Fr. 66.00

Labour Class Childrens Schooling in Urban India - A Sociological Account

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Based on ethnographic research conducted in an urban, coeducational school, this book challenges the modernist, Eurocentric and ahistorical understandings of childhood that prevail in educational policy-making in India, offering a contextualised account of childhood through an engagement with 'poor' children's lives at home and school.


List of contents










Dedication
Table of contents
Acknowledgments


  1. Making a case for sociological accounts of childhood, labour and schooling

    1. Theorising the link between educational and socioeconomic inequalities

    2. Poverty and poor children's schooling in development discourses

      1. The 'girl effect'

    3. Informal work

      1. A note on the term, 'labour class'

    4. Methods

    5. Organisation of the book

    6. Theorising intersections: poverty, patriarchy and urban children's schooling in India

      1. Socioeconomic and educational stratification and access to schooling

        1. Stratification, participation and access

        2. Decision-making within families

      2. Classroom processes, experience and social relations

        1. Teacher attitudes and discrimination

        2. Welfare, poverty and social class difference

      3. Theoretical framework

        1. Childhood, the school/labour binary and political economy

        2. Caste, class and informal work

        3. Poverty, gendered work and social reproduction

        4. Caste patriarchy and children's lives

      4. Contributions

      5. Labour class students and their families: a look at urban lives and labours

        1. Introduction

        2. Migrating to Indore

          1. Children migrating without parents

        3. Labour class parents' work

          1. OBC families

          2. SC families

        4. Children's gendered work

          1. Boys' work

          2. Girls' work

        5. Conclusion

        6. Ghar, bahar and the gendered place of school in children's lives

          1. Introduction

          2. Ghar: Why school is dearer than home

            1. (Un)freedom: village versus city

            2. (Un)freedom: no bargains within patriarchy

            3. (Un)freedom: when protecting becomes policing

          3. Bahar: What could be more important than school?

            1. The rewards of (waged) work

            2. The reward is in recognition: jaan-pehchan

          4. Conclusion: Gendered and classed significance of school

          5. 'Sarkari skool', 'sarkari bacche': unpacking the narrative of deficiency

            1. Introduction

            2. The 'sarkari' school

              1. Overview of infrastructure, facilities and routine

              2. What is 'sarkari' about the school?

            3. Teachers' 'deficit view' of labour class children

              1. Differences between teachers' practices

            4. Challenging the deficit view

              1. Labour class parents' struggles and strategies

              2. Labour class pupils' struggles and efforts

            5. Conclusion

            6. The hidden moral curriculum for 'labour class' children

              1. Introduction

              2. Disciplining the welfare-dependent labour class

              3. Keeping labour class children 'clean'

                1. Countering the narrative, cleaning the school

              4. For the love of caste patriarchy: policing clothes, space and interaction

                1. Constructing and negotiating labour class femininities

                2. Policing techniques in the classroom

                3. Negotiating gender policing

              5. Conclusion

              6. Schooling, social inequality and impossibilities of change

                1. Children in families

                2. Children in classrooms

                3. Conclusion
                References
                Index


                About the author










                Reva Yunus is Lecturer in Education and Social Justice in the Department of Education at the University of York, UK.


                Summary

                Based on ethnographic research conducted in an urban, coeducational school, this book challenges the modernist, Eurocentric and ahistorical understandings of childhood that prevail in educational policy-making in India, offering a contextualised account of childhood through an engagement with ‘poor’ children’s lives at home and school.

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