backgrounds and those of Middle Eastern origin. The reform of secondary education in the direction of comprehensive schools in the 1960s and 1970s was expected to eliminate cultural 'gaps' and equalize educational opportunities for all. These goals were achieved only in part because of the operation of new selection mechanisms inside secondary education, which became universal following the reform. The 'autonomization' of schools as not-for-profit organizations and their opening to parental choice have in the past few years been presented as freeing Israeli education from its centralistic-bureaucratic bonds. Analysis of the politico-cultural and socio-economic changes over the last two decades in Israel indicates that these steps are in line with the traditional structural differentiation in education on the basis of class and cultural background. The new arrangements-like the old ones-strive to secure secondary-school tracks leading to university education in order to preserve the status of youth from the well-established middle classes.</abstract><cop>Abingdon</cop><pub>Taylor &amp; Francis Group</pub><doi>10.1080/0142569980190305</doi><tpages>10</tpages></addata></record>
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source Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Taylor & Francis:Master (3349 titles)
subjects Access to Education
Children
Class Differences
Communities
Education
Education policy
Educational Change
Educational Inequality
Educational Policy
Educational Reform
Educational Systems
Elementary schools
Equal Education
Foreign Countries
Group identity
Hebrews
Individualized Instruction
Israel
Middle Class
Modernity
National Identity
Nationalism
Nationhood
Relationship
Religious Factors
School Choice
School Desegregation
Schools
Secondary Education
Social class
Social classes
Social Influences
Social Stratification
Sociology
Sociology of education. Educational systems. Lifelong education
Tracking (Education)
Zionism
title Nationhood, Modernity and Social Class in Israeli Education
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