The Impacts of Social Class: Crash Course Sociology #25 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

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Class matters. You probably already know that.
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And not only because you’re a student of sociology, but because you’re a person who lives in a society.
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But do you know how much it really matters?
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Social class is huge determinant of many of the most fundamental aspects of modern life
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– from your education, to your beliefs, as well as your values, your occupation, your income, and not only how you live, but also how you die.
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So let’s talk about how class plays out in the lives of Americans today.
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[Theme Music]
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Class starts to matter at the very beginning of your life.
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When we discussed socialization a few episodes ago,
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we talked about anticipatory socialization, or learning to fit into a group you’ll someday be a part of, like a gender or a race.
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And one type of anticipatory socialization is class socialization,
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where parents convey to their children the values that go along with being upper class or middle class or working class.
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Let’s take a simple example.
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Suppose you’re a parent and your kid absolutely refuses to eat broccoli.
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How do you respond?
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Do you make them clear their plate and say that they shouldn’t waste food?
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Or do you allow them to make decisions for themselves about what they eat?
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Now, you may be thinking, “What?
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How does eating broccoli have anything to do with class?”
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But how parents from different walks of life approach parenting can differ a lot by class,
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as American sociologist Annette Lareau found in her research on parenting styles.
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Let’s go to the Thought Bubble to look at how social class can affect what kind of parent you are, or what kind you have.
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In the 1990s, Lareau’s research focused on observing families of elementary school students from upper-middle class and working class backgrounds.
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In doing this, she realized that parents had very different approaches to how they educated and disciplined their kids.
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She found that upper-middle class parents tend to be very involved in their kid’s social and academic lives.
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Think scheduled play dates, after school activities, checking their homework assignments every night.
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The stereotype of a suburban helicopter mom isn’t too far from the mark for some of these families.
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By contrast, working class parents – who were more likely to have less time and money to devote to these activities –
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were more likely to be hands off in structuring their kid’s free time.
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These kids might be more likely to be playing with whoever is around their neighborhood than going on playdates.
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Working class parents also tend to put a greater emphasis on obedience and discipline compared to their upper middle class counterparts, Lareau found.
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While a working class parent might tell their kids to eat their broccoli
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“Because I said so,” an upper middle class parent is more likely to talk through decisions with their children in an effort to encourage autonomy.
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Thanks, Thought Bubble.
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So, yes, a toddler’s distaste for broccoli and their parents’ reaction to it, can tell us something about class.
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And these trends in parenting aren’t the only difference in values and beliefs that we see across classes.
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Political views tend to vary across class groups, too,
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with upper class Americans being more likely to be fiscally conservative and socially progressive, and lower class Americans being more likely to be the opposite.
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Even religion varies by class.
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Upper income Americans are more heavily represented in liberal Protestant groups like Episcopalians and Presbyterians, as well as Judaism, Hinduism and Atheism,
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whereas lower income Americans are more likely to identify as Evangelical Protestants or Catholics.
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But beliefs and values aren’t the only thing that vary by social class.
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A large component of class differences plays out through educational attainment and its consequences for success later in life.
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Education is sometimes called the “Great Equalizer.”
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The more people who have access to quality education, the more equal a society gets.
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Or so the thinking goes.
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But whether you get a quality education varies by the social class you’re born into.
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So we might be concerned that education will have the opposite effect, and will actually help pass inequalities from one generation on to the next.
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There are a few ways that social class comes into play when we talk about education in the US.
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First, where do you live?
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Income segregation, or the tendency for families of similar income levels to live in the same neighborhoods, is incredibly common in the United States.
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If you’ve ever gone apartment hunting in a big city, this might not come as a surprise to you.
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An apartment in a “good” neighborhood, or an area with low crime, good schools, and better quality housing,
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costs way more than a home where crime and pollution are higher and education and job access is inconsistent.
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One reason that access to education varies by class is that public schools in the US are funded mainly at the local level,
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so kids who grow up in affluent neighborhoods tend to have access to better schools, because those communities provide more funding.
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So, living in a better neighborhood tends to mean access to better educational facilities,
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as well as to technology like computers, good teachers, and a wider variety of classes and extra-curriculars.
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And that’s assuming you go to a public school.
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Upper class children are more likely to attend private schools – and this trend continues when we get past high school.
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We mentioned this last week –
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children who grow up working class or low-income are much less likely to attend college,
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and those who do are much more likely to attend public state schools or two-year community colleges.
