Sociology of Education: Adepoju O. Joseph
Sociology of Education: Adepoju O. Joseph
Sociology of Education: Adepoju O. Joseph
ADEPOJU O. JOSEPH
SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION
Unit Structure
- Objectives
- Introduction
- Meaning of Sociology
- Function of Sociology
- Meaning of Education
- Agents of Socialization
- Culture
INTRODUCTION
Any individual can learn very little by himself. Others play a very
important role and contribute a lot to his learning process. The presence
of other persons is important because a person learns from the
knowledge gained by others. Therefore the process of getting education
is always a social process.
The word Sociology is derived from the combination of the Latin socius
meaning ‘companion’ and the Greek logos - meaning ‘the study of’. So
the word literally means the study of companionship, or social relations.
It is the science or study of the origin, development, organization, and
functioning of human society. It is the science of fundamental laws of
social behavior, relations, institutions, etc.
Meaning of Sociology
The scientific assessment of the social facts within the society serves as
an avenue to curb discomfort and instability in the society amongst the
people. Hence, sociology as a field assists the members of any society
to solve attitudinal, character, behavioural and social problems to
actualize a healthy growth and development of such society.
Sociologists therefore are people serving the society in a variety of
capacities as teachers, lecturers, researchers, journalists, workers in
industry, personnel officers, social workers, administrators, farm
planners, parsons, criminologists, probation officers and so forth. It is on
the basis of this that the basic knowledge of sociology is compulsory for
scholars in all field of endeavour for better understanding of the society
which they live.
SELF-ASSESSMENT EXERCISE 1
List at least five aspects of economy where you find the study of
sociology relevant.
Functions of Sociology
Meaning of Education
Education and sociology are issues used to classify and establish the
interrelatedness between education and the society. The terms
educational sociology and sociology of education are used in the
discipline as approaches to the two extremes. The usage of the two
terms rests on the preference of the expert. However, in the
contemporary world, sociology of education is commonly in use. This is
because educational sociology would imply an emphasis upon
emphasizes sociological problems in the realm of education which is the
concern of sociologists.
Modern sociology was born out of the Industrial Revolution and the
increasing awareness of radical shifts in the social structure of society, in
particular in Europe and England. But it was during this period that
education as we know it was also expanding, so that in a way,
industrialization and educational expansion went hand in hand.
Education did enter into the writings of the early classical sociologists,
although not always in well thought-out forms.
Classical Origins
The third, and perhaps the most important, of the classical sociologists
who influenced the development of the sociology of education was Emile
Durkheim (1858–1917).
Every society has its own changing socio – cultural needs and requires
an education to meet these needs. Today’s needs are conservation of
resources, environmental protection, global citizenship etc. Therefore
education caters towards meeting of these different needs. Since the
needs of the society change education also changes. Hence there is
need for studying sociology of education. It helps in understanding:
• Self-esteem/self-efficacy
• Thinking creatively
• Citizens who can evaluate information and predict future outcomes are
developed – in short who can take part in decision-making
Agents of Socialization
1 The Family
2 The School
4 Religious Houses
5 Mass Media
Concept of Socialization
Early Socialization
Agents of Socialization
1. The Family
The family is one of the many small face-to-face groups that are called
primary groups saddled with the responsibility of giving the offspring a
qualitative and decent pattern of living. The family is expected to satisfy
“sex needs” (reproduction), economic needs – feeding, clothing, shelter,
medical provision, and so on. It is also expected to transmit the cultural
values and norms to the young generation in order to be fully integrated
into the society. The family is indeed the foundation of socialization
because that is the first contact of the child. The inculcation of basic
social values, desirable character traits and norms are learnt first in the
family. The home assists in laying the foundation for personality and
character development of a child. The success or failure of an individual
depends on the type of social take-off acquired in the family setting.
2. The School
The school is another important agent of socialization. After the home,
the child is exposed to the school which also influences him. It socializes
the child, gives him the opportunity to manifest his qualities,
potentialities, capabilities, instincts, drives and motives and helps to
develop his personality. For the child, the teacher’s personality and
character provide a mode which he strives to copy, thereby consciously
molding his personality. This is true only of those teachers who succeed
in arousing in the child’s mind an attachment and love of themselves.
