Abstract

Two theories are considered in accounting for the increased schooling required for employment in advanced industrial society: (a) a technical-function theory, stating that educational requirements reflect the demands for greater skills on the job due to technological change; and (b) a conflict theory, stating that employment requirements reflect the efforts of competing status groups to monopolize or dominate jobs by imposing their cultural standards on the selection process. A review of the evidence indicates that the conflict theory is more strongly supported. The main dynamic of rising educational requirements in the United States has been primarily the expansion of mobility opportunities through the school system, rather than autonomous changes in the structure of employment. It is argued that the effort to build a comprehensive theory of stratification is best advanced by viewing those effects of technological change on educational requirements that are substantiated within the basic context of a conflict theory of stratification.

Keywords

Stratification (seeds)PsychologyConflict theoriesSocial psychologySociologyEpistemologyConflict resolutionSocial scienceBiologyPhilosophy

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Publication Info

Year
1971
Type
article
Volume
36
Issue
6
Pages
1002-1002
Citations
810
Access
Closed

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Randall Collins (1971). Functional and Conflict Theories of Educational Stratification. American Sociological Review , 36 (6) , 1002-1002. https://doi.org/10.2307/2093761

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/2093761