10 results on '"Peterson, Sarah"'
Search Results
2. Civic education and the education of refugees.
- Author
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Dryden-Peterson, Sarah
- Subjects
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CIVICS education , *EDUCATION of refugees , *CURRICULUM , *CIVICS , *ETHICAL problems , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This essay explores the civic education of refugees within the context of a radical global policy shift to include refugees in national education systems. I argue that this shift has promoted structural inclusion of refugees in national schooling but has not adequately engaged with the relational processes of inclusion. I explore two central dilemmas for civic education in this context: the dilemma of nation-state-centric curriculum and national narratives that do not include refugees; and the dilemma of marginalisation of refugees within national education systems and limited spaces for refugees to imagine or enact civic behaviours. I examine these dilemmas through a synthesis of existing literature, both historical and contemporary, that addresses civic dimensions of the educational experiences of refugee children while also drawing on my original research with refugee children and in refugee-hosting schools and from interviews with national and global actors. I conclude with reflections on the implications of these dilemmas for future research to inform school-based practices in refugee education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Borders and belonging: displaced Syrian youth navigating symbolic boundaries in Lebanon.
- Author
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Chopra, Vidur and Dryden-Peterson, Sarah
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SYRIAN refugees , *EDUCATION of refugees , *CITIZENSHIP , *CIVIL rights , *STATE boundaries - Abstract
We examine the ways in which young Syrian refugees perceive and navigate the symbolic boundaries of belonging when displaced in Lebanon. Using portraiture, we identify three dimensions of belonging for refugees – safety, dignity, and relationships – and we explore the role of education in cultivating each one. We find that educational spaces, such as formal school and informal volunteering experiences, are places where refugee young people are at times able to blur bright boundaries of belonging. We also find that this belonging is tenuous and serves to reinforce boundaries of citizenship, rights, and everyday practices that exclude refugee young people. Our findings emphasize the need for the field of refugee education to address the question of how schools can actively resist and counter state-established bright boundaries of belonging to instead serve as spaces that blur and redefine those boundaries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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4. The Purposes of Refugee Education: Policy and Practice of Including Refugees in National Education Systems.
- Author
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Dryden-Peterson, Sarah, Adelman, Elizabeth, Bellino, Michelle J., and Chopra, Vidur
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ECONOMIC opportunities , *SOCIAL belonging , *EDUCATION of refugees , *FORCED migration , *SOCIAL processes , *GLOBALIZATION , *SOCIAL change - Abstract
This article explores the understood purposes of refugee education at global, national, and school levels. To do so, we focus on a radical shift in global policy to integrate refugees into national education systems and the processes of vernacularization accompanying its widespread implementation. We use a comparative case study approach; our dataset comprises global policy documents and original interviews (n = 147) and observations in 14 refugee-hosting nation-states. We analyze how the purposes of refugee education are understood and acted upon by actors occupying diverse positions across these nation-states and over time. We demonstrate that the articulated purposes of refugee education are oriented toward possible futures for refugees, and they presuppose refugees' access to quality education, social belonging, and economic opportunities. Yet we find that across nation-states of exile, refugees' access to these resources is tenuous. Our findings suggest reconceptualizing refugee education to reflect how refugees are simultaneously embedded within multiple national contexts and to address the exclusions they face within each one. This study of refugee education has implications for understanding the purposes of education in other ever-more-common contexts of uncertainty, including the rapid economic and social changes brought about by migration, globalization, and technology. Empirically, understanding the purposes of refugee education is critical in a time of unprecedented forced migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Social support networks, instant messaging, and gender equity in refugee education.
- Author
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Dahya, Negin, Dryden-Peterson, Sarah, Douhaibi, Dacia, and Arvisais, Olivier
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EDUCATION of refugees , *FEMINISTS , *TRANSNATIONALISM , *INSTANT messaging , *GENDER - Abstract
This paper addresses the role of instant messaging chat groups to support teacher training and gender equity initiatives in Kenyan refugee camps. Our findings are based on survey data with refugee teachers in Dadaab and Kakuma refugee camps (n = 203), group interviews with refugee teachers in Kakuma (n = 21), and interviews with international instructors of teacher training programs in Nairobi, Toronto, and Vancouver (n = 14). In our analysis, we apply amplification theory, feminist science and technology studies paradigms, and considerations of transnational approaches to understand the use of instant messaging among refugee teacher communities. Our framework explores how social and cultural norms are amplified through transnational text and instant messaging related to teacher training and in support of gender equity. Peer-to-peer group chats draw on transnational learning opportunities and expand these engagements through group chats between men and women refugee teachers across camps as well as through community engagement about gender equity initiatives in education. International instructors identify both value and hesitation in navigating the quantity and content of these communications, such as learning more about refugee teachers' daily lives in the camps and concern about following and managing the amount of communication that can ensue over chat groups. Our work has practical implications for transnational teacher training programs in refugee camps, illuminates how mobile technology and chat groups allow women and men in the community to engage and support girls' education, and questions how text messaging affects the lived and day-to-day experiences of women refugee teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Inclusion and exclusion within a policy of national integration: refugee education in Kenya's Kakuma Refugee Camp.
