Three types of tightrope dance in the comback process
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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Date
2017Metadata
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Original version
International Journal for Research in Vocational Education and Training. 2017, 4 (2), 146-163. 10.13152/IJRVET.4.2.3Abstract
Fewer than half of the young people attending vocational institutions in
Norway complete their education within the allotted five years. Indeed, many of these
students have non-linear paths to completion. However, it is not changes in the dropout
rate that make this different from earlier generations but the expansion of formal edu-
cation and the rise of the knowledge society and individualisation. The term `tightrope
biographies' is used here to encapsulate why individualisation cannot be thought of
in terms of choice, because today's youth are often held accountable for their educa-
tional progression rather than this progression being viewed as dependent on institu-
tional mechanisms. The present study characterises young people as tightrope dancers
in their interactions with vocational schools. Selected data collected from ethnographic
interviews during the ongoing longitudinal project Youth, Completion and Dropout in
Telemark are used here to capture the voices of young people. These data focus on the
non-linear educational careers of these youth when they re-enter schools and explore
the stories they tell about dropping out and re-entering. These stories suggest that, to
succeed, students need customised support throughout the process from school to the
workplace and that many depend on this support. The study identifes three different
ways of understanding these students as tightrope dancers trying to get back on track,
characterising them as The Steady, The Shaky and The Shivering.