The Social Education Gap Report of a Dutch Peer-Consultation Project on Family Policy
Like their fellow Europeans, many Dutch citizens worry about the moral decay of their youth. Often the family is blamed; (other) parents have failed in their moral education. Recently the Dutch Government asked the present authors to advise them on family policy, taking young people's opinions...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The British journal of social work 1999-12, Vol.29 (6), p.903-914 |
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description | Like their fellow Europeans, many Dutch citizens worry about the moral decay of their youth. Often the family is blamed; (other) parents have failed in their moral education. Recently the Dutch Government asked the present authors to advise them on family policy, taking young people's opinions into account. We asked a group of 24 pupils from vocational schools, aged 14 and 15 and from different ethnic origins, to interview ten classmates each on the subject and to discuss the results with us. Their findings were astonishing. The teenagers, mostly from underprivileged neighbourhoods, said that the problem was not so much the family, but the whole of their ‘educational’ environment. Occasional family problems can easily get out of hand because of what we term a ‘social education gap’. Neither within their neighbourhoods, nor within their large, anonymous schools do they find enough adults who really care, sec to their safety or provide help and attractive activities. To them, the family and the outside world are interdependent educational entities. The absence of caring adults in their social world puts all the pressure on their families, an unfair burden that some parents cannot bear. Their advice to the Government was therefore: invest in educating adults and facilities, and involve young people in policy-making. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1093/bjsw/29.6.903 |
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Often the family is blamed; (other) parents have failed in their moral education. Recently the Dutch Government asked the present authors to advise them on family policy, taking young people's opinions into account. We asked a group of 24 pupils from vocational schools, aged 14 and 15 and from different ethnic origins, to interview ten classmates each on the subject and to discuss the results with us. Their findings were astonishing. The teenagers, mostly from underprivileged neighbourhoods, said that the problem was not so much the family, but the whole of their ‘educational’ environment. Occasional family problems can easily get out of hand because of what we term a ‘social education gap’. Neither within their neighbourhoods, nor within their large, anonymous schools do they find enough adults who really care, sec to their safety or provide help and attractive activities. To them, the family and the outside world are interdependent educational entities. The absence of caring adults in their social world puts all the pressure on their families, an unfair burden that some parents cannot bear. 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Often the family is blamed; (other) parents have failed in their moral education. Recently the Dutch Government asked the present authors to advise them on family policy, taking young people's opinions into account. We asked a group of 24 pupils from vocational schools, aged 14 and 15 and from different ethnic origins, to interview ten classmates each on the subject and to discuss the results with us. Their findings were astonishing. The teenagers, mostly from underprivileged neighbourhoods, said that the problem was not so much the family, but the whole of their ‘educational’ environment. Occasional family problems can easily get out of hand because of what we term a ‘social education gap’. Neither within their neighbourhoods, nor within their large, anonymous schools do they find enough adults who really care, sec to their safety or provide help and attractive activities. To them, the family and the outside world are interdependent educational entities. The absence of caring adults in their social world puts all the pressure on their families, an unfair burden that some parents cannot bear. Their advice to the Government was therefore: invest in educating adults and facilities, and involve young people in policy-making.</description><subject>Adolescents</subject><subject>Adult education</subject><subject>Brainstorming</subject><subject>Child development</subject><subject>Child rearing</subject><subject>Child welfare</subject><subject>Civic education</subject><subject>Community</subject><subject>Education</subject><subject>Factors</subject><subject>Families & family life</subject><subject>Family Policy</subject><subject>Family problems</subject><subject>Family Relations</subject><subject>Family School Relationship</subject><subject>Homework</subject><subject>Intergenerational relations</subject><subject>Interviews</subject><subject>Junior High School Students</subject><subject>Juvenile delinquency</subject><subject>Medieval period</subject><subject>Moral Education</subject><subject>Morality</subject><subject>Neighborhoods</subject><subject>Neighbourhoods</subject><subject>Netherlands</subject><subject>Parents</subject><subject>Parents & parenting</subject><subject>Peer groups</subject><subject>Perceptions</subject><subject>Policy Making</subject><subject>Policy Reform</subject><subject>Politics</subject><subject>Professional schools</subject><subject>Psychologists</subject><subject>Social distance</subject><subject>Social environment</subject><subject>Student Attitudes</subject><subject>Upbringing</subject><subject>Vocational 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Often the family is blamed; (other) parents have failed in their moral education. Recently the Dutch Government asked the present authors to advise them on family policy, taking young people's opinions into account. We asked a group of 24 pupils from vocational schools, aged 14 and 15 and from different ethnic origins, to interview ten classmates each on the subject and to discuss the results with us. Their findings were astonishing. The teenagers, mostly from underprivileged neighbourhoods, said that the problem was not so much the family, but the whole of their ‘educational’ environment. Occasional family problems can easily get out of hand because of what we term a ‘social education gap’. Neither within their neighbourhoods, nor within their large, anonymous schools do they find enough adults who really care, sec to their safety or provide help and attractive activities. To them, the family and the outside world are interdependent educational entities. The absence of caring adults in their social world puts all the pressure on their families, an unfair burden that some parents cannot bear. Their advice to the Government was therefore: invest in educating adults and facilities, and involve young people in policy-making.</abstract><cop>London</cop><pub>Oxford University Press</pub><doi>10.1093/bjsw/29.6.903</doi><tpages>12</tpages></addata></record> |
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source | Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current) |
subjects | Adolescents Adult education Brainstorming Child development Child rearing Child welfare Civic education Community Education Factors Families & family life Family Policy Family problems Family Relations Family School Relationship Homework Intergenerational relations Interviews Junior High School Students Juvenile delinquency Medieval period Moral Education Morality Neighborhoods Neighbourhoods Netherlands Parents Parents & parenting Peer groups Perceptions Policy Making Policy Reform Politics Professional schools Psychologists Social distance Social environment Student Attitudes Upbringing Vocational Education Youth |
title | The Social Education Gap Report of a Dutch Peer-Consultation Project on Family Policy |
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