Read The Blackwell Companion to Sociology Online
Authors: Judith R Blau
population of students who begin college actually obtain a college degree
(Resnick and Wirt, 1996). Those who fail to graduate from college are often in
an even more difficult position than new high school graduates, with respect to
the job market. They typically receive no special assistance from their colleges in looking for employment, and employers generally are unaware of students who
drop out of college to seek employment.
Moreover, many students fail to develop marketable skills through their
choice of college or of the courses they select in college. Recent research shows that students receive little direct help in selecting a college that matches their abilities and fits their ultimate career goals (Rosenbaum, 1996). As a result,
students often choose a college for which they are ill-prepared and that does not serve their future needs well. Without proper guidance, college bound students,
especially those with weak academic records, often experience disappointment
and failure in college and drop out without furthering their career objectives
(Schneider and Stevenson, 1999). The negative consequences of poor college
choices are seen most readily in the difficulties these individuals have when they enter the labor market.
Research in the Sociology of Education
371
Research in sociology of education has been an important source of informa-
tion about the challenges and difficulties of entering the labor market directly from school. Studies have documented the weak links in the transition from
school to work in the United States, and the consequences of an unstructured
transition for students' job opportunities. Supplementing this body of research
are a number of comparative studies that shed additional light on the way
institutional and organizational characteristics of schools and the labor market affect the transition from school to work.
Cross-national Comparison of Transition from School to Work
Comparative research on stratification and mobility processes shows that while
countries tend to be similar in the effects of social origin on occupational
attainment, they differ markedly in the effects of educational attainment on
job destination. Variation in the effect of educational qualifications on occupational attainment is usually attributed to the degree to which the transition
between school and work is structured. In some countries, like Switzerland
and Germany, students begin their preparation for the job market early in their
school careers and follow clearly specified steps leading them to a specific
occupation. In other countries, like the United States and Ireland, the path
from school to work is ambiguous, and students follow quite different trajec-
tories toward employment. The studies find that the more structured the transi-
tion, the greater the effect of educational attainment on occupational
destination.
Several characteristics of industrialized countries affect the transition from
school to work. The health of the economy determines the availability of work.
The extent to which women participate in the labor market affects competition
for jobs. Average level of educational attainment raises the level of skills required of new job holders. In addition to these general influences on the transition
process, Kerckhoff (2000) identifies three other factors that directly relate to the structure of the transition from school to work: the degree of stratification of the educational system, the degree of standardization of educational programs, and
the degree to which the educational credentials awarded are general academic
ones or specialized vocationally relevant ones.
Comparing the structure of the transition to work in France, Germany, Great
Britain, and the United States, Kerckhoff (2000) found that Germany is the most
structured of the four countries, while the United States is the least structured. In Germany, students are divided as early as fifth grade into one of three curricula, which channel them to higher education, advanced vocational training, or early
entrance into the labor market. This division marks students for particular kinds of employment and has a profound effect on their occupational attainment. The
United States is characterized by a low degree of curriculum differentiation,
despite the existence of tracks, and has virtually no points where educational
decisions are irrevocable. As a result, the linkage between educational creden-
tials and positions in the labor market is weak. Kerckhoff shows that countries
with more standardized transitions have lower rates of return to full-time school, 372
Maureen T. Hallinan
fewer increases in educational credentials, fewer job changes, and lower rates of early occupational mobility. In short, these countries exhibit a more orderly
transition from school to work.
Making a similar comparison between the transition from school to work in
the United States and Germany, Mortimer and Kruger (2000) found that the lack
of structure in the US transition results in American youth's spending a longer
period of time in trial and testing in the labor force than German youth.
Americans new to the job market change jobs often in an effort to find a good
fit between their skills and the requirements of a position. Similarly, employers view new graduates as an unstable workforce and tend to be unwilling to
provide training for them unless or until they have spent a certain amount of
time with the same employer. Often Americans react to the dissatisfactions they
experience in their first jobs by returning to school to train for a specific
occupation or career. Mortimer and Kruger claim that loosening the tight
regulation of school-to-work pathways in Germany would make it easier for
individuals to change careers or occupations in order to find greater job satisfaction and economic opportunity. Likewise, providing greater integration of
school and work in the United States would make schooling more relevant to
students, encourage them to attain further educational credentials, and create a better fit between educational training and job requirements.
One of the most ambitious cross-national studies of the transition from school
to work was undertaken by Shavit and Muller (2000). Working with researchers
from 13 industrialized nations, they investigated the association between educa-
tional qualifications and occupational attainment in Australia, Britain, France, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland,
Taiwan and the United States. The researchers found marked differences in the
degree to which the 13 countries exhibited four institutional features: educa-
tional stratification, educational standardization, occupationally specific vocational training, and a low percentage of students obtaining post-secondary
education. These institutional characteristics were strong predictors of the
strength of the association between educational and occupational attainment.
