A study of Values education in India: Multinational school-based values education schemes

Vol-4 | Issue-5 | May 2019 | Published Online: 15 May 2019    PDF ( 201 KB )
Author(s)
Manoj Kumar 1; Dr.Omkar Nath Mishra 2

1Research Scholar, OPJS University, Churu, Rajasthan (India)

2Assistant Professor, OPJS University, Churu, Rajasthan (India)

Abstract

In terms of socialization, the modern system of mass education is second only to the family in importance. It promotes two main socializing tasks: homogenization and social sorting. Students from diverse backgrounds learn a standardized curriculum that effectively transforms diversity into homogeneity. Students learn a common knowledge base, a common culture, and a common sense of society’s official priorities, and perhaps more importantly, they learn to locate their place within it. They are provided with a unifying framework for participation in institutional life and at the same time are sorted into different paths. Those who demonstrate facility within the standards established by curriculum or through the informal patterns of status differentiation in student social life are set on trajectories to high-status positions in society. Those who do less well are gradually confined to lower, subordinate positions in society.

Keywords
socialization, modern system, culture.
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