Promoting Academic Success and Social Inclusion in Non-Formal Education Contexts: The Case of a North-East Region of Portugal
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. How Is the Socio-Educational Inclusive Practice of Study Support Characterised and Perceived by These Actors?
The project started with the 5th Generation, and it was implemented approximately eight years ago. At the time, it was a key programme for the community created to support schools and school success.[Excerpt from E–Institutional leader]
It has always a specific time slot from Monday to Friday. Because not all participants have the same timetable. That’s also why we choose to work from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. because there are children who come to us at 3 p.m. and others who can come at 5 p.m. It also depends on the school timetable.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 4]
The main objectives of the practice, what we do on a daily basis, is homework support and preparation for tests.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 4]
We have a new participant, who has been with us for three months, and her mother has already informed us that both she and the teacher have noticed, for example in reading and writing, that she has already improved since she has been attending the practice.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 3]
[The practice promotes] orientation, because often at home they don’t have this orientation and here we help them to organise their notebooks so that they have a little pride in what they do. We show them that if they have an organised notebook they study better.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 3]
Some participants have few study habits and are easily demotivated by certain tasks. And with our support, we also manage to mould other habits here, another attitude towards school and difficulties, moulding this with the kids who are learning and also not resisting so much what they can’t do, or giving up. We are also helping them to change their attitude, to be motivated and to train in these study habits.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 2]
I think that, in a certain way, the practice will mould them so that they will also be better people and will be able to go to school with more tools. I think it helps them to get better grades academically, it helps them in terms of self-esteem, self-confidence, and autonomy.[Excerpt from FG–Community Facilitator]
As the participants arrived at the facility, we ask them if they have any homework or if they need any help, for example, to study for a test. And we do this management according to the participants’ needs. This is how the practice works in both neighbourhoods.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 4]
We teach them how to organise their activities and notebooks and they have everything organised, they know how to do research in a book, how to organise their homework, how to put the sheets in their notebooks, all this is to create rhythms and study habits.[Excerpt from E–Institutional leader]
[with the technical team] they are much more at ease, and we build a relationship of trust with them that they probably don’t have at school with the teachers.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 3]
I am now thinking about some things that happened over time that make me think that the fact they are with a technical team, allows them to speak of their expectations for the future, the type of goals that they have, the activities that they do, the friends that they make, because they easily and informally talk to us about several aspects of their lives. So, we get to know many things that may be more difficult to figure out in other contexts.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 2]
The work carried out in the practice allows the children to learn faster than if they were alone at home. At home, their parents do not have the ability to help them, perhaps they don’t have such a good school education. So, it does help them a lot being here.[Excerpt from FG–Community Facilitator]
3.2. What Processes and Factors of Transformation Have Occurred in the Study Support Practice?
The main aim of this practice is to keep them a little engaged with school so that they can fulfil some of their school obligations because they must comply with them. They always must do some work or some research. But I think it’s a bit more for them to realize that they can achieve other things, other goals. I think that the practice is not exclusively aimed at school success, it’s not exactly the school success part anymore. I think it started there, but nowadays it doesn’t work only on that part. Because we need to work on the component of the school interest as they are a little uninterested. I don’t think school is what attracts them. So, I believe that our role is also to maintain their interest in school, to try to motivate them to have some interest in school so that they may be able to get some education.[Excerpt from E–Institutional leader]
The age of the target group has been changing over the different generations of the Choices Project. It has already focused on an age group between 6 and 18 years old, young people between 6 and 24 years old, and this new generation includes a public between 6 and 25 years old in order to work on citizenship skills, civic participation, community dynamics, health, culture and, of course, education.[Excerpt from E–institutional leader]
