Buch, Englisch, Band 5, 312 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 653 g
Shifting private and public responsibilities in education and child rearing
Buch, Englisch, Band 5, 312 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 653 g
Reihe: Children’s Well-Being: Indicators and Research
ISBN: 978-94-007-2971-1
Verlag: Springer Netherlands
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction - Sabine Andresen and Martina Richter - The Politicization of Parenthood - Shifting Private and Public Responsibilities in Education and Child Rearing.-
Part I Families and the Welfare State: the Understanding of Responsibility.-
Val Gillies - Family Policy and the Politics of Parenting: From Function to Competence.-
Nadia Kutscher - Families, Professionals, and Responsibility.-
Anne Lise Ellingsaeter - Nordic Politicization of Parenthood: Unfolding Hybridization?.-
Brid Featherstone - Can a Crisis Become an Opportunity? Gender and Care in Contemporary Ireland.-
Kristen D. Nawrotzki - Parent–School Relations in England and the USA: Partnership, Problematized.-
Andreas Lange - Family and Welfare State Change: Challenges for Education.-
Nina Oelkers - The Redistribution of Responsibility Between State and Parents – Family in the Context of Post-Welfare-State Transformation.-
Part II Child Rearing Between Family Care and Institutional Provisions.-
Tanja Betz - Early Childhood Education, and Social Inequality: Parental Models of a “Good” Childhood.-
Colette McAuley - Child Well-Being in the UK: Children's Views of Families.-
Carol Vincent, Nicola Rollock, Stephen Ball, and David Gillborn - The Educational Strategies of the Black Middle Classes.-
Jutta Ecarius - Significance of Family and School, Educational Standards, and Social Reproduction in Education.-
Elke Wild and Sittipan Yotyodying - Studying at Home—With Whom and in Which Way? Homework Practices and Conflicts in the Family.-
Christine Hunner-Kreisel - “Having to Keep Silent”: A Capabilities Perspective on Growing Up and the “Education Process” in a Migration Family.-
Part III Meeting Parents' and Children's Needs: Professionals in Schools.-
Erin McNamara Horvat - Pushing Parents Away:The Role of District Bureaucracy in an Urban School.-
Till-Sebastian Idel, Kerstin Rabenstein, and Sabine Reh - Symbolic Constructions, Pedagogical Practices, and the Legitimization of the All-Day School From a Professional Perspective: Tendencies Towards Familialization in All-Day Schools.-
Nicole Börner - Parents' Perspectives on Services to Support Families in All-Day Schools.-
Michael Urban, Kapriel Meser, and Rolf Werning - Parental Involvement in All-Day Special Schools for Learning Disabilities.-
Regina Soremski - Educational or Childrearing Partnerships: What Kind of Cooperation is Needed at All-Day Secondary Schools?.-
Natalie Fischer and Felix Brümmer - School Attachment and Performance: The Impact of Participation in Extracurricular Activities at School,-
Ivo Züchner - Daily School Time, Workforce Participation, and Family Life: Time Spent in School as a Condition of Family Life.-
Sabine Andresen, Lena Blomenkamp, Nicole Koch, Martina Richter, Anne-Dorothee Wolf, and Kathrin Wrobel - Ideas of Family and Concepts of Responsibility at All-Day School.-
Contributors.