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Pupil and teacher perceptions of community action: an English context

机译:学生和老师对社区行动的看法:英语环境

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Background: In England over the last two decades, there has been a growing interest in the role of English schools in developing, facilitating and supporting young people's community participation. A number of policy initiatives have sought to build the capacity and opportunities for youth participation. Research suggests, however, that pupils and schools are often prohibited by significant barriers from becoming involved with community activities, particularly those that might occur beyond the school environment itself. In March 2010, the UK Labour government launched a Youth Community Action initiative for England, piloted across five local authorities, which aimed to involve young people of 14-16 years of age in community action. Following the UK general election in May 2010, the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government terminated these pilots but was quick to announce the launch and piloting of a National Citizen Service for 16-19-year-olds in England. Purpose: Drawing on research conducted with participants in one Youth Community Action pilot project, the aim of this study was to explore the perceptions and understandings of young people regarding their involvement in community action activities and how this compared with the perceptions and understandings of the teachers responsible for co-ordinating such activities. Sample: In the final synthesis, the sample comprised 614 pupil questionnaires, representing a response rate of 24% of the pupils in the nine participating schools. Eleven semi-structured interviews and one focus group interview were conducted with pupils in six of the schools, with a further eight semi-structured interviews conducted with teachers in these six schools. Design and methods: A questionnaire was administered to pupils participating in the Youth Community Action pilot, enabling an exploration of self-reported behavioural attitudes and perceptions. The data collected was analysed thematically, with an identification of common themes in responses. In addition, factor analysis and a series of chi-squared tests of association were carried out. The use of semi-structured interviews, the data from which were analysed thematically, enabled a qualitative exploration of pupils’ and teachers’ self-reported perceptions of community action activities. Results: The findings of our questionnaires report that those pupils who know more about their local neighbourhood and community are likely to report greater levels of concern for what happens within it. This suggests that pupils’ learning about their neighbourhoods and community is likely to be beneficial toward developing affective attachments to them. For the pupils in our data set, simply possessing pro-social behaviours and attitudes was not a sufficient or necessary condition for their community awareness and involvement. It suggests that, at least for a notable number of pupils, active engagement in the community requires cultivation and learning beyond pro-social behaviours. The semi-structured interviews report that pupils identify the school as the key source of information about community engagement opportunities, but also indicate that there is a marked difference in the activities that teachers identify their pupils as having undertaken, and the ability of pupils to vocalise these themselves. A further notable finding was a focus on the practical (time, distance, age constraints) and social (peer pressure) barriers to community action activities to the exclusion of specifically educational (lack of understanding and skills) barriers. Conclusions: Results from this study suggest that schools represent an important source for pupils’ community involvement, but that in our sample pupils often lack the vocabulary with which to explain the extent and nature of such engagement. Pupils and teachers identify a range of barriers to and benefits of community involvement, but these do not include a lack of understanding or skills. The research raises important questions in the context of recent policy trends in England.View full textDownload full textKeywordsYouth Community Action, participation in the community, National Citizen ServiceRelated var addthis_config = { ui_cobrand: "Taylor & Francis Online", services_compact: "citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,more", pubid: "ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b" }; Add to shortlist Link Permalink http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00131881.2012.710087
机译:背景:在过去的二十年中,英国对英语学校在发展,促进和支持年轻人的社区参与中的作用越来越感兴趣。已经采取了许多政策举措,以建设青年参与的能力和机会。但是,研究表明,学生和学校通常受到阻碍参加社区活动的重大障碍的限制,特别是那些可能超出学校环境本身的活动。 2010年3月,英国工党政府在五个地方政府中发起了针对英国的“青年社区行动”倡议,旨在使14-16岁的年轻人参与社区行动。在2010年5月英国大选之后,保守党-自由民主党民主党政府终止了这些飞行员​​,但很快宣布为英国16-19岁的年轻人提供国民公民服务。目的:基于与一个青年社区行动试点项目的参与者进行的研究,本研究的目的是探讨年轻人对他们参与社区行动活动的看法和理解,以及如何与这些看法和理解进行比较负责协调此类活动的教师。样本:在最终的综合中,样本包括614个学生问卷,占9所参与学校学生的24%的答复率。对六所学校的学生进行了11次半结构化访谈和一个焦点小组访谈,另外对这六所学校的老师进行了八次半结构化访谈。设计和方法:向参与“青年社区行动”试点的学生们发放了一份调查表,使他们能够探索自我报告的行为态度和看法。对收集到的数据进行主题分析,并确定响应中的常见主题。此外,还进行了因子分析和一系列卡方检验。半结构化访谈的使用,对这些数据进行了主题分析,从而对学生和教师对社区行动活动的自我报告看法进行了定性探索。结果:我们的调查表的调查结果报告说,那些对当地社区和社区有更多了解的学生可能会报告对其中发生的事情的关注程度更高。这表明学生对邻里和社区的了解可能会有助于他们建立情感依恋。对于我们数据集中的学生来说,仅仅拥有亲社会的行为和态度对于他们的社区意识和参与并不是充分或必要的条件。它表明,至少对于一定数量的学生来说,积极参与社区活动需要超越亲社会行为的培养和学习。半结构化的访谈表明,学生将学校确定为有关社区参与机会的主要信息来源,但同时也表明,教师确定学生所从事的活动和学生发声的能力存在显着差异这些本身。另一个值得注意的发现是关注社区行动活动的实际(时间,距离,年龄限制)和社会(同伴压力)障碍,而排除了专门的教育(缺乏理解和技能)障碍。结论:这项研究的结果表明,学校是学生参与社区活动的重要来源,但是在我们的样本中,学生经常缺乏词汇来解释这种参与的程度和性质。学生和教师确定了社区参与的一系列障碍和收益,但其中并不包括缺乏理解或技能。这项研究在英国最近的政策趋势中提出了重要的问题。查看全文下载全文关键字青年社区行动,社区参与,国民公民服务相关var addthis_config = {ui_cobrand:“泰勒和弗朗西斯在线”,service_compact:“ citeulike,netvibes ,twitter,technorati,可口,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,更多”,发布号:“ ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b”};添加到候选列表链接永久链接http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00131881.2012.710087

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