The school-to-work transition has been an important topic in the fields
of education and sociology research in the past few years.
Pre-vocational education, which takes place during lower-secondary
school and aims to facilitate the school-to-work transition, is of
critical significance in introducing the participants to the world of
work and/or in preparing them for entry into further vocational
education programs.
With a strong comparative nature, Jun Li presents this systematic
investigation of the pre-vocational education in Germany and China and
analyzes their curricula of pre-vocational education. By combining the
methods of content analysis and teacher interview, the author offers an
in-depth perspective into the realms of pre-vocational education and
reveals the divergences between the prescribed curriculum and the
enacted curriculum. The findings also relate closely to an intensively
discussed issue in the sociology of education in the past few years,
namely the issue of knowledge and its status, function and forms in the
school education today.