Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cultural_deprivation> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 13 of
13
with 100 items per page.
- Cultural_deprivation abstract "Cultural deprivation is a term referring to the absence of certain expected and acceptable cultural phenomena in the environment, which results in the failure of the individual to be able to communicate and respond in the most appropriate manner. Language acquisition and language use are commonly used in assessing this concept.Proponents of this term argue that the culture of people in the working class (regardless of race, gender, ethnicity or other factors) are inherently deficient and different from the culture of people in the middle class.[citation needed]According to this theory, the people of the working class remain poor and are unable to elevate their class to higher classes due to this cultural deprivation.[citation needed]Cultural deprivation refers to the social class structure of society. The middle class gains cultural capital as the result of primary socialization, while the working class misses out on socialization and the associated gains in cultural capital. Cultural capital helps the middle class succeed in a capitalist society where the norms and values exposed to the middle class facilitate educational achievement and employability. Working class members of society that lack cultural capital do not pass it on to their children, reproducing the class system (Willis (1977) Learning to Labor). Morais Suggests that middle class children's culture capital allows them to communicate with their middle class teachers more effectively than the working class children which Morias et al. suggest is a contributor to the inequality between social classes.With arguments from Bourdieu (understanding Bourdieu 2004 webb et al.) that state schools are set up to make everybody middle class, whereby only the middle class and some high achieving working class can achieve this. Continuing his argument that exams suit the middle class, academic work meets the strengths of the middle class leaving the working class trying to meet the expected standards of others strengths with their weaknesses. Cultural deprivation from a Marxist perspective suggests that the materials and resources available to the working class are limited, and that working class children are educated poorly before entering the first steps of education .[citation needed] Some pupils start school with the ability to read at a low level, some can't even write their name .[citation needed] This shows the difference in opportunity and values that create a culture deprivation for the working class at a very early age.".
- Cultural_deprivation wikiPageID "32962014".
- Cultural_deprivation wikiPageRevisionID "600840079".
- Cultural_deprivation hasPhotoCollection Cultural_deprivation.
- Cultural_deprivation subject Category:Culture.
- Cultural_deprivation comment "Cultural deprivation is a term referring to the absence of certain expected and acceptable cultural phenomena in the environment, which results in the failure of the individual to be able to communicate and respond in the most appropriate manner.".
- Cultural_deprivation label "Cultural deprivation".
- Cultural_deprivation label "حرمان ثقافي".
- Cultural_deprivation sameAs m.0407y7k.
- Cultural_deprivation sameAs Q5193342.
- Cultural_deprivation sameAs Q5193342.
- Cultural_deprivation wasDerivedFrom Cultural_deprivation?oldid=600840079.
- Cultural_deprivation isPrimaryTopicOf Cultural_deprivation.