ABSTRACT
This study explores open-ended student responses representing advice for belonging from all students in one junior high school with 3 grades of youth ages 12–16 (n = 618). Nearly 5% of responses indicated that there was no way to belong at all. A variety of ideas about what matters for belonging in school emerged, including features of academic life and relationships with teachers, as well as friendships. Surprisingly, responses suggesting personal dispositional qualities far exceeded any other emergent themes. These included calls to be nice and to be outgoing as well as calls to avoid being ‘weird’. Managing and forming friendships were also very important. Chi-square analysis was used to explore differences across basic student characteristics for student positioning toward these emergent concepts of belonging. Gender and grade level stood out as significant, raising questions about how schools can organize to support belonging for students in middle level education. These youth represent the school context as a social and emotional space where they perceive normative dispositions are managed for belonging and where they grapple with authenticity. Implications surface for how to support students during important school transitions by attending to the social and emotional geographies over which young adolescents must traverse.
Acknowledgements
This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) for research with Human Subjects at my institution and has been performed in such a way as to be consistent with essential ethical standards. All human subjects (students) gave their informed consent prior to their participation in the research, parents also signed consent forms for their children to participate, and adequate steps were taken to protect all identifying information and to ensure participants’ confidentiality.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Data availability statement
Data are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request. Ethical considerations restrict the sharing of certain data.