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Friendship, exclusion and power: A study of two South Australian schools with new arrivals programs |
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Damien W. Riggs
Flinders University
Clemence Due
University of Adelaide
Young people who have recently arrived in Australia face considerable challenges
in making connections to their new community. While starting school can provide
opportunities to make such connections, it may in reality also serve to reinforce
perceptions or experiences of social exclusion perpetuated within the broader
Australian society. Drawing upon focus group data collected from two South Australian
primary schools that have a New Arrivals Programme, this paper outlines the relative
infrequency with which friendships between Australian-born and refugee or migrant
children occurred, and explores some of the reasons behind this. The findings also
highlight the different attributions the two groups of students made for forming
friendships, and explores the implications of this for social inclusion. The paper
concludes by suggesting the need for ongoing examinations of how newly arrived
students are engaged within primary schools, and how terms for inclusion are framed.
Australasian Journal of Early Childhood – Volume 35 No 4 December 2010
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Last Updated ( Friday, 15 April 2011 )
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