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Bourdieu Educational Achievement

Decent Essays

For Bourdieu, he views that through educational attainment, one is able to gain social status, gain positions of power, and that this educational attainment can be seen by an individual’s ability to understand cultural taste. This can be explained through the article I gathered on educational attainment in Indiana. In Clark and Floyd County, Indiana, more than 45% of the residents of these counties have a high school degree, and only 20.3% of these residents have a bachelor’s degree. It also states that in correlation to this fact, the quality of life and quality of workforce employment in very low. The main argument of this article by Jared Clapp proposes that if educational attainment was raised for the residents, then so to would the quality …show more content…

The Great Migration of African Americans to the north in the 1900s, along with racial tensions and a desire for separate but equal policies, resulted in a vast majority of African Americans to be relocated to Slum cities such as in New York and Chicago. They were relocated to areas where the educational system was, and is, underdeveloped when compared to that of white neighborhoods. A prime example of one of these slums to date in which there exist a large African American population and low educational attainment and low employment is Detroit. Detroit’s population is 83.9% African American and had a public school system that is currently in a $750 million dollar debt. Moreover, It was reported in 2014 that about 77.6% of the population graduate high school but only 12.7% of the population goes to college. From the viewpoint of Bourdieu, it would not be surprising that they are in the dystopian state they are in with this lack of educational success they’ve had. This isn’t only a Detroit problem …show more content…

This economic capital of these families is put into schools to give their children cultural capital, thus allowing them the ability to one day enter the economic field of business and gain power. Inversely, African Americans live in a field where the symbolic struggle they face is not in gaining the powerful positions but is in gaining the necessary forms of capital to give them positions in the social space in the first place. Moreover, like Bourdieu says, this social space creates a difference in the artistic competence, or culture, of the rich and the poor due to their economic capital, and thus creates social class differences. In terms of Foucault, I believe that this large difference in the quality of white school districts versus that of the African American school districts creates a new form of the Panopticon-like, disciplinarian society. One in which, white Americans gain positions of power, such as in the police, in schools, in government, and in business. It creates a disciplinarian society where African Americans are constantly being watch by their white

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