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Philip W. Jackson coined the term ‘hidden curriculum’ in 1968 in his bookLife in Classrooms, discussing the students’ need to master their schools’ expectations. He contended that education is a process ofsecondary socialization.

Two young students smiling and using an interactive whiteboard. Two young students smiling and using an interactive whiteboard.

Hidden Curriculum Examples

A school that has a strict dress code may be sending the message that appearance and conformity are more important than individuality and self-expression.

Education for children is thought to be anagent of socializationto learn appropriate behavior for their gender and contributes to the patriarchal system and structure (Sultana, 2010).

Young girls may be socialized into thinking that there are subjects that are more suited to boys such as mathematics and science.

Feminists view the hidden curriculum as a producer and perpetuator of agender socializationthat disfavors women.

Teachers may respond in different ways to boys and girls (Sadker & Sadker, 1994). Commencing in kindergarten, teachers may employ gender dichotomies to address pupils, separate them for group activities, and distribute them between adversarial teams for competitions.

Moreover, since in elementary level classrooms, boys tend to be more disruptive than girls, they may also receive more attention (both negative and positive).

Studies further suggest that boys attain high status based on athletic ability, toughness, coolness and cross gender relationships, while girls acquire popularity via social skills, physical appearance and their parents’ socioeconomic background.

The relatively higher representation of males over females in textbooks may influence girls’ and boys’ own opinions concerning their aptitudes and their ambitions as well.

For instance, even though, in Wales and England, female teachers outnumber male teachers, senior management of schools and colleges contain more men than women. This lack of salient senior role models may exert a baneful influence upon female students.

Moreover, feminist activists Tony Lawson and Tim Heaton (1996) claimed that textbooks subtly promote gender stereotypes (especially via the portrayal of men and women in different roles) and traditional gender divisions in sports and physical education.

They also argue that many educators still entertain entrenched sexist views concerning certain classroom tasks.

Radical feministsfurther complain that the whole educational system is patriarchal, and that it continues to oppress and marginalize women.

They protest that the system espouses the dependency of women upon men, and causes many girls to feel uncomfortable in the presence of boys while studying certain subjects.

They, moreover, contend that the system still engenders gender inequalities despite the introduction of the national curriculum.

The functionalist orientation toward the hidden curriculum is primarily concerned with concealed curricula’s reproduction of unified societies.

Moreover,Emile Durkheim’spropositions inEducation and Sociology(1922), as well asMoral Education(1925), likely foreshadowed the functionalist approach to the yet-undeveloped notion of the hidden curriculum.

Thefunctionalistshold that the hidden curriculum imparts to children the following:

The value of achievement: the hidden curriculum inculcates a strong work ethic, an attitude of inquiry, personal responsibility, individual initiative, a competitive spirit, and creativity.

Assenting to the school’s cultural norms and learning alongside pupils from different backgrounds, help pupils respect their fellow citizens’ opinions, and coexist with those different from oneself in the future.

According to Marxists the hidden curriculum reinforces social inequality and maintains ruling class ideology. Education encourages students to blindly accept capitalist values, through the hidden curriculum.

For example, schools that track students into different ability levels or classes based on test scores may be reinforcing the idea that some students are better than others and that some students are not worth as much attention or investment.

This can lead to aself-fulfilling prophecy, where students who are labeled as “less capable” may begin to believe it and underperform as a result (Jackson, 1968).

Students learn to rank themselves amongst their peers with grades (Bowles & Gintis, 1976). When children participate in a race or math contest, they learn that society has winners and losers.

Noble and Davies’ (2009) research suggests that this reproduction continues beyond secondary education. It can be seen in the reluctance of working-class students to apply for a university place because of a belief that they lack the cultural capital required to fit into university life.

Jackson (1964) described the hidden curriculum as the ‘unpublicised features of school life’ in which students learn to accept the unequal distribution of power within schools and society

Jackson (1968) described classrooms as places presenting persistent evaluations, crowds and massive differences in power between the managed and the manager.

