Choosing to Labour: Structure and Agency in School-Work Transitions

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Choosing to Labour: Structure and Agency in School-Work Transitions
Abstract
We still know relatively little about how young people rationalize their educational and occupational plans and what this might tell us about the relationship between structure and agency in school-work transitions. In this paper, based on a multi-method comparison of youth apprentices in Canada and Germany, the range of school-work transition alternatives realistically under consideration was circumscribed by socio-economic status, habitus, cultural capital, and institutional factors. While their vocational choices reproduced their class position, youth apprentices nevertheless saw their entry into the trades as an expression of a preference for, and identity with, working-class ideals of manual work. Further analysis suggests, however, that these narratives can also be interpreted as post-facto rationalization strategies in response to public discourses that equate life course success with ever higher levels of educational attainment.
Publication
Canadian Journal of Sociology
Volume
30
Issue
3
Pages
325-350
Date
2005
Language
en
ISSN
1710-1123
Short Title
Choosing to Labour
Accessed
8/3/18, 2:06 AM
Library Catalog
Project MUSE
Citation
Lehmann, W. (2005). Choosing to Labour: Structure and Agency in School-Work Transitions. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 30(3), 325–350. https://doi.org/10.1353/cjs.2005.0049