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SUMMARY; CHARSET=UTF-8 :Professor Ann-Marie Bathmaker (University of Birmingham) - &#39;Who wants to be an engineer? UTCs, vocational diversification and the experience of girls and boys from different social class backgrounds in England&#39;
UID:exeter_event_2151
URL:http://www.exeter.ac.uk/events/details/?event=2151
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20141125T000000
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20141126T235900
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ORGANIZER: MAILTO:n.t.simcock@exeter.ac.uk
ATTACH: http://www.exeter.ac.uk/events/details/?event=2151
DTSTAMP:20141201T145352
LOCATION:EMS Building G18 
DESCRIPTION; CHARSET=UTF-8 :University Technical Colleges (UTCs) contribute to an increasingly complex landscape of education and training, promoted as a creative means of meeting the diverse educational needs of young people (Fuller and Unwin, 2011). UTCs respond in particular to national and international policy agendas that seek to promote participation in STEM subjects (Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths). They have been championed by the Edge Foundation as providing a â€˜highly regardedâ€™ course of study â€˜with clear progression routes into higher education or further learning in workâ€™, especially careers in technician and degree level engineering. However, as yet, we know very little about whether young people and their parents understand the different options available, how decisions to attend a UTC are made, nor whether the education offered in these new institutions enhances or conversely limits the opportunities of students who attend them. 

This paper draws on data from a British Academy funded project (co-investigator: Dr Nicola Ingram, University of Bath) that carried out detailed case studies in two UTCs in England. The project addressed the following core question:
What impact does vocational diversification in the form of UTCs have on the decision-making and experience of boys and girls from different class backgrounds? 
The research used a holistic approach focusing on the whole institution in relation to the introduction and development of new educational policies. This encompassed analysis of â€˜the situated, material, professional and external dimensionsâ€™ (Braun et al 2011: 585) of the schools, recognising the schoolsâ€™ origins (and that of their communities), their ethos and culture, their physical environment and resources, their staff, and students as well as external influences. The paper offers an analysis of the enactment of policy (Ball et al, 2011) in the two case study institutions, and considers how these enactments may reinforce or challenge historical patterns of gender and class divisions in vocational education in England.

http://www.exeter.ac.uk/events/details/?event=2151
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