The Instant Mastery of Kitab Kuning with the Al-Bidayah Method: Between Kiai Fractured Authority and Pesantren Tradition Preservation
This study examines the Al-Bidayah method in pesantren, contrasting it with traditional bandongan approaches, and finds that it promotes inclusive, dynamic learning using Indonesian translations, thereby breaking social hierarchies, desacralizing traditional sciences, and fostering closer kiai-santri-community relations.
This research discusses the kitab kuning learning method in Islamic boarding schools called the Al-Bidayah method and how this approach is narrated as the antithesis of the bandongan approach tradition that has been established in pesantren. In pesantren, bandongan is considered by observers as a method that inherits the culture of rigid social class relations in Islamic boarding schools, especially between kiai, santri and society as a social group that is the object of the kiai's preaching. This is due to the basic character of bandongan which is designed to create an exclusive distance between the three social groups above. Meanwhile, the Al-Bidayah method has an inclusive basic character and with its mixture of the great traditions of pesantren and pop-culture typical of the younger generation, it can instantly break down rigid social divisions and classes. To discuss the social phenomena, this research uses Pierre Felix Bourdieu's theory of cultural reproduction and habitus. The results of this research state that the Al-Bidayah method uses an inter-directional learning and meaning model so that the students' abilities are more dynamic. The Al-Bidayah method also emphasizes discursive learning patterns with the language of instruction being translated from Arabic, but using Indonesian, so the researcher concludes that this approach is a form of desacralization of nahwu-sharaf which has been a special science in pesantren into a discipline that can be consumed and discussed. This approach also breaks down the chain of cultural reproduction of the bandongan tradition which emphasizes one-way learning and relies entirely on the authority of the kiai as the merely source of information and source of truth so that students who learn using this method will then, after returning to take part in society, be able to become social agents. in creating close relations between kiai, santri and the community.
- Research Article
3
- 10.54097/ehss.v9i.6415
- Mar 27, 2023
- Journal of Education, Humanities and Social Sciences
Test-based education in China is often seen as an educational system that focuses on test scores, memorization and problem-solving, with the main aim of improving students' adaptive skills. However, there are problems with this model that inhibit students' autonomy and creativity. This paper will therefore compare Bourdieu's theory of cultural capital and social reproduction with Nussbaum's theory of a competency-based approach to understanding social justice and equity in Chinese exam-based education. Bourdieu's theory of cultural reproduction objectively examines the development of students in test-based education at the level of "capital", where each student's academic performance is determined by multiple capitals. Nussbaum's competency approach theory explains the problems with this model in terms of freedom and choice, and that it is up to the student to decide what functions are valuable. The competency approach theory has been found to provide a more comprehensive and human-centered explanation of teaching to the test. There are therefore various drawbacks to teaching to the test, so how to overcome or mitigate these drawbacks is something that needs to be taken seriously in education today.
- Research Article
1
- 10.7202/1013930ar
- Jan 1, 1984
- Canadian University Music Review
Music as Social and Cultural Reproduction: A Sociological Analysis of Educational Processes in Ontario Schools. Un article de la revue Canadian University Music Review / Revue de musique des universités canadiennes (Numéro 5, 1984, p. 1-373) diffusée par la plateforme Érudit.
- Research Article
11
- 10.1108/ijssp-03-2013-0039
- Jul 8, 2014
- International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy
Purpose– Our attitudes, values and tastes are shaped by our position in social space. At least, that was the argument Pierre Bourdieu set out in his seminal work,La Distinction. The purpose of this paper is to consider Bourdieu's theory of cultural reproduction and his argument that working-class families exhibit cultural attitudes and tastes for social necessity.Design/methodology/approach– Attitudinal data relating to social necessity are taken from a national social survey of the British population. The results provide a rich source of data for exploring classed attitudes towards necessity in contemporary Britain.Findings– Bourdieu's original claims for working-class “choice of the necessary” and working-class “taste for necessity” are based on his observations grounded in social survey evidence drawn from 1960s French society. Analysis of contemporary British social survey and attitudinal data also reveals sharp contours and differences in attitudes and tastes according to class fractions. These are evident in classed tastes and preferences for food, clothes, the home and social life.Social implications– Within the Bourdieusian theoretical framework, we understand that the tastes of necessity are preferences that arise as adaptations to deprivation of necessary goods and services.La Distinctionand Bourdieu's approach to unmasking inequalities and structures in social space continue to be relevant in contemporary Britain. More generally, study findings add to the growing evidence that casts some doubt on current arguments concerning “individualisation”, claiming that social class has ceased to be significant in modern societies.Originality/value– This paper sheds fresh light on the empirical validity and continuing theoretical relevance of Bourdieu's work examining the role of social necessity in shaping working-class culture. Bourdieu argues that the real principle of our preferences is taste and for working-class families, this is a virtue made of necessity.
