Subjective School Wellbeing of Refugee and Local Children: Voices From Having, Loving, and Being Dimensions
Künye
KARAN, Şeyda & Ersoy ERDEMİR. "Subjective School Wellbeing of Refugee and Local Children: Voices From Having, Loving, and Being Dimensions". Early Child Development And Care, (2023): 1-19.Özet
The influx of refugees has drastically changed the ethnic composition of
early childhood education system in Turkey, especially in provinces
where refugees are resettled. Given this change, how refugee and local
children are functioning with their wellbeing at school remains an
underexplored yet an important area of research. This single case study
conducted at multiple sites aimed to examine subjective school
wellbeing among Syrian refugee and Turkish local children in public
primary schools. Situated within school wellbeing model and ecological
systems theory, the study investigated both groups of children’s
contextually bounded realities and experiences in their shared school
environments. Utilizing child-centred visual elicitation methods and
participatory research techniques with 10 children at two schools, the
study foregrounded children’s subjective voices with respect to
indicators of wellbeing at school. Children conceptualized their school
wellbeing in having, loving, and being dimensions, along with a variety
of subjective indicators associated with each dimension. School
wellbeing was not exclusively related to conditions and relations at
school level. Rather, home- and neighbourhood-level indicators in
proximal environments, as well as policies and societal regulations in
distal environments, converged to influence their wellbeing at school.
Relevant implications for policy and practice are discussed.