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Among elite colleges, most students don’t come from low-income families; they come from the very top of the income distribution.
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A recent study of social class and college attendance found that 38 elite colleges including five in the Ivy League – Brown, Dartmouth, Penn, Princeton, and Yale –
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had more students who came from the top 1% than the entire bottom 60%of the income distribution.
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Some of this inequality in college access is helped along by the policy of preferential admittance for so-called “legacy” students,
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whose parents or other family members attended the college.
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Policies like this entrench class inequalities across generations by making it less likely that those from lower socioeconomic classes will move up the ladder.
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Plus, the social networks formed within prestigious colleges often are the stepping stones toward jobs and financial success later in life,
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which again makes it more likely that inequality will get passed on to a new generation.
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And of course, political and economic power tend to be concentrated among those at the top of the social class ladder.
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Dreaming of being president when you grow up?
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Of the ten presidents who have held office in the last 50 years, 6 attended an Ivy League school for either their undergrad or postgrad studies.
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Every single one had at least a bachelor’s degree.
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So education can seem less like the great equalizer in this case than the great barrier.
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Without a college degree, there are jobs that are pretty much impossible to get.
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The jobs that you can get without a college degree tend to come with lower prestige, lower pay, and a greater risk of occupational dangers.
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Which brings us to the last class difference we’ll be talking about today: health.
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Social class affects how you live – but it also affects how you die.
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Mortality and disease rates vary by social class, with upper class Americans living longer and healthier lives.
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A man in the 80th percentile, or top of the income distribution, lives an average of 84 years,
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while a man at the bottom, in the 20th percentile, lives an average of 78 years.
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Women live longer than men typically. Yay for us!
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But the income gap is still similar here, with women in the 80th percentile living about 4.5 years longer than those in the 20th percentile.
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Why the huge gap?
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Some reasons might seem obvious – if you have more money, you can probably afford better health care.
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Or for that matter, afford any health care.
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Others are maybe less straightforward.
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For example, low income Americans tend to eat less healthy food.
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Now, is that just a matter of different choices made by different people, or is it a systematic pattern that links class with eating habits?
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Well, oftentimes unhealthy foods are cheaper, both in terms of money and time.
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Lower class Americans tend to have less leisure time and less money to spend on cooking healthy meals.
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After all, it takes a lot less time and money to pick up McDonald’s than to spend an hour cooking a meal with expensive organic vegetables.
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Additionally, many low income Americans live in what are known as food deserts,
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or neighborhoods without easy access to fresh foods, like fruits and vegetables.
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Other systematic class differences come from the occupations that different classes tend to hold.
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Upper and middle class Americans are more likely to be in white collar, full time jobs,
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which generally have lower exposure to dangerous materials and lower risks of accidents on the job.
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Not to mention more flexible work schedules.
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Less danger and less stress = better health.
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Plus, full-time jobs are more likely to provide benefit packages including health insurance and paid sick days.
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It’s much harder to take care of your health if you can’t take the time off work to go to the doctor or rest and recover.
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But that’s the reality for many working class Americans.
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Class gaps in health outcomes are clearly about more than just having the money to pay for better healthcare.
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It’s about occupation, neighborhood, income, education,
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and all the different ways that advantages like these can overlap to determine your life course.
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That’s why social class matters;
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it gives us a way to identify the advantages and disadvantages that different groups of people share,
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and understand the consequences of those advantages and disadvantages.
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Today, we discussed three types of class differences we see playing out in the United States.
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First, the beliefs and values parents pass on to the next generation will vary by class.
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Second, there are class gaps in educational attainment which help perpetuate inequality across generations.
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And finally, Americans of lower socioeconomic status tend to have worse health and shorter lifespans than those with higher class status.
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Next time we'll focus on a different aspect of socioeconomic stratification: social mobility –
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or, how your social position can change over your life time, or across generations.
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Crash Course Sociology is filmed in the Dr. Cheryl C. Kinney Studio in Missoula, MT, and it's made with the help of all these nice people.
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Our Animation Team is Thought Cafe and Crash Course is made with Adobe Creative Cloud.
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If you'd like to keep Crash Course free for everyone, forever, you can support the series at Patreon,
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a crowdfunding platform that allows you to support the content you love.
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Speaking of Patreon, we'd like to thank all of our patrons in general, and we'd like to specifically thank our Headmaster of Learning Ben Holden-Crowther.
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Thank you so much for your support.