- Author
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Bellino, Michelle J. and Dryden-Peterson, Sarah
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NATIONAL unification , *EDUCATION of refugees , *EDUCATIONAL quality , *SOCIAL integration , *HUMAN rights ,KAKUMA (Kenya : Refugee camp) - Abstract
This article explores the impact of global policy shifts toward 'national integration' on schooling for refugee youth in Kenya. Based on interviews and classroom observations in Kakuma Refugee Camp, we theorize that integration manifests in a multidirectional, hierarchical manner as few refugees integrate "up" into government schools, while most integrate "down" into segregated camp schools. We examine how youth interpret and navigate these oppositional paths, imbued with assumptions about quality and status. We argue that global policy can foster structures for physical integration; however, social integration, integrally connected to protection and opportunity, depends on local strategies and practices, encompassing formal decisions about adapting policy, as well as embedded beliefs about the purposes of educating refugees and their long-term inclusion in host societies. This study responds to calls for deeper sociological attention to education and global migration, as states expand educational opportunities for refugee populations while negotiating educational rights amongst citizens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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7. Tracing pathways to higher education for refugees: the role of virtual support networks and mobile phones for women in refugee camps.
- Author
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Dahya, Negin and Dryden-Peterson, Sarah
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EDUCATION of refugees , *VIRTUAL networks , *ONLINE social networks , *HIGHER education , *CELL phones - Abstract
In this paper, we explore the role of online social networks in the cultivation of pathways to higher education for refugees, particularly for women. We compare supports garnered in local and offline settings to those accrued through online social networks and examine the differences between women and men. The paper draws on complementary original data sources, including an online survey of the Somali Diaspora (n = 248) and in-depth interviews (n = 21) with Somali refugees who do or have lived in the Dadaab refugee camps of Kenya. We find an important interplay of local and global interactions, mediated by mobile technology, that participants identify as critical to their access to higher education. Our analysis relates these interactions to shifting social norms and possibilities for refugee women’s education. Our findings directly address the use of information and communication technology in expanding opportunities for higher education for women in refugee camps. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
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8. Refugee education: Education for an unknowable future.
- Author
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Dryden-Peterson, Sarah
- Subjects
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EDUCATION of refugees , *FORCED migration , *POLITICAL refugees , *INTERPERSONAL conflict , *SOCIAL conditions of refugees - Abstract
Conflict and displacement are increasingly protracted, requiring rethinking of refugee education as a long-term endeavour, connected not only to the idea of return but to the ongoing nature of exile. In this essay, I examine how refugees conceptualize education and its role in creating certainty and mending the disjunctures of their trajectories as refugees. Through a portrait of one refugee teacher, the essay explores technical, curricular, and relational dimensions of refugee education that assist refugee students in preparing for unknowable futures. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
- Full Text
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9. Refugee education in countries of first asylum: Breaking open the black box of pre-resettlement experiences.
- Author
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Dryden-Peterson, Sarah
- Subjects
EDUCATION of refugees ,RIGHT of asylum ,REFUGEE resettlement ,REFUGEE children ,DATA analysis - Abstract
The number of refugees who have fled across international borders due to conflict and persecution is at the highest level in recorded history. The vast majority of these refugees find exile in low-income countries neighboring their countries of origin. The refugee children who are resettled to North America, Europe, and Australia arrive with previous educational experiences in these countries of first asylum. This article examines these pre-resettlement educational experiences of refugee children, which to date have constituted a ‘black box’ in their post-resettlement education. Analysis is of data from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, key informant interviews in 14 countries of first asylum, and ethnographic fieldwork and interviews in four countries. The article argues that contemporary conditions of conflict usefully inform conceptual understanding of refugee education globally, including the types of schools that refugees access in countries of first asylum and their rates of access. It further identifies three empirical themes that are common to the educational experiences of refugees in countries of first asylum: language barriers, teacher-centered pedagogy, and discrimination in school settings. The article examines the theoretical and practical relevance of these pre-resettlement educational experiences for post-resettlement education of refugee children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
- Full Text
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10. Introduction: Higher Education for Refugees.
- Author
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Dryden-Peterson, Sarah and Giles, Wenona
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HIGHER education , *EDUCATION of refugees - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the editor discusses various reports published within the issue on the subject of higher education for refugees.
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- 2010
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