For example, in countries exhibiting these characteristics, such as Germany,
Switzerland, and the Netherlands, the effect of educational preparation on
occupational destination was twice as large as in countries without these fea-
tures, including Britain, Japan, and the United States.
The policy implications of these comparative studies for curricular reform are
profound. The findings indicate that vocational education facilitates occupa-
tional attainment in those countries where training is directed toward a specific occupation but is of little value otherwise. Moreover, a more formalized transition process facilitates job acquisition, but decreases job mobility and a return to school.
Further research is needed, of course. Comparative analysis of survey data is
limited by the few variables that are comparable across countries. The institu-
tional data that are available need to be supplemented by contextual data
describing the workplace, including characteristics of employers, employees,
the structure of the workforce, and the involvement of other organizations that
Research in the Sociology of Education
373
assist in job placement. Also needed is information about school context and the involvement of school personnel with students who are beginning a job search.
In addition, an understanding of the transition from school to work would be
informed by individual-level data, particularly students' ascribed and achieved
characteristics. Finally, this body of research should be extended beyond new
entrants to the labor market to further specify how schooling affects occupa-
tional attainment throughout the life cycle.
Conclusions
The two research traditions described in this chapter are similar in two ways.
First, both the organizational analysis of schools and the study of the transition from school to work are grounded in theoretical perspectives that provide a solid foundation for empirical studies in these traditions. The study of school as an
organization rests on general sociological theory about the structure, function, and processes of organizations, as well as their impact on their members and
non-members. Research on the transition from school to work is located in
broad sociological theories of stratification and social mobility, and its consequences for individuals' well-being and societal functioning.
Second, both research traditions have amassed a large body of empirical work
that flows directly from and further expands the conceptual ideas that generated it. Informed by powerful sociological theories, the empirical studies in these
areas tend to be systematic, integrated, and rigorous. Current empirical work
can be related easily to previous studies, leading to the accumulation of a
systematic body of research that broadens and deepens our understanding of
the social processes that govern schooling.
In general, a strength of sociology of education is that it is grounded in
comprehensive and powerful sociological theories of societal processes. These
broad theories have had a major influence on the conceptual and empirical
developments that characterize the sociological analysis of schools. At the
same time, sociology of education has been slow to formulate its own more
specific theories to explain schooling. While broad macro-level and micro-
level sociological theories are valuable in providing ideas and direction to the study of schooling, a gap exists between these general formulations and the
social processes that occur in the specific context of the school. Middle range
theories and more contextualized conceptual frameworks that take into account
the unique characteristics of schools and the populations they serve would lead
to even greater progress in our understanding of the educational process. More-
over, conceptualizing the links between macro-and micro-level processes would
increase our understanding of how school organization affects student learning
and how youth culture influences student engagement.
Schools assume a major role in the transmission of knowledge and culture
across generations and in the socialization of youth to their roles in adult life.
The sociological analysis of schools reveals the various contributions schools
make to society and how they shape and are shaped by societal institutions and
374
Maureen T. Hallinan
events. The contributions of twentieth-century sociology of education are sig-
nificant and of considerable consequence. The challenge for contemporary
sociologists of education is to build and extend this body of work through
theoretically rich and methodologically rigorous studies of schooling.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The author is grateful to the National Science Foundation and the American
Educational Research Association for Grant RED-9452861 for support of this
research. The author thanks Amy Orr, Vladimir Khmelkov, and Warren
Kubitschek for valuable research assistance. She is also grateful for support
from the Institute for Educational Initiatives at the University of Notre Dame.
26
Aging and Aging Policy in the USA
Madonna Harrington Meyer and Pamela Herd
The study of aging and aging policy is always personal as well as social. How can we best prepare for our own old age? Or for that of our parents or grandparents?
How can we as a society best prepare for a rapidly aging nation? Within the next 50 years, those over age 65 will comprise one-fifth of the population (US Bureau of the Census, 1993). Social gerontology includes the study of how our aging
population will impact every facet of our lives, including health and health care, our family relationships, economics, and work.
Gerontology is a multidisciplinary approach, drawing on such fields as soci-
ology, history, psychology, social work, medicine, public administration, political science, and biology. In recent decades, the discipline has changed ± and in this chapter we highlight several emerging trends. First, gerontology has diversified from an initial tendency to focus primarily on white men to a more cross-
cultural, racial, and gendered approach. Increasingly, scholars are paying careful attention to the ways that the processes and implications of aging vary for the
poor, for women, and for persons of color. Second, gerontological research has
moved away from a predominately individual or social-psychological approach
to a more social structural approach that takes into account how political and