A Place Between School and Home: Exploring the Place of Shadow Education in Students’ Academic Lives in the Netherlands

Worldwide, the use of private supplementary tutoring, commonly referred to as shadow education, has become increasingly prevalent since the turn of the millennium. Recently, participation rates in the Netherlands have substantially increased. This paper aims to explore the place of shadow education...

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Main Authors: Daury Jansen, Louise Elffers, Monique L. L. Volman
Format: Article
Language:ces
Published: Karolinum Press 2020-11-01
Series:Orbis Scholae
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.karolinum.cz/doi/10.14712/23363177.2020.11
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spelling doaj-257f55e58cac4516b2ad806b87f6e2da2020-12-01T13:54:32ZcesKarolinum PressOrbis Scholae1802-46372336-31772020-11-01142395810.14712/23363177.2020.1110302A Place Between School and Home: Exploring the Place of Shadow Education in Students’ Academic Lives in the NetherlandsDaury JansenLouise ElffersMonique L. L. VolmanWorldwide, the use of private supplementary tutoring, commonly referred to as shadow education, has become increasingly prevalent since the turn of the millennium. Recently, participation rates in the Netherlands have substantially increased. This paper aims to explore the place of shadow education in students’ academic lives by studying the goals and experienced benefits that students identify. Data were collected through 37 semi-structured interviews with tutored students in secondary education in the Netherlands. Our findings indicate that students conceived of shadow education as a skill-building institution to which they turned to for self-study, to receive career support, and to boost their performance. Students’ reflections reveal that shadow education builds upon and extends – but does not replace – learning activities at home and school. Based on our findings, we discuss how shadow education can function as a “third place” between school and home, occupying an increasingly prominent position in students’ academic lives.http://www.karolinum.cz/doi/10.14712/23363177.2020.11shadow educationstudents’ goalsexperienced benefitssemi-structured interviews
collection DOAJ
language ces
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daury Jansen
Louise Elffers
Monique L. L. Volman
spellingShingle Daury Jansen
Louise Elffers
Monique L. L. Volman
A Place Between School and Home: Exploring the Place of Shadow Education in Students’ Academic Lives in the Netherlands
Orbis Scholae
shadow education
students’ goals
experienced benefits
semi-structured interviews
author_facet Daury Jansen
Louise Elffers
Monique L. L. Volman
author_sort Daury Jansen
title A Place Between School and Home: Exploring the Place of Shadow Education in Students’ Academic Lives in the Netherlands
title_short A Place Between School and Home: Exploring the Place of Shadow Education in Students’ Academic Lives in the Netherlands
title_full A Place Between School and Home: Exploring the Place of Shadow Education in Students’ Academic Lives in the Netherlands
title_fullStr A Place Between School and Home: Exploring the Place of Shadow Education in Students’ Academic Lives in the Netherlands
title_full_unstemmed A Place Between School and Home: Exploring the Place of Shadow Education in Students’ Academic Lives in the Netherlands
title_sort place between school and home: exploring the place of shadow education in students’ academic lives in the netherlands
publisher Karolinum Press
series Orbis Scholae
issn 1802-4637
2336-3177
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Worldwide, the use of private supplementary tutoring, commonly referred to as shadow education, has become increasingly prevalent since the turn of the millennium. Recently, participation rates in the Netherlands have substantially increased. This paper aims to explore the place of shadow education in students’ academic lives by studying the goals and experienced benefits that students identify. Data were collected through 37 semi-structured interviews with tutored students in secondary education in the Netherlands. Our findings indicate that students conceived of shadow education as a skill-building institution to which they turned to for self-study, to receive career support, and to boost their performance. Students’ reflections reveal that shadow education builds upon and extends – but does not replace – learning activities at home and school. Based on our findings, we discuss how shadow education can function as a “third place” between school and home, occupying an increasingly prominent position in students’ academic lives.
topic shadow education
students’ goals
experienced benefits
semi-structured interviews
url http://www.karolinum.cz/doi/10.14712/23363177.2020.11
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