Every little action, every movement, speech made by the teacher
impresses itself on the child’s mind.
Apart from the teacher, the child is also influenced by his school mates
or groups. These mates or groups play a significant role in determining
the status and role the child will occupy in the society later in life. During
the process of education, the child’s personality develops under the
impact of the other personalities with whom he comes in contact. In the
school, the child is discipline; he is aware that disobedience brings
immediate punishment but too strict a system of discipline restricts
child’s mental growth and may even drive him into criminal activity.
On the other hand, complete absence of control may either make him
liberal, free and independent or impulsive. Besides, the cultural
programmes of the school also help to refine his attitudes. The school is
also expected to transmit knowledge and skills into the learners to be
able to face life challenges and for sustenance.
5. Mass Media
The mass media as an agent of socialization have their own technical
characteristics. There are two major types namely “Print and Electronic.
The print is in the group of newspapers, magazines, periodicals, texts,
bill boards and so on. While the electronics are the Radio, Television,
video, projectors and so forth. These form avenues for socialization.
Media are clearly in competition with one another for a restricted period
of leisure time though there is one exception to this generalization.
Because the radio has the specific characteristic that can be used as a
background to other activities; the specialist provision of music apt for
this purpose has been developed as a major function. The different
media largely because of technical characteristics are used in different
ways by children and hence different types of messages are passed
through mass media. Children need to be guided in the usage of their
leisure hours in the patronage and utilization of mass media to
discourage cultivation and learning of negative ideas.
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
1. The Family
The family plays the most significant role in the development of an
individual. Frend believed that the impressions made upon the child’s
personality as an adult by the family is very crucial. There are also
factors of social environment that may affect a child which include the
occupational status of his parents, the parents’ attitude towards their
children schooling and the expectations they have for their children. A
child from a higher socio-economic background has advantages over the
child from the socio-economically lower class. In a higher class, there
may be a television set, radio, picture, reading and writing materials all
of which help to prepare a child for learning in school. It is hypothesized
that parents of upper socio-economic classes have more positive
attitudes towards their children’s schooling and have high expectations
and standards for their children. The parent’s ability to provide books
and equipment for school, combined with a positive attitude, stimulate
the children to learn. Furthermore, the upper class child eats a balanced
diet and thus has good health. Again, the values he is exposed to at
home are similar to what he finds in school and therefore he is able to
adjust easily to school life. A feeling of belonging to a comfortable social
school environment further helps him to show his best (Dubey1973).
The children are not open to equal educational opportunity even with the
compulsory and free education provided for them. Some children from
low socio-economic class with natural endowment do not have equal
access to qualitative education but rural and ill equipped schools. The
public schools which are free are not properly funded to reflect the right
standard to deliver the right tutelage to the students. Many of the
students from this low social economic class are undermined with poor
health and malformed physique due to poor feeding, ignorance and
carelessness which may invariably give rise to poor performance
academically.
There are also differences between the students who attend Unity
schools and those who attend local or state owned secondary schools.
There is also a gifted secondary school established by the Federal
Government to cater for the needs of talented students which equally
emphasizes imbalance in the educational system. Schools and colleges
are theoretically equal following the same syllabus and leading to the
same qualifications. There is a vary wide assumption in status, quality
and the market value of the qualification obtained. Thus private schools
may be of a higher or lower quality than government schools, places in
high statues schools will be more difficult to obtain than places in lower
statues schools, colleges and universities may be more marketable than
the same qualifications earned elsewhere. In most advertisements, it is
always stated that qualifications should be from a recognized university.
This is because some schools, colleges and universities are not duly
registered with the appropriate authorities as a result they are
recognized as low status schools, colleges and universities. There are a
lot of those colleges and universities across the soil of Nigeria where
people have obtained qualifications and they are disregarded in Nigeria.
In the same vein, many Satellite Campuses and study centers are
regarded as auctioning center where certificates are been sold without
adherence to laid down procedures and rules for the award of such
certificates, as such they are regarded as low status schools.
