Learning environment and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children placed in separate programmes in elementary schools in Norway

Global migration has led to increasing numbers of children encountering schools as newcomers in their new countries. Statistics reveal that large groups of migrant children tend to perform poorly academically; thus, education for newcomers has become an urgent issue for host countries. The aim of th...

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Main Author: Finn Aarsæther
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-01-01
Series:Cogent Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2021.1932227
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spelling doaj-3a1d5e68debd4b96b16080a701dee3792021-06-21T12:25:19ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Education2331-186X2021-01-018110.1080/2331186X.2021.19322271932227Learning environment and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children placed in separate programmes in elementary schools in NorwayFinn Aarsæther0Oslo Metropolitan UniversityGlobal migration has led to increasing numbers of children encountering schools as newcomers in their new countries. Statistics reveal that large groups of migrant children tend to perform poorly academically; thus, education for newcomers has become an urgent issue for host countries. The aim of this study is to explore how Norwegian schools facilitate education and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children, based on qualitative data from separate programmes for newcomers. The findings show a large variation as to how the schools emphasise the teaching of subjects and how they facilitate active learning processes for newcomers. The analyses suggest that this variation, at least partly, is linked to a lack of clarity in the official Norwegian guidelines for the education of newly arrived migrant children. As far as inclusion is concerned, the schools, however, show quite similar results: none of them succeed in creating arenas for interaction between newcomers and mainstream peers. This may have an impact on the newcomers’ well-being, as well as on how fast they learn Norwegian—and hence school subjects—because the verbal and social interaction between language learners and target language users is crucial to the development of L2 skills.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2021.1932227migrant childrennewcomerseducationl2-learninginclusion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Finn Aarsæther
spellingShingle Finn Aarsæther
Learning environment and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children placed in separate programmes in elementary schools in Norway
Cogent Education
migrant children
newcomers
education
l2-learning
inclusion
author_facet Finn Aarsæther
author_sort Finn Aarsæther
title Learning environment and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children placed in separate programmes in elementary schools in Norway
title_short Learning environment and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children placed in separate programmes in elementary schools in Norway
title_full Learning environment and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children placed in separate programmes in elementary schools in Norway
title_fullStr Learning environment and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children placed in separate programmes in elementary schools in Norway
title_full_unstemmed Learning environment and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children placed in separate programmes in elementary schools in Norway
title_sort learning environment and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children placed in separate programmes in elementary schools in norway
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Education
issn 2331-186X
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Global migration has led to increasing numbers of children encountering schools as newcomers in their new countries. Statistics reveal that large groups of migrant children tend to perform poorly academically; thus, education for newcomers has become an urgent issue for host countries. The aim of this study is to explore how Norwegian schools facilitate education and social inclusion for newly arrived migrant children, based on qualitative data from separate programmes for newcomers. The findings show a large variation as to how the schools emphasise the teaching of subjects and how they facilitate active learning processes for newcomers. The analyses suggest that this variation, at least partly, is linked to a lack of clarity in the official Norwegian guidelines for the education of newly arrived migrant children. As far as inclusion is concerned, the schools, however, show quite similar results: none of them succeed in creating arenas for interaction between newcomers and mainstream peers. This may have an impact on the newcomers’ well-being, as well as on how fast they learn Norwegian—and hence school subjects—because the verbal and social interaction between language learners and target language users is crucial to the development of L2 skills.
topic migrant children
newcomers
education
l2-learning
inclusion
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2021.1932227
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