CHAPTER 16: EDUCATION Education is the social process of passing on to society members the things it is important to know. Sources: 1) church 2) family 3) peers 4) Formal Organizations In western societies, FORMAL EDUCATION is the process by which the state creates organizations that pass on literacy and other skills, but they also have a secondary function of socializing (values, norms, etc) and bringing diverse groups together The OFFICIAL goals of organizations are called (by functionalists) the MANIFEST functions. LATENT FUNCTIONS are the consquences of the educational system that are not part of the stated goals. MANIFEST FUNCTIONS: 1) Transmitting culture 2) Acculturation (of immigrants, outsiders, etc) 3) Training for adult status (stuff we need to survive) LATENT FUNCTIONS: 1) Hidden curriculums (other stuff learned: ethnocentrism, respect for authority, etc 2) Ideology (patriotism, religion, meritoracy) Schools have a positive effect and negative effect (explain) Despite fairly standard goals, schools differ: By type: primary/secondary (grade and highschool) and post-secondary; vocational/tech schools; prep schools, etc (ie, by level and type) Area (suburban, city, inner city, rural) This means that not all learn the same thing in the same way SO: Education, while seemingly neutral, becomes a battleground over ideas, values, etc (ask how) (Conflicts over values, standards, curriculum content, what's important to know, teaching methods, and other stuff POINT: THE FUNCTION of education (both manifest and latent) is at issue EXAMPLE: Meritocracy--distributing resources and rewards on the basis of abilities and credentials). SATs, exams, and IQ EDUCATION is a stratifying mechanism: a) level attained b) performance c) type of school and what's studied