New Identity of Russian Speaking Children in Estonian Society

According to Estonian Statistical Office whether we take the number of grade repeaters, the number of graduates or the number of students graduating with a distinction as a basis for the analysis, the academic achievement incline has remained the same for several years – girls whose language of...

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Main Author: Mare Leino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Social Work & Society 2006-01-01
Series:Social Work and Society
Online Access:https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/184
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spelling doaj-d8e69ee655ae479c83c29ec978ffd37b2021-05-29T05:41:33ZengSocial Work & SocietySocial Work and Society1613-89532006-01-0141New Identity of Russian Speaking Children in Estonian SocietyMare Leino0Tallinn UniversityAccording to Estonian Statistical Office whether we take the number of grade repeaters, the number of graduates or the number of students graduating with a distinction as a basis for the analysis, the academic achievement incline has remained the same for several years – girls whose language of instruction is Russian come at the top, followed by girls who study in Estonian. Boys come last, and boys studying in Russian reveal much better results than boys whose language of instruction is Estonian (Heinlo 2001, 23). Current paper is going to show that native Estonians have problems as well and starting from school already; Russian speaking youth is doing even better (with hard work). So the question is: who is the better citizen - a native but quite easy-going, or an (former) immigrant who is eager? In European social thought the concept of citizenship is constructed as universal, but it contains tensions between sameness and difference, us and others, centres and margins (Gordon et al 2000, 9). For us citizenship means belonging, which means safety. Here we will ask: is it (for better future) enough just to be a native Estonian, or should one work for ones success as much as many immigrants do.https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/184
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mare Leino
spellingShingle Mare Leino
New Identity of Russian Speaking Children in Estonian Society
Social Work and Society
author_facet Mare Leino
author_sort Mare Leino
title New Identity of Russian Speaking Children in Estonian Society
title_short New Identity of Russian Speaking Children in Estonian Society
title_full New Identity of Russian Speaking Children in Estonian Society
title_fullStr New Identity of Russian Speaking Children in Estonian Society
title_full_unstemmed New Identity of Russian Speaking Children in Estonian Society
title_sort new identity of russian speaking children in estonian society
publisher Social Work & Society
series Social Work and Society
issn 1613-8953
publishDate 2006-01-01
description According to Estonian Statistical Office whether we take the number of grade repeaters, the number of graduates or the number of students graduating with a distinction as a basis for the analysis, the academic achievement incline has remained the same for several years – girls whose language of instruction is Russian come at the top, followed by girls who study in Estonian. Boys come last, and boys studying in Russian reveal much better results than boys whose language of instruction is Estonian (Heinlo 2001, 23). Current paper is going to show that native Estonians have problems as well and starting from school already; Russian speaking youth is doing even better (with hard work). So the question is: who is the better citizen - a native but quite easy-going, or an (former) immigrant who is eager? In European social thought the concept of citizenship is constructed as universal, but it contains tensions between sameness and difference, us and others, centres and margins (Gordon et al 2000, 9). For us citizenship means belonging, which means safety. Here we will ask: is it (for better future) enough just to be a native Estonian, or should one work for ones success as much as many immigrants do.
url https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/184
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