Planned and happenstance transitions of students from education to work in England and Romania

The fact that students engage in more than just their studies while at university has been acknowledged in previous education research, but it has not been included in the theoretical debates on education-to-work-transitions. In this thesis I argue that the lack of debates between educational resear...

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Main Author: Plugor, Reka
Other Authors: Goodwin, John; O'Connor, Henrietta
Published: University of Leicester 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.639399
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6393992017-02-17T03:25:30ZPlanned and happenstance transitions of students from education to work in England and RomaniaPlugor, RekaGoodwin, John; O'Connor, Henrietta2015The fact that students engage in more than just their studies while at university has been acknowledged in previous education research, but it has not been included in the theoretical debates on education-to-work-transitions. In this thesis I argue that the lack of debates between educational researchers and youth transitions researchers and the narrow focus of existing studies on certain educational aspects cannot do justice to the complex experiences and perceptions of young people today, who, I believe, experience multiple status positions while at university. In this thesis I try to address this gap by focusing on the process of student transitions from education to work from a comparative and biographical perspective. I conducted 42 topical life history interviews with final year students in England and Romania about their reasons for opting to study at university, the processes of deciding what and where to study, the impressions and attitudes towards their studies, the activities they were engaged in, and their future (career) plans just before graduation. I conducted this exercise with an explicit aim to answer my main research question: What are the characteristics of student pathways through HE? To answer this question I relied on the main concepts from youth transitions and education-to-work transitions research – structure and agency – but I included in the analysis considerations about significant others and happenstance events, as well as perspectives about time and space. Overall, from a theoretical perspective, my research responded to calls for more holistic perspectives on youth and education-to-work transitions, while from a methodological perspective, I offered a thick description of narrative research conducted from multi-lingual and multi-ethnic perspectives on the lived experiences of students in two country and institutional contexts.378.1University of Leicesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.639399http://hdl.handle.net/2381/31839Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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sources NDLTD
topic 378.1
spellingShingle 378.1
Plugor, Reka
Planned and happenstance transitions of students from education to work in England and Romania
description The fact that students engage in more than just their studies while at university has been acknowledged in previous education research, but it has not been included in the theoretical debates on education-to-work-transitions. In this thesis I argue that the lack of debates between educational researchers and youth transitions researchers and the narrow focus of existing studies on certain educational aspects cannot do justice to the complex experiences and perceptions of young people today, who, I believe, experience multiple status positions while at university. In this thesis I try to address this gap by focusing on the process of student transitions from education to work from a comparative and biographical perspective. I conducted 42 topical life history interviews with final year students in England and Romania about their reasons for opting to study at university, the processes of deciding what and where to study, the impressions and attitudes towards their studies, the activities they were engaged in, and their future (career) plans just before graduation. I conducted this exercise with an explicit aim to answer my main research question: What are the characteristics of student pathways through HE? To answer this question I relied on the main concepts from youth transitions and education-to-work transitions research – structure and agency – but I included in the analysis considerations about significant others and happenstance events, as well as perspectives about time and space. Overall, from a theoretical perspective, my research responded to calls for more holistic perspectives on youth and education-to-work transitions, while from a methodological perspective, I offered a thick description of narrative research conducted from multi-lingual and multi-ethnic perspectives on the lived experiences of students in two country and institutional contexts.
author2 Goodwin, John; O'Connor, Henrietta
author_facet Goodwin, John; O'Connor, Henrietta
Plugor, Reka
author Plugor, Reka
author_sort Plugor, Reka
title Planned and happenstance transitions of students from education to work in England and Romania
title_short Planned and happenstance transitions of students from education to work in England and Romania
title_full Planned and happenstance transitions of students from education to work in England and Romania
title_fullStr Planned and happenstance transitions of students from education to work in England and Romania
title_full_unstemmed Planned and happenstance transitions of students from education to work in England and Romania
title_sort planned and happenstance transitions of students from education to work in england and romania
publisher University of Leicester
publishDate 2015
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.639399
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