So, I think that’s the only change, there is a greater adhesion at the level of the children. Because the organisation of the practice remained the same, the structure, let’s say, of the practice was not changed.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 4]
Now we no longer work in the five neighbourhoods. We, in this last Generation, haven’t been able to work in all the neighbourhoods, that is, specifically with the Roma community. The kids didn’t want to apply so we stopped working with them. In the next application we’ll only work in two neighbourhoods.[Excerpt from E–Institutional leader]
The practice currently only operates in two neighbourhoods, A, which is the project’s headquarters, and B.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 1]
Unfortunately, our technical team is getting smaller and smaller and so we had to close some neighbourhoods. For example, in the A neighbourhood it’s very complicated to have just one technician working from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. It is impossible. There are young people in A and it is the most difficult neighbourhood to manage.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 4]
They could send an email or even a private message to our social networks whenever they had any doubt or difficulty, and they were helped in that sense. Then several activities were also launched in the social networks, and that was how we managed to keep in touch with them. And then they were also asked about everything that they were doing, including us technicians, everything that we were doing during quarantine was registered by photo and then posted on our social networks.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 4]
So, we never lost contact. Even if the parents had any questions or doubts, they could also contact us.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 1]
In the beginning, I think it was a little bit difficult for all of us because it was a new reality. We also know that not all the kids asked us for help. Some participants had their parents at home, or even older siblings that ended up playing almost our role. But for those who had more difficulties, at the beginning it was difficult.[Excerpt from FG–Technician 4]
4. Discussion and Recommendations
4.1. How Is the Socio-Educational Inclusive Practice of Study Support Characterised and Perceived
4.2. What Processes and Factors of Transformation Have Occurred in the Study Support Practice?
4.3. Recommendations
- Increase the duration of generations (EG) to a minimum of 3 to 5 years instead of the 2 years that are currently in place. Between the application phase of the Choices Programme and the approval or rejection of a new local Choices Project, there is usually an interregnum that can last up to 3 months. This fact often leaves the participants of the Project and of the study support practice in a situation of “abandonment” and the technical team in a situation of unemployment.
- Increase the human resources in order to overcome some difficulties in the study support provided to the participants, especially those who attend secondary education and are at risk of school failure, dropping out, or entering a NEET situation.
- Adjusting the physical spaces of the local project to the real requests of the number and characteristics of the participants. This type of study support practice demands a separate physical space from the other practices in the Choices Project to provide a calm and quiet environment for all participants to study and do their homework.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | An important policy decision implemented in Portugal in 2009 was to increase enrolment in compulsory education from 9 to 12 school years. |
2 | The Portuguese education system is structured in 1st cycle (4 years), 2nd cycle (2 years), 3rd cycle (3 years) and secondary education (3 years). Compulsory education ends with the completion of twelve years of schooling, or between the ages of 6 and 18. |
3 | Funding comes from the State Budget, through the Secretariat of State for the Presidency of the Council of Ministers, the Directorate-General for Education, and the Institute of Social Security. It is co-financed by the European Structural and Investment Funds (ESIF), through the Operational Programme for Social Inclusion and Employment, and by the European Social Fund, through the Operational Programmes for the Regions of Lisbon and the Algarve, within the framework of Portugal 2020. |
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Rodrigues, M.d.O.; Loureiro, A.; Flynn, P.; Berigel, M.; da Silva, S.M. Promoting Academic Success and Social Inclusion in Non-Formal Education Contexts: The Case of a North-East Region of Portugal. Societies 2023, 13, 179. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080179
Rodrigues MdO, Loureiro A, Flynn P, Berigel M, da Silva SM. Promoting Academic Success and Social Inclusion in Non-Formal Education Contexts: The Case of a North-East Region of Portugal. Societies. 2023; 13(8):179. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080179
Chicago/Turabian StyleRodrigues, Marta de Oliveira, Armando Loureiro, Paul Flynn, Muhammet Berigel, and Sofia Marques da Silva. 2023. "Promoting Academic Success and Social Inclusion in Non-Formal Education Contexts: The Case of a North-East Region of Portugal" Societies 13, no. 8: 179. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080179
APA StyleRodrigues, M. d. O., Loureiro, A., Flynn, P., Berigel, M., & da Silva, S. M. (2023). Promoting Academic Success and Social Inclusion in Non-Formal Education Contexts: The Case of a North-East Region of Portugal. Societies, 13(8), 179. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080179