“Terror victims are probably not the easiest to follow up”: students’ perception of learning and teaching in the aftermath of trauma
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28063Dato
2022-11-23Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
In August 2011, Norwegian schools welcomed survivors of the Utøya
massacre to a new school year. Based on interviews with 135 students
who went back to school weeks after experiencing extreme trauma, this
study investigates their perception of schooling and learning. Sixty
percent of the students reported a variety of reduced academic
functioning, and they were not prepared for the learning impairments
they faced. Their stories indicate that neither were the schools. Rather,
schools appeared to be trauma sensitive only to certain aspects of the
trauma-induced effects on schooling: A variety of actions aimed at
enhancing school well-being were implemented, however few
educational measures to assist and restore impaired academic
functioning were reported. The students blamed themselves for reduced
academic performance, and had few expectations with regard to teachers
helping them academically. The findings are discussed in the context of
influential pedagogical ideals in Norwegian and Scandinavian schools.
Forlag
RoutledgeSitering
Skarstein, Schultz. “Terror victims are probably not the easiest to follow up”: students’ perception of learning and teaching in the aftermath of trauma. Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research. 2022Metadata
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