Socially Haunted? Exploring Young People’s Views on Education and Marginalization
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. North East England
1.2. Post-16 Education in England
1.3. Social Haunting
2. Research Design and Methods
2.1. A Participatory Approach
2.2. The Participants
2.3. Data Collection
- Parts of the North East are identified as “youth unemployment hotspots”, 1 in 8 young people are unemployed—twice the national average.
- In the North East, young people from poorer backgrounds are more likely to drop out of Education at age 16 than anywhere else in England.
- The North East has the highest rate of young people aged 16–24, in England, who are not in employment, education or training.
- Educational attainment of young people from disadvantaged backgrounds and deprived areas, in the North East, can be around 2 years behind those from wealthier families, upon leaving school aged 16.
- Young people from poorer backgrounds score, on average, 33% less in standardized testing at age 16 than those from wealthier backgrounds.
- Do you think the leaving age of education should be 18?
- What does it feel like to study at Level 1?
- There are no jobs for young people.
2.4. Data Analysis
“when a child is experiencing some kind of marginalization and is recognized by almost everyone including himself/herself; when a child is feeling that he/she is experiencing marginalization, whereas most of the others do not recognize this; when a child is found in what appears to be marginalized situations but does not feel it, or does not view it as marginalization; and finally when a child is experiencing marginalization but does not admit it.”[89] (pp. 1312–1313)
3. Results
3.1. Marginalization, Employment, and Education
“Nahhh, cos of Maggie Thatcher!”(El Chapo)
“Do you think what happened in the 1980s is still impacting you guys now”(Researcher)
“Yep.”(Zane)
“Yes!”(El Chapo)
“Ayeee.”(Kirk)
“See, cos if Margaret Thatcher never happened, we’d still be down the mines and like, in the shipyards. We’d have a straight away job. Cos back then, you didn’t really need a CV […]. Like, you learn from your father. Or something like that. And you’d have done that. You follow your Da and it carries on.”(El Chapo)
“My grandad said he left school on the Friday and started working in the pit on Monday. He got one weekend off and that was it. That was his job.”(Kirk)
“So do you guys feel like you’re still feeling the effect of those closing down?”(Researcher)
“Yes!”(El Chapo)
“Yeah!”(Zane)
“Aye!”(Kirk)
3.2. Forms of Capital and Marginalization
“They’ve got better education, facilities, better learning environment. Compared to us up here that have hardly nothing. Like, people who get the best grades [in the North East], are the ones who’re doing it on their own and without help from teachers. Revising on their own and without any tutors or anything like that.”(Zane)
“AYE, SEE, BUT THE LINE THOUGH! The North and South divide. So, it means the North has always got less money than the south.”(El Chapo)
“Why do you think that is?”(Researcher)
“Cos it’s the capital. And the capital has always got money. See….. What’s the capital of China?”(El Chapo)
“Beijing?”(Researcher)
“Aye, if you go there, then there’s loads of money in there. But if you go out into the country, there’s no money.”(El Chapo)
“Well, I’ve done all this and volunteered, and I still can’t get a job. I told him about it and he’s like, “you’ll never get a job!”. And I’ve applied for them, he said “where?”. I said to the shop, and he asked how I did it. He didn’t know! The only way he managed to get a job is because he knew who the person was over Facebook! That’s the only way he managed to get a job.”(Kirk)
4. Discussion
4.1. Social Haunting
“Thousands of families, already struggling to make ends meet, were placed under so much strain that it altered them physically, psychologically and emotionally. What was left of the local economy adapted to supply the community’s mutating demands; off licences, pubs, chip shops, licenced bingo halls, bookmakers and, latterly, drug dealers, provided temporary relief from the grim reality of deindustrialisation.”[96] (p. 42)
4.2. The Ghost as a “Social Figure”
4.3. Masculinity and Deindustrialization
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Robinson, L.; Clark, J. Socially Haunted? Exploring Young People’s Views on Education and Marginalization. Youth 2024, 4, 214-230. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4010015
Robinson L, Clark J. Socially Haunted? Exploring Young People’s Views on Education and Marginalization. Youth. 2024; 4(1):214-230. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4010015
Chicago/Turabian StyleRobinson, Lee, and Jill Clark. 2024. "Socially Haunted? Exploring Young People’s Views on Education and Marginalization" Youth 4, no. 1: 214-230. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4010015
APA StyleRobinson, L., & Clark, J. (2024). Socially Haunted? Exploring Young People’s Views on Education and Marginalization. Youth, 4(1), 214-230. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4010015