| Literature DB >> 32265757 |
Robin Martin1, Jean Pierre Benoit1, Marie Rose Moro2,3,4, Laelia Benoit2,3,4.
Abstract
Background: School refusal is a form of school attendance problem (SAP) distinct from truancy, school withdrawal, and school exclusion; it requires specific mental health care. Schools' identification and referral to care of school refusers depends on school personnel's interpretation of the reasons for absences. Because cultural factors can induce misunderstanding of the young people's behavior and of their parents' attitudes toward school attendance, school personnel can have difficulty understanding these reasons for children with transcultural backgrounds (migrants or children of migrants). The aim of this study was to explore the experiences and opinions of school personnel, mainly teachers, related to school refusal among these students.Entities:
Keywords: discrimination; immigrant youth; minorities; school absenteeism; school personnel; school refusal; teacher; truancy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32265757 PMCID: PMC7099978 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Sample characteristics.
| Interview | Gender | Age | Profession | School | Region | Deals with transcultural situations? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | 34 | Mathematics teacher | Middle school | Paris | Yes |
| 2 | F | 35 | Head guidance counselor | Middle school | Paris | Yes |
| 3 | F | 52 | Spanish teacher | Middle school | Paris | Yes |
| 4 | F | 55 | French teacher | Middle school | Paris | Yes |
| 5 | F | 53 | English teacher | Middle school | Paris | Yes |
| 6 | F | 38 | School nurse | Middle school | Paris | Yes |
| 7 | F | 45 | Director | Schooling association | Paris | Yes |
| 8 | F | 42 | Teacher | Schooling association | Paris | Yes |
| 9 | F | 58 | Teacher | Schooling association | Paris | Yes |
| 10 | M | 50 | History teacher | Middle school | Paris | Yes |
| 11 | F | 52 | School nurse | Middle school | Paris | Yes |
| 12 | F | 55 | School doctor | Middle school | Paris | Yes |
| 13 | F | 40 | Mathematics teacher | High school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 14 | F | 40 | English teacher | High school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 15 | F | 29 | History teacher | High school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 16 | M | 50 | Head guidance counselor | High school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 17 | F | 60 | Assistant principal | High school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 18 | F | 51 | School nurse | High school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 19 | M | 55 | Principal | High school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 20 | F | 50 | English teacher | High school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 21 | F | 45 | French teacher | High school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 22 | F | 35 | English teacher | High school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 23 | F | 60 | School doctor | Local education authority | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 24 | F | 53 | French teacher | Middle school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 25 | F | 30 | Educational assistant | Middle school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 26 | M | 47 | Principal | Middle school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 27 | F | 50 | Biology teacher | Middle school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 28 | M | 50 | School nurse | Middle school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 29 | F | 59 | French teacher | Middle school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
| 30 | F | 36 | French teacher | Middle school | Bourgogne Franche-Comté | Yes |
Figure 1Flow chart showing the interview topic (level 1), themes (level 2), subthemes (level 3), and higher-level codes (level 4).
Illustrative quotations from transcripts.
