Abstrakti
Refugee students may come to schools with fragmented educational histories and other exile-related stressors, but many also settle fast, enjoy school and live rather ordinary childhoods. These more positive stories are not told because they get overridden by well-meaning but counterproductive stories of victimhood. This article presents a storycrafting project with 13 primary school aged refugee children in Australia, with an aim to problematise this deficit-discourse. The outcome was the group’s “preferred narrative”, that is, a story combining fact and fiction within the dialogical process between the teller and the audiences. The story was published as a fictional book and an animated film entitled Ali and the Long Journey Australia. This article discusses this process and its outcome; how a child-led project combining fact and fiction can inform qualitative research, and how stories are welcomed by audiences which are out of reach by regular research outputs.
| Alkuperäiskieli | Englanti |
|---|---|
| Sivut | 2252-2265 |
| Julkaisu | International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education |
| Vuosikerta | 36 |
| Numero | 10 |
| Varhainen verkossa julkaisun päivämäärä | 6 lokak. 2021 |
| DOI - pysyväislinkit | |
| Tila | Julkaistu - 2023 |
| OKM-julkaisutyyppi | A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä |
YK:n kestävän kehityksen tavoitteet
Tämä tuotos edistää seuraavia kestävän kehityksen tavoitteita:
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SDG 16 – Rauha, oikeudenmukaisuus ja vahvat instituutiot
Julkaisufoorumi-taso
- Jufo-taso 1
!!ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Education
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