SOCIALIZATION AND EDUCATION
CULTURE
Culture has been variedly defined by the different authorities in the field
of social sciences most especially sociologists. Linton defined culture as
the configuration of learned behaviour, and the result of behaviour,
whose component elements are shared and transmitted by the members
of a particular society. In the same token, culture is seen as the social
heredity that is passed on by the social group from generation to
generation. Taylor in his own contribution to the discourse of culture
viewed it as a complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art,
morals. Law, custom and any other capabilities and habit acquired by
man as a member of society. Kasper referred to culture as a collective
term for patterns of essential and normative assertions taken from
literature, language or drama or sounds in music, or symbols in
sculpture and art, or movement in dance and ballet of fashion in clothes
and so forth. Right from the time immemorial, human beings lived
together in a given place and at a given time. A society was formed in
this way. Set of individuals organized themselves to lead group life. In
their social interactions, the people had common interest which makes
them to have a common pattern of behaviours. They do everything in
common to achieve desired objectives. Their values, standards and
norms are reflected in their ways of thinking and feeling. In their
relationship they acquire “a way of life” which was known as culture.
Culture distinguishes man from animals because the cultural traits that
are present in man are virtually absent in animals. A man embraces the
world of language, art, dance, craft, drama, dress, food, literature, music,
politics, religious knowledge, skills and technology which makes culture
the sum total of ways of life of the people occupying a geographical
location. It is pertinent to stress and emphasize that there is uniqueness
of culture but there is no superiority of culture.
a. Cultural Norms
A cultural norm is an established standard of what a group expects in
terms of thought and conduct. These expectation and resultant
behaviours often vary from one culture to the next. They are also in
different forms like the values, folkways and morals. In every society
there is reinforcement of morals like rapes, murder and robbery with
punishment sanctions by the laws for members to obey and respect
them.
c. Sub-Culture
A sub-culture is a group smaller than a society, it is related to the larger
culture in the sense that it accepts many of its norms but the sub culture
is also distinguishable because it has some norms of its own.
d. Cultural Relativity
It is impossible to understand behaviour patterns of other groups if we
analyze them only in terms of our motives and values. A trait which may
be disruptive in one society may be vital to the stability of another.
e. Cultural Shock
When an individual is exposed to an alien cultural environment and
among people who do not share his fundamental belief, this condition is
referred to as a cultural shock.
f. Cultural Change
Cultural change occurs whenever new traits and trait complexes like
traditions, values and customs emerge to replace the old ones in content
and structure. Although, resistance to change is most evident when
changes occur but it is inevitable.
g. Cultural Lag
When the non-material element of culture like norms, values and beliefs
attempt to keep pace with changes in the material element of culture like
technology, then cultural lag has occurred.
h. Acculturation
The context between one culture and another to change the existing
traits is referred to as acculturation.
i. Enculturation:
This is a process by which people become part of the native culture.
This is done through the internalization of the morals, laws and folkways
of such culture to become part and parcel of it.
j. Personality
The origin, nature and development of personality had been considered
in a variety of universes of discourse. It is a central issue in sociology as
a discipline which centers on man and society. There had been
presentation of a variety of models of man’s inner nature. Some have
assumed a supernatural element called a spirit or a soul; others have
accepted that nothing is given beyond a biological and genetic heredity.
But model of man’s personality amount ultimately to no more than
current description of man’s activity and functions, the roles he plays and
the modification of his attitudes and behaviour through socialization and
education.
Man as a social animal lives within the context of the society to interact
with his environment. His physical and behavioural composition sums up
to give his personality as an individual. Man is armed with certain
potentials which are evoked in a variety of directions in relationship with
other people. These potentials are regarded as personality traits which
he grows up with throughout his life time. He demonstrates these traits
through actions and behavior as he relates with other people around him
who calls for the assessment and evaluation of other people to know the
type of person he is in the society. As human beings we make gestures
which are calculated to elicit response and that this comes about by the
individual taking on the role of the other with whom he is in the process
of interacting. The child, for example, gradually acquires the capacity to
respond in an imaginative way to his own projected conduct within
himself, he rehearses precisely what he is going to do and inwardly
responds to it. Should the response that he obtains prove to be
unsatisfactory, he will try again until an act is pictured in his mind which
elicits within himself the reflection of the satisfactory response he hopes
to evoke from the real situation outside him. He /She can then make a
sign, a gesture or sound which is meaningful, in the sense that it is
calculated to produce the desired effect.
