Continuing complexity: the university careers of a scientific elite in relation to their class origins and schooling

We report on continuing research on the UK scientific elite, intended to illustrate a proposed new approach to elite studies and based on a prosopography of Fellows of the Royal Society born from 1900. We extend analyses previously reported of Fellows' social origins and secondary schooling to...

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Main Authors: Bukodi, E, Goldthorpe, JH, Steinberg, I
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023
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author Bukodi, E
Goldthorpe, JH
Steinberg, I
author_facet Bukodi, E
Goldthorpe, JH
Steinberg, I
author_sort Bukodi, E
collection OXFORD
description We report on continuing research on the UK scientific elite, intended to illustrate a proposed new approach to elite studies and based on a prosopography of Fellows of the Royal Society born from 1900. We extend analyses previously reported of Fellows' social origins and secondary schooling to take in their university careers as under- and postgraduates. The composite term ‘Oxbridge’, as often applied in elite studies, is called into question, as members of the scientific elite prove to have been recruited more from Cambridge than from Oxford. Particular interest then attaches to the relation between Fellows' social origins and schooling and their attendance at Cambridge. Among Fellows whose university careers were made at Cambridge, those of more advantaged class origins and those with private schooling are over-represented, although in this, as in various other respects, including Fellows' field of study, family influences persist independently of schooling. One suggestive interaction effect exists in that being privately educated increases the probability of having been at Cambridge more for Fellows from managerial than from professional families. Private schooling leading on to both undergraduate and postgraduate study at Cambridge can be identified as the educational ‘royal road’ into the scientific elite; and Fellows coming from higher professional and managerial families alike have the highest probability of having entered the elite in this way. But the most common route turns out in fact to be via state schooling and attendance at universities outside of ‘the golden triangle’ of Cambridge, Oxford and London; and this route is far more likely to have been followed by Fellows of all other class origins than higher professional. The relation between the degree of social skew in the recruitment of an elite and the degree of social homogeneity among its members can be more complex than has often been supposed.
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spelling oxford-uuid:50d79061-3679-4a51-98e5-6912d010cb172023-09-14T17:33:28ZContinuing complexity: the university careers of a scientific elite in relation to their class origins and schoolingJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:50d79061-3679-4a51-98e5-6912d010cb17EnglishSymplectic ElementsWiley2023Bukodi, EGoldthorpe, JHSteinberg, IWe report on continuing research on the UK scientific elite, intended to illustrate a proposed new approach to elite studies and based on a prosopography of Fellows of the Royal Society born from 1900. We extend analyses previously reported of Fellows' social origins and secondary schooling to take in their university careers as under- and postgraduates. The composite term ‘Oxbridge’, as often applied in elite studies, is called into question, as members of the scientific elite prove to have been recruited more from Cambridge than from Oxford. Particular interest then attaches to the relation between Fellows' social origins and schooling and their attendance at Cambridge. Among Fellows whose university careers were made at Cambridge, those of more advantaged class origins and those with private schooling are over-represented, although in this, as in various other respects, including Fellows' field of study, family influences persist independently of schooling. One suggestive interaction effect exists in that being privately educated increases the probability of having been at Cambridge more for Fellows from managerial than from professional families. Private schooling leading on to both undergraduate and postgraduate study at Cambridge can be identified as the educational ‘royal road’ into the scientific elite; and Fellows coming from higher professional and managerial families alike have the highest probability of having entered the elite in this way. But the most common route turns out in fact to be via state schooling and attendance at universities outside of ‘the golden triangle’ of Cambridge, Oxford and London; and this route is far more likely to have been followed by Fellows of all other class origins than higher professional. The relation between the degree of social skew in the recruitment of an elite and the degree of social homogeneity among its members can be more complex than has often been supposed.
spellingShingle Bukodi, E
Goldthorpe, JH
Steinberg, I
Continuing complexity: the university careers of a scientific elite in relation to their class origins and schooling
title Continuing complexity: the university careers of a scientific elite in relation to their class origins and schooling
title_full Continuing complexity: the university careers of a scientific elite in relation to their class origins and schooling
title_fullStr Continuing complexity: the university careers of a scientific elite in relation to their class origins and schooling
title_full_unstemmed Continuing complexity: the university careers of a scientific elite in relation to their class origins and schooling
title_short Continuing complexity: the university careers of a scientific elite in relation to their class origins and schooling
title_sort continuing complexity the university careers of a scientific elite in relation to their class origins and schooling
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