Parenting, Education, and Social Mobility in Rural China Cultivating dragons and phoenixes Routledge Contemporary China Series
Auteur : Kong Peggy A.
Like many countries around the world, China has been implementing policies aimed at improving parent-school relationships. However, unlike many developed countries, the historical context of family-school relationships has been limited and parents typically do not participate in the school context. Until now, there has been little research conducted in rural China on parental involvement in their children?s education.
This book investigates the nature of parental involvement in primary children?s education in rural China by using a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods. It outlines the layered strategies of how rural parents are involved in their children?s schooling, showing that rural parents strongly desire educational success for their children and view education as a means to their children gaining social mobility. It demonstrates that few rural parents engage in visible forms of parental involvement in their children?s schools, such as attending parent-teacher meetings. Rather, they are more likely to engage strategies to support their children?s education which are largely invisible to schools. It adds to the growing body of parental involvement research that suggests that culture, location, and socio-economic status influence different forms of parental involvement, and highlights nuances in invisible forms of parental involvement.
Providing insights into how poor rural parents envision their role with their children, schools, and the larger society, and how these relationships can affect the social mobility of students and families, this book will be of huge interest to students and scholars of Asian education, comparative and international education, and Chinese society.
Introduction 1. Conceptual and Theoretical Framework 2. What does it mean to be rural? 3 ."To walk out" 4. "It is up to them" 5. Active rural parents’ hidden work: creating a good learning environment 6. Information network: Support of family and friends 7. Migration. Conclusion
Peggy A. Kong is an assistant professor in Comparative and International Education at Lehigh University, USA. Her research interests include educational inequality including rural education, gender issues and private tutoring.
Date de parution : 02-2018
15.6x23.4 cm
Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).
Prix indicatif 58,78 €
Ajouter au panierDate de parution : 11-2015
15.6x23.4 cm
Thème de Parenting, Education, and Social Mobility in Rural China :
Mots-clés :
Young Men; parents; Desert Dust Storms; parental; Rural Parents; involvement; Evening Study Hall; literature; Education Bureau; Zhao Ziyang’s Speech; Socioeconomic Development; Social Reproduction; Parental Involvement Literature; Low Suzhi; Mother Questionnaire; City Middle School; Middle Class Western Families; Education System; Parental Involvement Strategy; Primary School Examination; Parental Habitus; Purchase School Supplies; Suzhi Discourse; Parental Involvement; Good Learning Environment; Poor Rural Residents; Hukou System; Exit Examination; Educational Aspirations