The family educates the child on the immediate experiences. Even the
educationists have become aware of the vital importance of early years
in children cognitive development and of the facts that the home is the
first of several teachers. This fact in essence, highlights the impacts of
the family background in early childhood education. Childhood is a
period during which a child needs the knowledge of the universe in
which he lives, the nature of the people and the materials in it. Through
education, the child develops his sensory explorations, emotions and
social experiences as well as experiences of mastery and achievements.
For a child to develop cognitively, certain skills should be inculcated into
him at every stage of his development. This in essence calls for parental
influence. For instance, the family socio economic status is of paramount
importance. In all societies, there is social stratification and each social
class plays a dominant role in the cognitive development of a child. For
example the importance of home factors, emotional factors, pattern of
childrearing, parental environment, parental mode of behaviour are
significant factors in determining a child’s early childhood education.
A child from modern African family in urban center with economic power
to cater for them is expected to learn better in school than a child from a
traditional African family in rural area with low economic power. The
reason can be attributed to the fact that such middle class children are
exposed more to the world around them, and the parental
encouragement take cognizance of the children’s exposition to modern
life within their environment. For example, such children might be
exposed to computer operations, Internet or e-learning world, banking
operations, communication world like text messages and GSM
operations and so on than rural children. Becker summarizes a number
of studies which show that the children exposed to restrictive discipline
are conforming and more dependent than children exposed to
permissive disciplinary techniques.
Durojaiye’s study on African children who are always told what to do are
judged to be low in originality. In other words, the more the parents
authority, the less the child’s level of cognitive development. Such
children are socially timid and non assertive. When discipline is imposed
by means of severe physical punishment, the child is depressed, and
socially aggressive.
The family is one of the primary groups of society, concerned with face
to face interaction or relationships. Throughout man’s history, however
and throughout the world both the family and the institution of marriage
display a considerable cultural variability. But whatever forms such
institution take, they have regard to the fact that the human child is for a
long time dependent for its biological survival upon the adult members of
those institutions. There are two types of family namely the extended
and the nuclear family. The extended family or kin group is found and
can span three generations within the total household. On the other
hand nuclear family comprises basically the father, the mother and the
children.
On the other hand, the children from families of low social class find it
difficult to actualize their dreams professionally because of low income
that will be insufficient to train them. For example, a child from low social
class whose intention is to become a medical doctor or a lawyer may fail
in his dreams due to the inability of his parents to afford the cost of his
training as a medical doctor irrespective of his talents or natural
endowment. There are several children who excelled in their commercial
examination like West African School Certificate (WASC) but due to the
economic incapability of their families resort to offering courses that are
at variance with their career aspirations. Some even become wasted
abilities like dropouts or engage in low paid jobs like “blue cola jobs” as
drivers, sales boys and girls, house helps and so on. Hence
occupational aspirations of children are closely related to the family
position. The family background of a child is significantly responsible for
the realization of the children’s occupational aspirations.
Family and Educational Aspiration of the Child
There are differences between the adjustment of rural and urban child in
school situations. A rural child is more likely to present behaviour
problems in school than an urban child. The rural child may find out the
behaviour which is expected of them in the classroom is completely
different from that of the home. School demands a new kind of
behaviour which does not make sense in the home. An urban child
however, discovers in the classroom a particularly new demands
regarding behaviour. Thus continuity of expectation about child conducts
in the school and home ceases. To further explain the illustration above,
a rural child lives a simple and unchallenged life.
When we look for the functions of any social institution, we tend to focus
on the way in which their institution helps in the rest of the social system
at one moment. The picture is static, but we know that society is in flux.
