
AUSTRALIA
Transition debate consider young
people’s reality
Transition debate should consider young people’s
reality We need a greater understanding of young people’s experiences if
policy on transition is to be effective, according to NZCER researcher
Dr Karen Vaughan. Dr Vaughan is presenting a paper on transition at
PPTA’s Charting the Future: the Way Forward for Secondary Education
conference in Wellington, entitled: Just Browsing, thanks: Young
peoples’ navigation from school. She says the trend towards more and more young people
opting to postpone their careers or change their minds several times
about their study, work experience or career options — a phenomenon the
OECD calls ‘milling and churning’— parallels the increasing number of
pathways available to them.
However, ‘milling and churning’ should be seen not as
a barrier to young people getting on with life, she says, but rather as
something to be understood by policy makers, schools and employers in
order to support students through what are often confusing changes.
“Milling and churning is the way some of these young
people cope with the myriad of pathways available to them. It provides
them with a variety of work and study experiences while allowing them to
process their experiences and choose a work and lifestyle to which they
are most suited.
“Asking them to rush their decision-making may be
detrimental to young people in the longer term. What is more important
is supporting young people through the confusion and changes of heart to
help them make the best choices.”
Dr Vaughan has just completed the first interviews in
a four-year longitudinal research study on transition involving a series
of case studies of about 100 young people as they negotiate the various
pathways available to them.
“The young people we’ve interviewed have fascinating
views on choice. On one hand the sheer weight of possibilities puts
pressure on them to make the best choices. On the other hand the
flexibility provided by choice is something they would not do without.”
Karen Vaughan says young people’s tendency to change
their minds does not reflect a lack of commitment or focus.
“On the contrary — they are committed to getting
qualifications and acquiring the knowledge that will let them make
choices.
“However, unlike their parents and grandparents, work
is no longer their major source of identity, nor career the driving
force in their lives.
“Transition policy needs to put young people’s
perspectives at the centre, to acknowledge the different meanings of
life events, and that pathways are no longer linear.”
20 April 2004
http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/ED0404/S00062.htm
home /
Previous feature
|