- Research Article
5
- 10.1016/j.ssaho.2023.100578
- Jan 1, 2023
- Social Sciences & Humanities Open
This study examines the determinants of the gaps in learning outcomes of students in three lower- and middle-income countries (LMICs) – Ethiopia, India, and Vietnam. We examined the extent to which English language performance relates to Bourdieu's theory of cultural reproduction, using the Young Lives international school survey data in the three countries. We employed a three-level multilevel model, to investigate variables at the individual, classroom and school levels that may influence English language skills of students. We find that differences in English test performance are attributable to both home background and school factors in all three contexts. Within countries, we find evidence of a high degree of variation in the English test scores of students between schools, indicating the importance of schooling quality and school characteristics for the development of English language skills. We conclude that the process of cultural reproduction through schooling is different for each country, with school-level factors found to reinforce social stratification in countries that are less equitable. This study provides a robust quantitative contribution to the literature base on English language learning in LMICs, where large-scale cross-country comparisons are relatively uncommon due to a relative lack of suitable data. The results and recommendations would be of interest to education stakeholders within LMIC contexts.
- Book Chapter
28
- 10.4337/9781789909432.00015
- Jun 10, 2022
I address the usefulness of Pierre Bourdieu's theory of cultural reproduction, and his concept of cultural capital, for explaining inequality. I argue that while Bourdieu's theory lacks clarity, recent research provides a useful framework for conceptualizing the mechanisms through which cultural capital affects inequality. I also review the empirical literature and conclude that we know less about the role of cultural capital in explaining inequality than is commonly assumed. Finally, I suggest that the concept of cultural capital, stripped of some of its 'legacy content', might be useful for capturing a set of non-cognitive skills (such as creativity, academic confidence, and persistence) that parents transmit to children and that affect inequality.
- Research Article
- 10.17509/interlude.v2i2.70436
- May 30, 2023
- Interlude: Indonesian Journal of Music Research, Development, and Technology
This study examines transforming Barasuara's "Guna Manusia" from a folk-rock song into a brass band arrangement. It analyzes its cultural and sociological ramifications using Pierre Bourdieu's theory of cultural reproduction. The project aims to investigate the impact of song adaptation on audience perception, involvement, and awareness of environmental issues. The research utilizes a comprehensive technique that combines descriptive analysis and literature review. The process of descriptive analysis entails the examination of YouTube videos showcasing both the original and brass band renditions of "Guna Manusia" to comprehend the musical alterations and gauge the audience's reactions. A literature review is placed on findings within appropriate theoretical frameworks and examines prior research on music adaptation and cultural replication. The analysis demonstrates that by converting "Guna Manusia" into a brass band arrangement, its cultural importance is enhanced, and its accessibility is broadened to a broad spectrum of audiences. Descriptive analysis reveals that the brass band adaption successfully communicates the song's environmental message through instrumental expression. Bourdieu's theory demonstrates how cultural reproduction impacts the adaptation process and affects the audience's reception. The study highlights the educational and societal significance of employing music to promote environmental advocacy. It showcases how Barasuara's rendition of "Guna Manusia" actively helps increase awareness and encourage transformative change within society. The research offers unique insights into the profound impact of music and its role in tackling urgent social problems.
- Single Book
- 10.54094/b-0e82de5c4a
- Jan 1, 2018
This book offers an in-depth examination of Pierre Bourdieu's theoretical framework. The book is not just a collection of more or less critical remarks but constitutes a coherent whole, underpinned by an original analytical framework. This conceptual apparatus makes it possible to present some alternative solutions to the theoretical problems under consideration. The book goes largely against the grain of views that are dominant in the literature on Bourdieu. Therefore, its conclusions may be surprising to many a reader. The book demonstrates that Bourdieu's well-known theory of 'capital' forms is untenable, resembling more an illegitimate metaphor rather than a scientific concept. In a similar vein, the Bourdesian class theory should be largely regarded as a variant of social stratification rather than class. There are many theoretical and empirical problems with Bourdieu's theory of social and cultural reproduction as well. There is more to the above criticisms than meets the eye. The point is that many weaknesses of Bourdieu's style of theorising seem to stem from his intellectual dependence upon structuralism, especially in Claude Lévi-Strauss' version. It is this affinity that accounts for such features of Bourdieu's approach as its essentialism, formalism and epistemic idealism. The book will be of interest primarily to students of Bourdieu's many and varied contributions to social theory. In view of Bourdieu's immense influence, it will also hold interest to critical scholars in political science, economic sociology and political philosophy.
