Abstract
This chapter looks at Jamaican boys’ aspirations towards higher education in relation to their personal experiences and histories shaped by social structures and groups within their educational field. It engages with Bourdieu’s theory of practice to explore boys’ personal agencies towards higher education through systems of power relations within their sociocultural contexts. Boys are grossly underrepresented in higher educational institutions in Jamaica and across the English-speaking Caribbean. The sociological and historical explanations include a gendered educational system favored towards girls, crime and Black male-hegemony. At the risk of overgeneralization, these explanations, though relevant, tend to place boys in a “victim” mode, as agents without voices. This outlook is explored through a qualitative study analyzing the narratives of 64 participants affiliated with two schools in urban Jamaica. The findings present boys as both active citizens of their own agency and “victims” of relations of power within wider social structures.
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Notes
- 1.
Measured based on a summary of the following: occupation of parents (usually mothers as the sample reflected the Jamaican context of majority single-mother household), size of family, and number of individuals in one household and the location of their community (see Stockfelt, 2016, for a deeper discussion of SES in this context).
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Stockfelt, S. (2016). Exploring Boys’ Agency Towards Higher Education: The Case of Urban Jamaica. In: DeJaeghere, J., Josić, J., McCleary, K. (eds) Education and Youth Agency. Advancing Responsible Adolescent Development. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-33344-1_7
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