"As a practising youth worker and researcher, I found this book a fascinating and engaging read…It provides a useful analysis and exploration of the classed and gendered ‘anti-school’ ethic in place presently within many schools, and it will provide a meaningful analysis for academics, policymakers and practitioners and anyone with an interest in gender, education and young people."
Fin Cullen, Goldsmiths College, Review in Gender and Education
"I would [therefore] urge everyone concerned with what is happening in schools to read this book, with its fascinating data and nuanced arguments."
Heather Mendick, London Metropolitan University - Review in British Journal of Educational Studies
This innovative book looks at how and why girls and boys adopt ‘laddish’ behaviours in schools. It examines the ways in which students negotiate pressures to be popular and ‘cool’ in school alongside pressures to perform academically. It also deals with the fears of academic and social failure that influence pupils’ school lives and experiences.
Drawing extensively on the voices of students in secondary schools, it explores key questions about laddish behaviours, such as:
This topical book is key reading for students, academics and researchers in education, sociology and psychology, as well as school teachers and education policy makers.