- Research Article
158
- 10.1017/s0038038501008938
- Oct 16, 2001
- Sociology
According to Bourdieu's theory of cultural reproduction, children from middle-class families are advantaged in gaining educational credentials due to their possession of cultural capital. In order to assess this theory, I have developed a broad operationalisation of the concept of cultural capital, and have surveyed pupils on both their own and their parents' cultural capital. I will conclude that cultural capital is transmitted within the home and does have a significant effect on performance in the GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) examinations. However, a large, direct effect of social class on attainment remains when cultural capital has been controlled for. Therefore, ‘cultural reproduction’ can provide only a partial explanation of social class differences in educational attainment.
- Research Article
775
- 10.1177/0038038501035004006
- Nov 1, 2001
- Sociology
According to Bourdieu's theory of cultural reproduction, children from middle-class families are advantaged in gaining educational credentials due to their possession of cultural capital. In order to assess this theory, I have developed a broad operationalisation of the concept of cultural capital, and have surveyed pupils on both their own and their parents' cultural capital. I will conclude that cultural capital is transmitted within the home and does have a significant effect on performance in the GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) examinations. However, a large, direct effect of social class on attainment remains when cultural capital has been controlled for. Therefore, `cultural reproduction' can provide only a partial explanation of social class differences in educational attainment.
- Research Article
195
- 10.1080/0142569980190101
- Mar 1, 1998
- British Journal of Sociology of Education
Social class differentiation in education results not only from differences in academic ability and processes of institutional differentiation but also from processes of self‐selection by pupils, students and their parents in the progression through the school system and into higher education, training and employment. This paper examines the explanation of class differences in choices at transition or branching points in the system which is offered by Rational Action Theory in the light of evidence from qualitative studies of educational transitions. It also explores the relationship of ‘rational action’ to Bourdieu's theory of cultural reproduction, with reference to some recent research into parental choice of school. It concludes with a discussion of a reconceptualised notion of ‘rational action’.
- Dissertation
- 10.7190/shu-thesis-00670
- Jan 1, 2024
- Sheffield Hallam University
Many Chinese students pursue advanced studies overseas through private international schools, which are distinguished from public schools by high fees. In the Chinese context, parents prioritize education spending to enhance their children's competitiveness and chances in a challenging educational environment. Most research on China's private education system focuses on the macro level to investigate educational inequality by comparing private schools with public schools in terms of teachers' welfare security, students' recruitment, and establishing key public schools. Relatively little research has been conducted on educational inequality brought about by the emergence of private international schools from individual perspectives, and a limited amount of research has explored institutionalised capital from students' perspectives in China. This study aims to investigate how the development of private international schools provides better higher education opportunities for students from middle-income household family backgrounds. Two case schools were selected in economically developed cities in different provinces. Guided by Bourdieu's cultural reproduction theory and Weber's social stratification theory, this research explores how the national and local policies impact the development of private education, and to what extent these different stakeholders in the two selected private schools believe that educational inequality is reproduced in the development of private international schools. In order to undertake a thorough review, different types of data sources were utilised, including desk-based research, quantitative surveys, and qualitative interviews. Empirically, the research provides a systematic review of current Chinese policies and regulations that influence the development of private education in China. It contributes to knowledge concerning private education in China through the identification of different geographical locations, different routes of sending students abroad, schools' training, parents' expectations of private schools, and students' experiences in school, which reflects on how private international schools generate educational inequality. Methodologically, this research is a multiple-case study approach using mixed methods to collect qualitative and quantitative data in private international schools with principals, teachers, parents, and students in different regions of China. This participatory approach, using case studies, allows for an insider perspective to help build rapport with potential participants, the collection of authentic and in-depth data, and positioning of the researcher to be able to reflect and avoid being methodologically subjective. Theoretically, the empirical evidence challenges the concept of meritocracy in the Chinese context. What this means is that students who cannot be admitted to famous local public high schools still have the opportunity to go to famous universities abroad by attending private international schools due to their parents' economic capital purchasing educational resources and privileges. This research utilises Bourdieu's theory on social reproduction where economically advantaged families can transfer their economic capital into children's cultural and institutionalized capital, culminating in the social advantages and educational privileges that private education can bring. Private schools have restructured their institutional habitus in ways similar to overseas universities. This means that although students may not have inherited middle-class family cultural capital as described in the existing Western literature, they can benefit from the enhanced institutionalised cultural capital to be found within private education establishments, thus leading to the reproduction of further education inequalities.
