Decision-making Processes Among Potential Dropouts in VET and Adult Learning
Contributors
Editors:
Description
In a current project (2017-2020) about dropout among 18-24-year-old students in VET and basic general adult learning the aim is to study the students’ thoughts and actions in relation to deciding to stay in or drop out of an educational programme. The study combined two sets of data: weekly student surveys and interviews with these same students. While the surveys provide a weekly snapshot of the students’ thoughts regarding the probability of them continuing in the programme, their satisfaction with the educational programme as a whole, the specific lessons they attend, and the atmosphere at the school, the interviews contribute with detailed descriptions of the students’ thoughts on the same matters. Findings: Based on the students’ answers over an eight-week period, it was possible to trace a graph illustrating changes in the students’ attitudes. These graphs can be placed within four categories of development: the stable, the positive, the unstable, and the negative. The latter can furthermore be differentiated as reflecting a stable decline, a fluctuating decline, or a sudden decline. In the interviews, the aim was to elicit the individual students’ thoughts and actions at the points when their graphs took a turn. Conclusion: The findings show that the students’ thoughts and actions concern matters both inside and outside the school. Furthermore, seemingly trivial matters in the students’ lives are shown to have a potentially decisive influence on the students’ thoughts about staying in or dropping out of a programme. These findings confirm the importance of focusing on students’ decision-making processes not only in research on dropout but also in practice as inspiration for teachers and guidance counsellors.
Files
Aarkrog et al. (2018) Decision-making Processes Among Potential Dropouts in VET and Adult Learning.pdf
Files
(304.7 kB)
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:5ee95bfcf157fdb54d7dbb15ecd42b2b
|
304.7 kB | Preview Download |