ABSTRACT

In contemporary western societies, there are increasing emphases on children being the responsibility of their parents, contained within the home, and on their compartmentalisation into separate and protected organised educational settings. Thus 'home' and 'school' form a crucial part of children's lives and experiences.
This book explores the key institutional settings of home and school, and other educationally linked organised spaces, in children's lives, and the relationships between these. It presents in-depth discussions concerning new research findings from a range of national contexts and focuses on various aspects of children's, and sometimes adult's, own understandings and activities in home and school, and after school settings, and the relationship between these. The contributors assess children from a variety of backgrounds and circumstances and consider how these children see and position themselves as autonomous within, connected to or regulated by home and school. Discussion of the impact of policy and practice developments on the everyday lives of these children is also included.

chapter |23 pages

Introduction

Conceptualising relationships between home and school in children's lives

chapter 1|17 pages

Students' rights in British schools

Trust, autonomy, connection and regulation

chapter 2|16 pages

Educational reform in New Zealand

Where were the children?

chapter 3|18 pages

School's Out?

Out of school clubs at the boundary of home and school

chapter 4|17 pages

Portrait of Callum

The disabling of a childhood?

chapter 5|13 pages

Adults as resources and adults as burdens

The strategies of children in the age of school-home collaboration

chapter 7|17 pages

Minding the gap

Children and young people negotiating relations between home and school

chapter 9|16 pages

Negotiating boundaries

Tensions within home and school life for refugee children

chapter |2 pages

Afterword

Similarities and differences