- Research Article
31
- 10.1080/09620210300200109
- Jul 1, 2003
- International Studies in Sociology of Education
A programmatic study of inequality/difference in New Zealand education has been carried out, for a quarter of a century, within a family resource framework that has supported both theoretical and empirical research. Although deeply influenced by Bourdieu's theories of social and cultural reproduction, its adherence to a realist philosophy of science means that its structure-disposition-practice explanatory schemes cannot be represented as Bourdieusian. This article takes the concept of habitus (as a set of learned dispositions)and argues that durable embodied cognitive schemes, acquired by children in classed environments, are a principal cause of observed class variation in educational performance. This view challenges accounts in which 'ability'is regarded as 'socially constructed'. The entire history of the sociology of education might be written in terms of its struggle against the dominant influence of IQ theory as an explanation of inequality/difference in education. It is not clear that our discipline has yet been successful in that struggle. These matters are discussed with reference to empirical data on the association between social class and educational achievement in New Zealand. The evidence suggests that class patterns of attainment, particularly on standardized tests designed to assess verbal intelligence, support the thesis that cognitive operations effected by the cognitive habitus are fundamentally involved in the reproduction of inequality/difference. It seems that the primary effects of socialisation may be more important than the secondary effects that many sociologists have taken as their proper area of concern. Some policy implications of this thesis - which is neither a move to encode IQ theory in a radical discourse nor an attempt to reinstate classical deficit theory - are discussed in the context of state-sponsored possibilism currently being imposed on many educational systems.
- Conference Article
3
- 10.1109/fie.2012.6462386
- Oct 1, 2012
This paper explores the use of Bourdieu's Theory of Habitus as a theoretical framework for a PhD study on the dispositions enabling non-traditional students to succeed in their first year of engineering studies. It provides a review of Bourdieu's sociological Theory of Habitus and the application of this framework to higher education settings and in particular to engineering education. Bourdieu's theory of Habitus provides a framework for exploring and analyzing the behavior of individuals within a particular environment. It can provide insight into the behavior, and subsequent academic performance, of an increasingly diverse student cohort in the Australian higher education system. Bourdieu's theory offers researchers the opportunity to understand the complexity of human interactions within the education system. Moreover it is currently an underutilized tool for developing research methodologies as well as providing a framework for subsequent analysis [1].
- Research Article
- 10.30574/ijsra.2024.12.2.1241
- Jul 30, 2024
- International Journal of Science and Research Archive
This article rigorously examines the transgenerational impact of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's seminal 7th March speech through the lens of Pierre Bourdieu's theory of cultural Reproduction. Delivered in 1971, this speech catalyzed the Bengali independence movement and continues to shape political socialization in Bangladesh. By dissecting the speech as a potent form of cultural capital, this study elucidates its role in forming collective habitus and exerting symbolic power across generations. The analysis underscores the speech's enduring influence on national identity, civic engagement, and political discourse. The findings reveal significant practical and societal implications, suggesting the integration of this historical narrative into educational curricula and community initiatives to foster cohesive political consciousness.
- Research Article
21
- 10.1111/soin.12030
- Jan 17, 2014
- Sociological Inquiry
Although the U.S. population is becoming more racially and ethnically diverse, research indicates that minority participation in the arts continues to decline. This article addresses the racial disparity of public art museum attendance by examining the role of the art museum curator and the process by which concepts of race are reproduced within the space of the public art museum. Utilizing Bourdieu's theories of cultural reproduction, social space, and symbolic power as a preliminary framework of inquiry, we examine the concept of whiteness as privileged social construct. Through face‐to‐face in‐depth interviews with museum curators, we investigate the means by which the dominant cultural narrative of whiteness is maintained through the preferences, decisions, and social interactions of curators. We draw upon critical white studies, a part of critical race theory, to underline the manner in which whiteness presents itself as a position of dominance. Our findings show that whiteness is maintained through the process of exclusion by presenting the white cultural narrative as both ordinary and invisible.