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Original article

“What was your home country like?”- Syrian refugee youths’ experiences of school belonging

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Pages 181-189 | Received 31 Mar 2021, Accepted 30 Jul 2022, Published online: 21 Aug 2022
 

ABSTRACT

Objective

To explore the experiences of how Syrian refugee youth resettled in Canada negotiate and facilitate a sense of belonging within their school environment.

Method

Semi-structured interviews in English were conducted with nine Syrian refugee youths aged 16 to 18. The content of the interviews was analysed through Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis.

Results

Participants identified a variety of factors which helped them or became hurdles for within this process. Three themes of language proficiency, shared experiences, and school environment were described. Overall, it was apparent that schools with robust policies, such as having trained teachers and language support programmes, were important in facilitating belonging. Peers who were from the same sociocultural background or were migrants themselves often were highlighted as important individuals as they acted as cultural brokers.

Conclusion

Syrian refugee youth within this study actively found ways to facilitate belonging within their school environments, even if there was a lack of structural support in the forms of inadequate language programmes or poor school policies. This study’s findings also iterate that Syrian refugee youth are active agents in their environments, as they engage in various opportunities to socialize, integrate, and thrive in their new environments.

KEY POINTS

What is already known about this topic:

  1. Refugee youth face a plethora of challenges when integrating into a new school.

  2. The education system is a very important agent of socialization.

  3. School climate has implications for influencing outcomes of mental health and wellbeing.

What this topic adds:

  1. Attention to how structural supports are crucial in supporting refugee youth integrate to their schools.

  2. Emphasis on how refugee youth are active agents in the process of facilitating belonging within a school environment.

  3. Highlighting how the education system is a frontier for facilitating positive resettlement outcomes and sociocultural integration

Acknowledgments

The principal investigator would like to thank the participants of this study for sharing their experiences and time.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Data availability

Due to the nature of this research, participants of this study did not agree for their data to be shared publicly, so supporting data is not available.

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