Learning to Fail

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A01=Fran Abrams
Author_Fran Abrams
Birthday
Category=JNF
College Place
Cup
dearne
Disengaged
educational inequality
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eq_non-fiction
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Follow
Girlfriend
Grandma
Hold
manchester
marginalised communities education
mum
north
North Manchester
Odd
Peer Outreach Work
people
post-16 transitions
Precinct
school dropout prevention
Slightly
Smoothes
social exclusion
Strong
supporting vulnerable learners
Togo
Tom's Mum
toms
Trousers
Tv
valley
Wandered
white
White Working Class Boys
Wo
working
young
Young Man
Young People
youth disengagement

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415483964
  • Weight: 294g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Sep 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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During a decade of relative prosperity from the mid-1990s onward, governments across the developed world failed to crack one major issue – youth unemployment. Even when economic growth was strong, one young person in 10 in the United Kingdom was neither working nor learning. As the boom ended, the number of young people dropping out after leaving school – already acknowledged to be too high - began to rise at an alarming rate. As governments face up to the prospect of a new generation on the dole, this book examines the root causes of the problem.

By holding a light to the lives and attitudes of eight young people, their families, their teachers and their potential employers, this book will challenge much of what has been said about educational success and failure in the past 20 years. For two decades, policy makers largely assumed schools were the key to ensuring young people got the best possible start in life. Yet for many children the path to failure began well before their first day at school.

Through the stories of these young people, this book reveals how marginalised young people are let down on every step of their journey. Growing up in areas where aspiration has died or barely ever existed, with parents who struggle to guide them on life in the 21st century, they are let down by schools where teachers underestimate them, by colleges and careers advisers who mislead them and by an employment market which has forgotten how to care or to nurture. Learning to Fail goes behind the headlines about anti-social behaviour, drugs and teenage pregnancy to paint a picture of real lives and how they are affected by outside forces. It gives a voice to ordinary parents and youngsters so they can speak for themselves about what Britain needs to do to turn its teenage failures into a success story.

Fran Abrams is an investigative journalist with 20 years’ experience of observing and reporting on education in the United Kingdom. She works regularly for the UK broadsheet newspapers and for the BBC, and lives in Suffolk.

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