Publicação

Multi-actor perspectives on succesful and inclusive socio-educational practices: overcoming school failure and dropout in Portugal

Ver documento

Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:Project "EDUPLACES: Practices, voices and pathways of inclusive education" seeks to identify, characterise and discuss socio-educational practices aimed at overcoming school failure and dropout. Teachers/professionals, parents, children/young people and institutional partners engaged in ten practices, located in four Portuguese municipalities, participated in interviews (10) and focus groups (37). Cross-analysisproduced relevant results pertaining to the practices’ location, basis (school or community organisation) and philosophy (student grouping, study support, mediation or pedagogical differentiation). Additionally, it revealed some differences between groupsof participants: individual change is an outcome more predominantly identified by parents and children/young people; teachers/professionals frequently address successful approaches to school-family-community interactions; partners express a generally positive outlook on the practices, instead of focusing on barriers.
Autores principais:Lúcio, Joana
Outros Autores:Antunes, Fátima
Assunto:School failure School dropout Inclusive education Socio-educational practices Qualitative research
Ano:2019
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:comunicação em conferência
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade do Minho
Idioma:inglês
Origem:RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
Descrição
Resumo:Project "EDUPLACES: Practices, voices and pathways of inclusive education" seeks to identify, characterise and discuss socio-educational practices aimed at overcoming school failure and dropout. Teachers/professionals, parents, children/young people and institutional partners engaged in ten practices, located in four Portuguese municipalities, participated in interviews (10) and focus groups (37). Cross-analysisproduced relevant results pertaining to the practices’ location, basis (school or community organisation) and philosophy (student grouping, study support, mediation or pedagogical differentiation). Additionally, it revealed some differences between groupsof participants: individual change is an outcome more predominantly identified by parents and children/young people; teachers/professionals frequently address successful approaches to school-family-community interactions; partners express a generally positive outlook on the practices, instead of focusing on barriers.