Accessing and activating social capital resources in Buffalo's public high schools

The contents of this paper were presented by the author in June 2006 at the University of Cambridge’s 3rd Annual Postgraduate Symposium in Education. The paper summarises and presents conclusions from a dissertation completed shortly thereafter. 
 
 The paper first examines the distr...

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Main Author: Brian D. Barrett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University College London 2006-12-01
Series:Educate~
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.educatejournal.org/index.php?journal=educate&page=article&op=view&path%5B%5D=103
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spelling doaj-b122a1d240ce41bea6a11cfb27de2fd32020-11-25T02:11:56ZengUniversity College London Educate~1477-55572006-12-0162631Accessing and activating social capital resources in Buffalo's public high schoolsBrian D. BarrettThe contents of this paper were presented by the author in June 2006 at the University of Cambridge’s 3rd Annual Postgraduate Symposium in Education. The paper summarises and presents conclusions from a dissertation completed shortly thereafter. 
 
 The paper first examines the distribution of social capital both across and within a representative sample of six public high schools in Buffalo, New York, an industrial city that has suffered massive urban decline and is characterised by high rates of social dislocation. 
 
 Though SPSS analyses indicate social capital’s positive relationship to academic achievement, individual levels of social capital are shown to be mediated most prominently by socio-economic status and, the higher a student’s household income, the greater their social capital resources tend to be. 
 
 While quantitative analysis suggests that some actors are constrained in their access to social capital (based especially on socio-economic status) as a result of structural forces, it does not conclude that they are controlled by them. Many disadvantaged students make use of social capital resources and achieve ‘against the odds’. Qualitative techniques explore the processes behind Buffalo students’ access to, and activation of, social capital resources. These processes are revealed to vary according to students’ school and social contexts. http://www.educatejournal.org/index.php?journal=educate&page=article&op=view&path%5B%5D=103Social Capital, Urban Education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brian D. Barrett
spellingShingle Brian D. Barrett
Accessing and activating social capital resources in Buffalo's public high schools
Educate~
Social Capital, Urban Education
author_facet Brian D. Barrett
author_sort Brian D. Barrett
title Accessing and activating social capital resources in Buffalo's public high schools
title_short Accessing and activating social capital resources in Buffalo's public high schools
title_full Accessing and activating social capital resources in Buffalo's public high schools
title_fullStr Accessing and activating social capital resources in Buffalo's public high schools
title_full_unstemmed Accessing and activating social capital resources in Buffalo's public high schools
title_sort accessing and activating social capital resources in buffalo's public high schools
publisher University College London
series Educate~
issn 1477-5557
publishDate 2006-12-01
description The contents of this paper were presented by the author in June 2006 at the University of Cambridge’s 3rd Annual Postgraduate Symposium in Education. The paper summarises and presents conclusions from a dissertation completed shortly thereafter. 
 
 The paper first examines the distribution of social capital both across and within a representative sample of six public high schools in Buffalo, New York, an industrial city that has suffered massive urban decline and is characterised by high rates of social dislocation. 
 
 Though SPSS analyses indicate social capital’s positive relationship to academic achievement, individual levels of social capital are shown to be mediated most prominently by socio-economic status and, the higher a student’s household income, the greater their social capital resources tend to be. 
 
 While quantitative analysis suggests that some actors are constrained in their access to social capital (based especially on socio-economic status) as a result of structural forces, it does not conclude that they are controlled by them. Many disadvantaged students make use of social capital resources and achieve ‘against the odds’. Qualitative techniques explore the processes behind Buffalo students’ access to, and activation of, social capital resources. These processes are revealed to vary according to students’ school and social contexts.
topic Social Capital, Urban Education
url http://www.educatejournal.org/index.php?journal=educate&page=article&op=view&path%5B%5D=103
work_keys_str_mv AT briandbarrett accessingandactivatingsocialcapitalresourcesinbuffalospublichighschools
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