Institution once established begins to have lives and to create values of
their own. In consequence we must remember that we are examining a
system prone to change. Equilibrium is rare, tensions are common.
Often there is a balance between the consequences of contemporary
social organization. In some ways it is functional and in others it is
dysfunctional where, however, there is no balance, a political decision
may be necessary to rearrange the institution so as to meet the nation’s
present aims. It is convenient to consider the social function of education
under five headings.
3. The political function, this may be looked at in two ways. There is first,
the need to provide political leaders at all levels of democratic society
and second, there is the demand that education should help to preserve
the present system of government by ensuring loyalty to it.
5. The economic function, here the need is that all levels or the labour
force should be provided with the quantity and quality of educated
manpower required under the current technical condition.
There are many functions itemized above but only the economic and
political aspects shall be elaborately addressed in this work because of
the intimate link between them.
It is apparent that there may be conflict between the ideals needed for a
smoothly working economy and those inculcated by the ethos in the
schools. A laisser-faire economy requires on the production side, a
positive attitude towards money making and “getting on” and on the
assumption side, there must be an eagerness to “keep up with the
Joneses”. These attitudes have not been greatly favoured by teachers,
due to autonomous developments rather than to policy decisions. It is
fitting to end the functional analysis of the educational system contained
in this part, by emphasizing that political decisions in pursuit of aim
involving one function that education can serve may lead to dysfunction
in another sphere. This may happen tortuously if there was insufficient
thought before the political decision was taken. The main political aim
was the provision of equality of educational opportunity and the stress
was laid on the function of selection. Understanding this, help the
economy by developing capability, but very little thought has never been
given to the way that the quality of the lower levels of the labour force
will be altered. Yet in the economic, function the educational system is
responsible for the schooling of all levels of the labour force.
The political function of educational system has two tasks. If the political unit as it is
now constituted is to survive, there is a need that all its members especially the new
generation coming to the age when it can exercise political power, shall be loyal to
the assumptions underlying the present system of government. This consensus is
often taken for granted but one of its main services whether consciously pursued or
not, lay within the educational system, secondly there is the necessity that the
country shall be led. Whatever is the type of government that exists in the country,
its leaders must come from within it if it is to remain independent. The schools can
play a major role in both the selection and the training of leaders. When we talk
about leaders in a democracy, to whom are we referring? We certainly include
political leaders such as members of the Cabinet. We should included members of
parliament and the more active members of the Senate. The higher grades of the
Civil Service must be added, since they are part of governing machinery of the
country and have considerable powers of their own. Mention must be made of the
counterparts of these National leaders at local government level, namely councilors
and chairmen as well as the full time officers such as the director of education, who
carry out the policy determined by our democratically elected representative on the
local councils. It will be noticed that economic leaders have not been mentioned but
they are part of political leaders.
Obviously, the educational system has two important pasts to play from a political
point of view. It must ensure that the political leaders at each level are followed even
by those in loyal opposition. Democracy is a system of government that demands a
fair standard of education to ensure its continuance. Secondly, the educational
system must be organized so that those with the intelligence necessary to lead at
whatever level or in whatever sphere of the society can have the chance to do so.
There are basically the selective functions of education to which we now rely.
Likely questions
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References:
- Musgrave, P.W. (1975) The Sociology of Education. Great Britain: Butler and
Tenner Limited
- Vide Maude, A. (1989) The Egalitarian Thrust in Co. C.B. and Dysan, A.E.
(eds) Fight for Education: Black paper (the Critical Quarterly Society (1989) pp.
7-9; Cox, C.B. and Dyson, A.E. (ed)
- Berzer, P., and Luckman, T., (1972): The social Construction of Reality.
Belgium: University Books Limited.
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- Morris, I. (1978): The Sociology of Education. An Introduction: London: William
Cloves Limited.
- Musgrave P.W. (1977): The Sociology of Education. Great Britain: Butler and
Tanner Limited.
- Floud, J., Halsey, A. H., & Martin, F. (1957). Social class and educational
opportunity. London: Heinemann.
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