Closely Observed Training: an exploration of links between social structures, training and identity
Open Access
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Studies in Sociology of Education
- Vol. 1 (1) , 225-243
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0962021910010113
Abstract
This paper suggests that, while there is a wealth of work on the economic benefits of training, relatively little attention is being given to relationships between vocational training and broader social structures and trends. The focus here is on social processes within vocational training. The paper is based on ethnographic research into training for employment in the field of institutional care. This study documented dramatic adjustments in young people's attitudes towards work which occurred in the course of training. The paper explores ways in which training contributed to these adjustments. Two fundamental inter‐related processes are identified, which may also have wider relevance: screening for social and cultural attributes and discipline. The analysis of the discipline of training draws upon the work of Foucault in order to highlight the importance of current trends towards increased ‘surveillance’ and accountability at work. Through such processes, it is suggested, training may both serve to reinforce links between class, gender and occupational destinations and may also reinforce the control of labour within occupations.Keywords
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