Herein, as the student crowds’ resources are limited, denial, delay, distraction and interruption enter the student experience. Meanwhile, the teacher becomes a gatekeeper, supply sergeant, participation signaler and privilege granter.

In 1970, the psychiatrist and then-Dean of MIT’s Institute Relations, Benson R. Snyder published a book calledThe Hidden Curriculum.

Snyder argued that unstated social and academic norms are primarily responsible for much of students’ anxiety and campus conflict.

He strove to ascertain why highly gifted students give up on education, and pointed out that these concealed norms impair the students’ capacity to think creatively and develop independently.

TheMarxist approachto the hidden curriculum, initially constituted a substantial challenge to the functionalist view. Marxist theorists contended that schooling primarily caters to the oppressive and powerful social groups and institutions.

Employing the term ‘long shadow of work,’ Herbert Gintis and Samuel Bowles (1976), in particular, argued, in their seminal book entitledSchooling in Capitalist America, that students develop a consciousness, internalize norms, and acquire skills that suit their future employment.

They are purportedly educated in a fashion that prepares them for different levels of autonomy, control and ownership in the capitalist system.

The relationship between social milieu of production and the social milieu of school life was described as the correspondence principle.

Gintis and Bowles argued that the correspondence principle accounts for the correspondence between the schools’ internal organization to the capitalist workforce’s internal organization via norms, values and structures.

For instance, the authors claim that the structure of authority in schools resembles the hierarchy of dominance in the labor market. The head teacher acts as a managing director, while students garbed in uniforms and subjected to discipline take after the lower-level employees laboring under tyrannical supervision.

Moreover, education informs how to govern workplace interactions and affords practical preparation for entrance into the labor market.

The passive subservience of pupils to teachers, which corresponds to the passive subservience of workers to managers;

An acceptance of hierarchy – the authority of teachers and administrators over students corresponding to the authority of managers over employees;

Critical Evaluation

Hugh Lauder and Philip Brown (1991) have noted that Gintis and Bowles had oversimplified education’s correspondence to the labor market, and have suggested that bureaucratic control at work has diminished in favor of increased teamwork.

Meanwhile, David Reynolds (1984) has contended that Gintis and Bowles had discounted the impact of the formal curriculum.

Furthermore, Reynolds has noted that much of the British curriculum actually fails to impart the skills employers need, instead of failing to develop an ideal employee for the capitalist system.

The fact that norms are implicitly communicated does not mean that they necessarily elicit passive assent. Existence of anti-school subcultures, truancy, and exclusion suggest both the hidden curriculum and correspondence principal have failed.

For instance, Paul Willis, inLearning to Labor(1981), demonstrates how the demands of the hidden curriculum may encounter resistance, and create a counterculture in school.

Willis, employing an ethnographic methodology, studied 12 boys from a working-class background, who were attending Hammertown Boys, a modern school in the British Midlands.

The boys were in their penultimate year of schooling, and Willis followed them for approximately 6 months, examining their interactions with their school and with each other, and interviewing them occasionally. He evaluated them afterward as well, periodically till 1976.

Recognizing the reality of these working-class lads’ own interpretation of schooling, Willis observed a nonconformist counter-school culture among them.

This counter-school culture purportedly thrust working-class students, eventually, as adults, into low-wage and subordinate labor positions.

This “self-damnation” stemmed from these youths’ awareness of, and rebellion against their school’s dominant disciplinary mechanisms.

A conventional curriculum, also known as formal or academic curriculum, involves instruction and the transmission of knowledge in schools to accomplish the principal objectives of preparing students to pass examinations, and imparting to them specific skills.

The hidden curriculum refers to the informal learning processes that occur in schools. These processes often have the ‘side-effect’ of transmitting subtle messages to pupils and students about key values, attitudes and norms of behavior.

