具有难民背景的非洲学生在澳大利亚高等教育中的教育弹性和经验

IF 0.1 Q2 Arts and Humanities Australasian Review of African Studies Pub Date : 2018-12-01 DOI:10.22160/22035184/aras-2018-39-2/122-150
Alfred Mupenzi
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引用次数: 8

摘要

在澳大利亚,只有少数难民背景的学生能够接受主流的中等教育和高中教育(11年级和12年级)。大多数难民背景的学生成年后到达澳大利亚,并在职业教育与培训学院注册,作为进入大学的途径。接收这些学生的机构和教育工作者可能会努力支持他们融入澳大利亚的教育体系,学生们也会努力学习新的内容,用新的语言,在新的文化中学习。为了在他们的新家完成高等教育,这些学生必须在语言障碍和文化冲击中具备教育弹性。本文通过三个案例(研究者和两个参与者)介绍了流离失所的非洲学生的故事,突出了他们的教育轨迹和影响他们教育弹性的因素。本文旨在为难民背景的学生对更广泛的重新安置经历的定位和具体理解开辟空间。它试图介入并打断塑造了这一领域学术的“赤字逻辑”。通过生活史叙述和自我反思方法获得数据。教育弹性在学生的生活经历和影响中表现明显:家庭;社区;教师;同行;信仰和宗教;以及自我决定和行为因素。研究结果表明,流离失所的影响持续超出人们最初的学校经历,并进入他们的职业和/或大学教育。换句话说,这些学生所经历的社会崩溃、战争和地理流离失所的创伤展现为重大的教育和职业挑战。我作为一个难民长大的个人生活故事,以及我为获得高等教育所经历的挣扎,与澳大利亚境内外多个机构和地点的我的研究参与者产生了共鸣。本研究中的故事揭示了被迫流离失所对难民背景学生教育途径的影响。
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Educational resilience and experiences of African students with a refugee background in Australian tertiary education
In Australia, only a handful of refugee background students are able to navigate mainstream secondary education and senior high school (Years 11 and 12). Most refugee background students arrive in Australia as adults and enrol in Vocational Education and Training (VET) colleges as a pathway to university. The institutions and educators that receive these students can struggle with supporting their integration into the Australian education system, and students struggle with learning new content, in a new language, within a new culture. To complete tertiary education in their new home, these students must possess educational resilience, amid language barriers and culture shock. Using three cases (the researcher and two participants) this article presents the narratives of displaced African students, highlighting their educational trajectories and the factors influencing their educational resilience. This article seeks to open space for situated and embodied understandings of the broader resettlement experience for refugee background students. It tries to intervene in and interrupt the 'deficit logics' that have shaped scholarship in this area. Data were obtained by means of life history narratives and self-reflective methodologies. Educational resilience is evident in the students' lived experiences and influences from: family; community; teachers; peers; faith and religion; and self-determination and behavioural factors. The study's findings reveal that the effects of displacement continue beyond people's initial school experiences and into their vocational and/or university education. In other words, the trauma of social breakdown, war and geographic displacement experienced by these students unfolds into major educational and vocational challenges. My personal life story of growing up a refugee, and the struggles I have gone through to acquire tertiary education, resonates with those of my research participants across multiple institutions and locations within and outside Australia. The stories in this study reveal the impact of forced displacement on refugee background students' education pathways.
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期刊介绍: The Australasian Review of African Studies aims to contribute to a better understanding of Africa in Australasia and the Pacific. It is published twice a year in June and December by The African Studies Association of Australasia and the Pacific. ARAS is a multi-disciplinary journal that seeks to provide critical, authoritative and accessible material on a range of African affairs that is interesting and readable to as broad an audience as possible, both academic and non-academic. All articles are blind peer reviewed by two independent and qualified experts in their entirety prior to publication. Each issue includes both scholarly and generalist articles, a book review section (which normally includes a lengthy review essay), short notes on contemporary African issues and events (up to 2,000 words), as well as reports on research and professional involvement in Africa, and on African university activities. What makes the Review distinctive as a professional journal is this ‘mix’ of authoritative scholarly and generalist material on critical African issues written from very different disciplinary and professional perspectives. The Review is available to all members of the African Studies Association of Australia and the Pacific as part of their membership. Membership is open to anyone interested in African affairs, and the annual subscription fee is modest. The ARAS readership intersects academic, professional, voluntary agency and public audiences and includes specialists, non-specialists and members of the growing African community in Australia. There is also now a small but growing international readership which extends to Africa, North America and the United Kingdom.
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