Cultural Studies in School Transitions
In: Rethinking the Youth Question, S. 326-383
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In: Rethinking the Youth Question, S. 326-383
In: Children & young people now, Band 2016, Heft 9, S. 35-35
ISSN: 2515-7582
In: Handbook of Research on Schools, Schooling and Human Development
In: Prevention in human services, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 151-168
ISSN: 2374-877X
In: Prevention in human services, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 137-150
ISSN: 2374-877X
In: Child abuse & neglect: the international journal ; official journal of the International Society for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect, Band 51, S. 237-248
ISSN: 1873-7757
In: IZA Discussion Paper No. 6455
SSRN
Leaving school, whether to move on to training, work or education, is a fundamental rite of passage the world over. This volume draws on a wealth of international sources and studies in its analysis of the 'transitions' young students make as they move on from their secondary schooling. It identifies how these transitions are planned for by policymakers, enacted by school staff and engaged with by students themselves. With data from a range of nations with advanced industrial economies, the book delineates how the policies relating to these transitions need to be conceived and implemented, how the transitions themselves are negotiated by young people, and how they might be shaped to meet the varied needs of the students they are designed to help. The authors argue that the relationship, often complex, between what schools provide in the way of preparation, and the ways in which students take up what is on offer, is the crucial nexus for understanding the experience of transitions by young people, and for enhancing that experience. With a host of case studies of transition policies themselves, as well as evaluative data on how they were received by the school leavers whom they were designed for, this valuable addition to the educational literature deserves to be read by all those with roles in preparing the young for their journey into a complex adult world full of pitfalls as well as opportunity.
In: Prevention in human services, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 169-178
ISSN: 2374-877X
In: Children & young people now, Band 2018, Heft 12, S. 48-48
ISSN: 2515-7582
Authors Terry Ng-Knight, Katherine Shelton, Lucy Riglin, Norah Frederickson, Chris McManus, Frances Rice Published by British Journal of Educational Psychology, September 2018
In: Journal of prevention & intervention in the community, Band 42, Heft 1, S. 20-30
ISSN: 1540-7330
In: Snow active: das Schweizer Schneesportmagazin, Band 7, Heft 6, S. 134
UK schoolchildren are vulnerable to transitional stress between primary and secondary school, which may impact negatively upon their psychological health and academic achievement. This is experienced most acutely by children from ethnic minorities and lower socio-economic status (SES) households. Outdoor Adventure (OA) residential programmes are purported to develop behavioural adaptations which enable positive educational transitions of children. Personal, social and academic skills (self-reliance, getting along with others, curriculum alignment) may be best acquired through bespoke nature-based residential OA programmes. A mixed methods study evaluated the efficacy of a bespoke OA programme for developing school children's psychological well-being and self-determination during their transition into secondary school. Participants were representantives of ethnic minorities and lower SES groups. A bespoke OA residential programme achieved the strongest scale of change in children's psychological well-being (F (30,69) = 1.97 < 0.05) and self-determination (effect size 0.25) compared to a generic OA residential and a non-OA school-based induction programme. Qualitative testimonies illuminated personal experiences and processes underpinning the perceived changes in the self-determination domains of Autonomy (the capacity to self-direct learning), Competence (the ability to complete tasks) and Relatedness (developing connections with others). Providing early opportunities for children to take control for their own learning through nature-based tailored OA programming improves their psychological well-being and adaptability to combat transitional stress.
In: Young: Nordic journal of youth research, Band 29, Heft 3, S. 288-304
ISSN: 1741-3222
Building on the relational approaches, particularly social relational theory, this study investigates how Chinese adolescents plan their transition to post-compulsory education through relational influences between themselves and their parents. By examining the family and school lives of 25 Chinese adolescents from a small Chinese town, it has been found that they exercise their agency when negotiating their educational future with their parents. Their mixed agentic strategies are embedded in multiple parenting styles and they result in differing levels of agreement. Despite such variation, the adolescent–parent relationship is interpreted as the reliable interdependence across the participants. The findings provide new insights into parental influence on young Chinese people's educational future and stress the value of the relational approach in studying the family–education nexus.
In: Prevention in human services, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 7-26
ISSN: 2374-877X
In: Annual review of sociology, Band 19, Heft 1, S. 401-423
ISSN: 1545-2115
Though critically important for children's long-term well being, the beginning school transition generally has been neglected by sociologists interested in issues of schooling and social inequality. This chapter examines early school from an educational stratification perspective. Life-stage and developmental considerations heighten young children's sensitivity to school influences generally, while pressures associated with social role transitions (i.e. from "home child" to "school child") challenge them. We review how out-of-school social structural influences associated with poverty, ethnicity, and family type complicate early school adjustment. Reviewed too are various structural arrangements in the social organization of early schooling (e.g. access to preschools, the restricted socioeconomic variability of elementary schools, and various kinds of educational "tracking") that can either reinforce or offset out-of-school influences. We conclude with a call for more work on mechanisms of educational stratification in the early grades.