Chapter 5: Capital at Home And at School as Determinants of Child Social Adjustment1
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Published:2007
Toby L. Parcel, 2007. "Capital at Home And at School as Determinants of Child Social Adjustment1", Contemporary Perspectives on Social Learning in Early Childhood Education, Olivia N. Saracho, Bernard Spodek
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This chapter has several interrelated purposes. First, I will argue that child social adjustment is important both for its own sake and for its implications across the life course, particularly in terms of school success. Second, I will argue that the capital to which the child has access, both at home and at school, will be a major determinant of his/her social adjustment. This approach explicitly acknowledges that both the family and the school are influential contexts in shaping social behavior. Following Bronfenbrenner and Morris (1998), I believe that a child’s experience is shaped by multiple contexts throughout the course of development. Of course, the family is the first context the child experiences, but within a few years, the school becomes a second context that also will be important. I will review several perspectives that help to illuminate how various forms of capital located at home and at school can be so influential. In doing so, I will distinguish between perspectives focusing on social capital from those focusing on social class; I will also explore their intersection.
