Learning Or Labouring?

Learning Or Labouring?
Author: Judith Ennew
Publisher: UNICEF-IRC
Total Pages: 164
Release: 1995
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Harmonized with UNICEF's efforts to reduce hazardous and exploitative forms of child labor, this compilation of key texts examines the area of child labor and basic education. The articles are organized into four main areas covering ideas, debates, evidence, and case studies. The first part provides some definitions of childhood, work, exploitation and education. The second part provides a review of changes in policy attitudes at an international level and presents some of the classical views in both the compulsory education and fertility debates. The cases of India, China, Java and Nepal are considered. The third part examines cases of children working in rural and urban settings, evidence of the importance of primary education for economic development, the relationship between school and work during childhood, and the different reasons why children may be unable to attend school. The final part of the book presents examples of how basic education for working children has been approached in several parts of the world. Suggestions for further reading and a resource section of relevant books, articles, and other materials that can be obtained from academic sources and international agencies is included. (AA)

From Labouring to Learning

From Labouring to Learning
Author: Michael R.M. Ward
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 187
Release: 2016-04-29
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1137441755

Highly Commended in the Society of Educational Studies Book Prize This book explores how economic changes and the growing importance of educational qualifications in a shrinking labour market, particularly effects marginalized young men. It follows a group of young working-class men in a de-industrial community and challenges commonly held representations that often appear in the media and in policy discourses which portray them as feckless, out of control, educational failures and lacking aspiration. Ward argues that for a group of young men in a community of social and economic deprivation, expectations and transitions to adulthood are framed through the industrial legacy of geographically and historically shaped class and gender codes. These codes have an impact on what it means to be a man and what behaviour is deemed acceptable and what is not.

Learning to Labor

Learning to Labor
Author: Paul E. Willis
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 244
Release: 1981
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780231053570

Claims the rebellion of poor and working class children against school authority prepares them for working class jobs.

Learning to Labour

Learning to Labour
Author: Paul Willis
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 215
Release: 2017-10-03
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1351218778

This book which has now established itself as a classic study of working class boys describes how Paul Willis followed a group of 'lads' as they passed through the last two years of school and into work. The book explains that for 'the lads' it is their own culture which blocks teaching and prevents the realisation of liberal education aims. This culture exposes some of the contradictions within these formal aims and actually supplies the operational criteria by which a future in wage labour is judged. Paul Willis explores how their own culture can guide working class lads on to the shop floor. This is an uncompromising book which has provoked considerable discussion and controversy in educational circles throughout the world - it has been translated into Finnish, German, French, Swedish, Japanese and Spanish.

Labouring and Learning

Labouring and Learning
Author: Tatek Abede
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017-10-12
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9789812870315

Geographies of children and young people is a rapidly emerging sub-discipline within human geography. There is now a critical mass of established academic work, key names within academia, growing numbers of graduate students and expanding numbers of university level taught courses. There are also professional training programmes at national scales and in international contexts that work specifically with children and young people. In addition to a productive journal of Children’s Geographies, there’s a range of monographs, textbooks and edited collections focusing on children and young people published by all the major academic presses then there is a substantive body of work on younger people within human geography and active authors and researchers working within international contexts to warrant a specific Major Reference Work on children’s and young people’s geographies. The volumes and sections are structured by themes, which then reflect the broader geographical locations of the research.

Labouring to Learn

Labouring to Learn
Author: Tony Huzzard
Publisher:
Total Pages: 412
Release: 2000
Genre: Knowledge management
ISBN:

"How do trade unions learn? In the first empirical study of learning in unions, Tony Huzzard furthers our knowledge of union renewal in a comparative study if learning in the two main Swedish manufacturing unions, Metall and SIF."--Back cover.