| Themes | Categories | Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Experiencing destabilization | (Talking about Chinese sisters): “they are severely um … affected … by something that is, in my opinion, really hard to deal with. For them. | |
| Feeling shock, awkwardness, astonishment | (About a young sub-Saharan girl): “You have this girl, who is basically apathetic. You'll see who can be discomfited! The ‘I don't care' type. When I say impassive, | |
| Standard strategies fail | “It complicates things. And it wasn't only not speaking the language. When you don't understand, yourself, well you don't know, it's hard to say ‘You have to be careful about this.' If the person understands one word out of two, the whole meaning might be distorted. And then, the understanding of the French educational system, its requirements. Finally everything is more complicated, at that point it's much harder to work, it's harder to understand the causes, and as a result, harder to draw conclusions.” (Math Teacher, 1) | |
| Discriminatory cultural barriers | “There's a parent, I believed he wouldn't speak very well. In fact, he speaks very very well.” (School nurse, 6) | |
| Inaccessibility is assumed and explained by the differences in culture and language | “There are cultures—without necessarily being misogynist— | |
| Cultural differences remain taboo | “It's hard, [the] single-parent families, it's complicated, because we also have cases of polygamy, anyway, not enormously but um, it's not known | |
| Doubting the willingness of parents to agree with the aims of education | “Among the students who I knew they were victims of anxious school refusal, there are sometimes families that are extremely caring, concerned and put time into their children's education, and others sometimes can be a little less so, uh” (History-geography teacher, 11) | |
| Assuming that families' cultural priorities are incompatible with children's education | “There is, sometimes, a lack of interest in school that can be linked to the family's culture. A child, those they call the travelers, there are a lot of them around here. And the school culture is truly under … underestimated, undervalued. The idea is to be able to work as soon as possible, manual labor, and soon.” (Principal, 41) | |
| The lack of academic skills | “The families don't all have, necessarily, | |
| The lack of implicit social skills | “He started to not come anymore … But really, fear in the belly, you know! We had to telephone them to find out what was going on. They came. The mother explained.” (English teacher, 5) | |
| The lack of representation of health care services | “Sometimes | |
| Unconventional parenting practices involving both physical and moral violence. | “It is striking to observe families from foreign countries, who seem, in relation to school, to be conscious of the importance of the institution, but whose response is a sort of a condemnation that is demonstrated like that, publicly, and that can even take sometimes violent forms.” (History-geography teacher, 11) | |
| Parental pressure and insensitivity to their child distress | “The parents demanded that it continue to work well. He was coming less and less often to class, and the family demanded that he be at school.” (School nurse, 12) | |
| Teachers' difficulty to refer to culture and migration in their narratives | “I asked one of them where she had been in school, because I didn't dare ask if she was born in France.” (French teacher, 4) | |
| Using euphemisms and conniving allusions | “You rarely have, uh…'René', most of the time you have ‘Mamadou.' Ok, you see?” (English teacher, 5) | |
| Worrisome students | (Talking about two Chinese sisters): “They do everything they can to be forgotten and they succeed. They don't move. They don't gesture. They don't catch my eyes. I asked one of them to tell me if, because they are … I said to myself: there, maybe they don't speak French well, they are completely lost.” (French teacher, 4) | |
| Sly youth | “We have a lot of first-generation immigrants who do not speak French at all. And as a result, no matter how many letters you send them, no matter how many times you call, sometimes you get the student, you don't know, sometimes he fakes it! He picks up and says, “Yes yes I'll tell him.” (Math teacher, 1) | |
| Highly adapted youth | “We have a lot of foreign students. They invest enormously in school because they understand that it is their only path to salvation. These children [with anxious school refusal] are vulnerable, from an emotional point of view, a little overprotected. Those [immigrant youth], inversely, they are torn from their parents, torn from their family, torn from their friends, and they are super happy to be here.” (Head Guidance Counselor, 19) | |
| Providing customized strategies for the youth | “Sometimes we let the students leave, because they have a psychiatry appointment and their parents mustn't know. Because that can put them in danger.” (Head Guidance Counselor, 2) | |
| Making explicit what is tacit for the other families | “It can be hard to make [Chinese parents] understand that there is treatment that is necessary, so that they want to hear uh … it's complicated for their child … that their child, he's not well.” (School doctor, 13). | |
| To communicate with parents | “I come from another culture too, my family is Iranian. So, I know how to talk to parents who believe that all you have to do is say, ‘listen to your teacher, listen to your teacher.' Because there's no agreement about values, especially in middle school.” (English teacher, 5) | |
| To set themselves as role model for the youth. | “I'm originally Algerian and there've been students from North Africa and who weren't succeeding. [They said] ‘in any case, I'm stupid, my parents can't read'. So I explained to them, well, my parents couldn't read or write either, but I passed the agreg [advanced civil service test]. I think that also affected them. Anything is possible, and then as a result I set up personalized help for them. [They told me] ‘you give us personalized help, finally someone who listens to us, who considers us.'” (English teacher, 29) | |
| To connect with the young people affected by anxious school refusal | “There remains, even for these youth, a desire for ‘cultural nourishment.' History and geography are often very important for these youth who have … anxious school refusal … because they always find an association with their past, their culture, their roots.” (Director, 7) | |