Friday 13 April 2012 at 15:15 - 16:45
SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION Sin , I.L.
ROGER STEVENS 01 University of Edinburgh
International Education at the Doorstep: Exploring the Privilege and Deprivation of the 'Other' Foreign Student
This paper draws upon the preliminary interview findings of my PhD research exploring the distinction practices of young, middle-class international students pursuing UK tertiary programmes in Malaysia. Feelings of inferiority based on the perceived lower economic and social exchange values of their cultural capital, compared to those of Malaysian students studying onshore, that is, physically in the UK, were evident. Onshore students were labelled socially snobbish and having unrealistically high expectations of the material and status rewards of UK education. Yet, the participants desired sameness with them, admiring their direct experiences of a perceived superior academic, social and cultural environment in the UK. However, the participants also established social distance by citing their own positional strengths in the graduate labour market: flexibility, humility and better access to local knowledge and social networks. I argue that UK international education offered outside the UK, where Malaysia represents the biggest market, is an arena where the more modest foreign student middle class experience and negotiate both relative privilege and deprivation.
The paper contributes to an emerging research area which extends Bourdieu’s concept of cultural capital to include Western international education undertaken for social mobility by the middle class from Asia. It challenges one- dimensional notions of overseas students as elite, educational consumers necessarily crossing national borders for an international education. Essentially, it gives visibility to academic and social differentiation within hierarchical modes of tertiary education in the rapidly expanding global academic marketplace.
Lin, P-Y. Logics of Educational Exploitation
In this paper I extend Glenn Rikowski’s ‘labour power theory’ by asking: ‘who are the labourers producing labour power in education?’ David Harvie has focused on the role of teachers’ labour; on the contrary, I argue that the role of students’ labour in education should be considered, within the process of producing labour power.
I call the students’ labour ‘schooling labour’, to signify the passive meanings of ‘to be educated’. Moreover, I found under the pressure of improving the qualities of labour powers for capitalist accumulation, there will be an inner logic to expand and intensify schooling labour; as a result, schooling labour will not be free activities or consumption of pleasure, but be alienated process for students.
I argue that following Marxist labour theory of value, schooling labour also produce the use value (productivity) and exchange value (premium wage) of labour power; however, it hasn’t produced surplus value yet. The production of schooling labour is embodied in the labour powers, and it would be used in the commodity production process to intensify wage labour and to produce more surplus value.
Moreover, owing to the effects of schooling labour on increasing surplus value, ‘educational exploitation’ emerged. I tried to distinguish two main mechanisms of educational exploitations.
(1) by improving the qualities of labour powers to increase the capacities of producing surplus value;
(2) by the tendencies of ‘expanding educational costs’, ‘inflations of graduates’, and ‘global auction’ to lower the value of skilled labour power.
In conclusiom, I would integrate the logics of educational exploitation with the ideas of Marx, to broaden Marx’s theory of surplus value.
Goldsmiths, University of London
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