Although the hidden curriculum is taught in a formal institution, it is a form of informal socialization.The hidden curriculum includes things like the way teachers dress and behave, the way they interact with students, the way discipline is handled, and the overall climate of the school.

While the hidden curriculum is often unintentional, it can still have a powerful impact on students. It can shape their values, beliefs, and attitudes, and it can influence the way they behave both inside and outside of school.

These factors can send strong messages to students about what is important and what is not, what kind of behavior is acceptable and what is not, and what kind of people are valued and who is not (Jackson, 1968).

For example, a school that has a lot of rules and regulations may be sending the message that order and compliance are more important than creativity and innovation.

And a school that has a lot of violence and bullying may be sending the message that aggression and force are more effective than cooperation and kindness.

References

Bourdieu, P. (1977).Reproduction in Education, Society and Culture. London: Sage

Bourdieu, P. (2011). The forms of capital.(1986).Cultural theory: An anthology, 1, 81-93.

Bowles, S., & Gintis, H. (1976).Schooling in capitalist America: Educational reform and the contradictions of economic life. Basic Books.

Durkheim, E. (1922).Education and Sociology. New York: Free Press.

Durkheim E. (1925).Moral education: A study in the theory and application of the sociology of education.New York and London: The Free Press and Collier-Macmillan.

Giroux, H.A. & Penna, A.N. (1979) Social Education in the Classroom: The Dynamics of the Hidden Curriculum.Theory & Research in Social Education,7:1, 21-42.

Heaton, J. & Lawson, D. (1996).Feminism and Education. Russ-Books.

Heaton, T., & Lawson, T. (1996). Explaining gender differences in educational achievement. In Education and Training (pp. 96-121). Palgrave, London.

Jackson, P.W. (1964). The conceptualization of teaching. Psychol. Schs., 1: 232-243.

Jackson, P. (1968).Life in Classrooms. Rinehart and Winston: New York.

Johnson, R., & Bourdieu, P. (1993).The field of cultural production: Essays on art and literature.Cambridge: Polity.

Lauder, H. & Brown, P. (1991). Education, Economy and Social Change”.International Studies in Sociology of Education, 1(1–2), 3–23.

Ochs, E. (1999). Socialization.Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, 9(1/2), 230-233.

Nash, C. J. (2009).Patriarchy.

Sultana, A. (2010). Patriarchy and women’s subordination: a theoretical analysis.Arts Faculty Journal, 1-18.

Noble, J., & Davies, P. (2009). Cultural capital as an explanation of variation in participation in higher education.British Journal of Sociology of Education, 30(5), 591-605.

Reynolds, D. K. (2021).Constructive living. In Constructive Living.University of Hawaii Press.

Sadker, M., & Sadker, D. (1994).Failing at fairness: How America’s schools shortchange girls. New York: Touchstone.

Snyder, Benson R. (1971).The Hidden Curriculum. Alfred A. Knopf.

Willis, P. (1981).Learning to Labor: How working class kids get working class jobs. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. (Original work published 1977)

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Saul McLeod, PhD

BSc (Hons) Psychology, MRes, PhD, University of Manchester

Saul McLeod, PhD., is a qualified psychology teacher with over 18 years of experience in further and higher education. He has been published in peer-reviewed journals, including the Journal of Clinical Psychology.

Olivia Guy-Evans, MSc

BSc (Hons) Psychology, MSc Psychology of Education

Olivia Guy-Evans is a writer and associate editor for Simply Psychology. She has previously worked in healthcare and educational sectors.

Ayesh PereraResearcherB.A, MTS, Harvard UniversityAyesh Perera, a Harvard graduate, has worked as a researcher in psychology and neuroscience under Dr. Kevin Majeres at Harvard Medical School.

Ayesh PereraResearcherB.A, MTS, Harvard University

Ayesh Perera

Researcher

B.A, MTS, Harvard University

Ayesh Perera, a Harvard graduate, has worked as a researcher in psychology and neuroscience under Dr. Kevin Majeres at Harvard Medical School.