What will you do when you grow up?: the social construction of children’s occupational preferences

Children’ s occupational preferences can provide insights into the ways in which they learn about adult work in the society in which they live. While in traditional societies occupational knowledge and occupational identity can be seen as developing hand in hand, and children can be seen as legitima...

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Main Author: Merryn Hutchings
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Presses universitaires de la Méditerranée 1997-01-01
Series:Éducation et Socialisation
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/edso/26445
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author Merryn Hutchings
author_facet Merryn Hutchings
author_sort Merryn Hutchings
collection DOAJ
description Children’ s occupational preferences can provide insights into the ways in which they learn about adult work in the society in which they live. While in traditional societies occupational knowledge and occupational identity can be seen as developing hand in hand, and children can be seen as legitimate peripheral participants (Lave & Wenger, 1991) in adult work, in industrialised societies children’s opportunities to observe and participate in adult work are limited. This article examines the resources which children in such societies use in constructing ideas about their future occupations, and considers whether these ideas can be seen as occupational identities. Finally, implications for the curriculum are examined.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2271-6092
language fra
publishDate 1997-01-01
publisher Presses universitaires de la Méditerranée
record_format Article
series Éducation et Socialisation
spelling doaj-art-6d0dae6f1c6b4a66bdb717fff12a6f392025-01-30T13:36:59ZfraPresses universitaires de la MéditerranéeÉducation et Socialisation2271-60921997-01-011411914410.4000/133drWhat will you do when you grow up?: the social construction of children’s occupational preferencesMerryn HutchingsChildren’ s occupational preferences can provide insights into the ways in which they learn about adult work in the society in which they live. While in traditional societies occupational knowledge and occupational identity can be seen as developing hand in hand, and children can be seen as legitimate peripheral participants (Lave & Wenger, 1991) in adult work, in industrialised societies children’s opportunities to observe and participate in adult work are limited. This article examines the resources which children in such societies use in constructing ideas about their future occupations, and considers whether these ideas can be seen as occupational identities. Finally, implications for the curriculum are examined.https://journals.openedition.org/edso/26445
spellingShingle Merryn Hutchings
What will you do when you grow up?: the social construction of children’s occupational preferences
Éducation et Socialisation
title What will you do when you grow up?: the social construction of children’s occupational preferences
title_full What will you do when you grow up?: the social construction of children’s occupational preferences
title_fullStr What will you do when you grow up?: the social construction of children’s occupational preferences
title_full_unstemmed What will you do when you grow up?: the social construction of children’s occupational preferences
title_short What will you do when you grow up?: the social construction of children’s occupational preferences
title_sort what will you do when you grow up the social construction of children s occupational preferences
url https://journals.openedition.org/edso/26445
work_keys_str_mv AT merrynhutchings whatwillyoudowhenyougrowupthesocialconstructionofchildrensoccupationalpreferences