How schooling, and particular schools, make a difference: values, identities and futures in longitudinal study
journal contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00authored byL Yates, Julie Mcleod
Just over a decade ago the authors set out to select and follow a range of young people from the age of 12 and their end of primary or first days in secondary school, to the age of 18 when most of them had embarked on the first steps of the post-school lives. Students from four different types of schools were chosen: a Melbourne high school, a high school in a Victorian regional city, a large non-government school, and a secondary school that had once been a technical school. The students were interviewed twice a year about their views of self, of school, of the future. In this article the authors discuss two aspects of the study: what sense did they get of schools and their effects on the subjectivities being formed by young people today? And, what sense did the authors get of how gender is working in young lives now? The article outlines some of the findings in relation to these two issues.
History
Journal
Idiom
Volume
42
Issue
1
Pagination
7 - 14
Publisher
Victorian Association for the Teaching of English
Location
Melbourne, Vic.
ISSN
0046-8568
Language
eng
Publication classification
C3 Non-refereed articles in a professional journal