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Articles

Floating childhoods: Psychological and educational adaptations of migrant children in China

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Pages 72-82 | Published online: 29 Apr 2019
 

ABSTRACT

The large-scale internal migration from countryside to city over the past 30 years has transformed China’s demographic, social, economic, and educational landscapes. There were approximately 35.81 million children below age 18 living with their migrant parents in urban cities without local registration of permanent residence (Hukou). Migrant children and their families face many challenges in migrant destinations, such as discriminations, economic insecurity, educational inequality, lack of access to health care, and social exclusion. Migrant children face special difficulties in adapting to new environments, securing quality education, enjoying adequate parental attention, and living in adequate housing. Those children are often denied admission to urban public schools and have to attend schools created mainly for migrant children with insufficient educational resources and poor teacher quality. The migrant children who have the opportunity to attend public schools suffer discrimination from teachers and local urban-resident classmates. Family disadvantages and institutional barriers potentially undermine academic achievement and psychological wellbeing of migrant children. Developing policy and practice to address the critical needs of these children are not only important in itself because of the large number of migrant children involved, but also essential for the future of urban China.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Zheng Zhou

Dr. Zheng Zhou is a Professor in the Psychology Department at St. John’s University in New York. Her research interests include children’s mathematical reasoning, basic relational concepts acquisition, and school adjustment.

Tao Xin

Tao Xin, Professor, Collaborative Innovation Center of Assessment toward Basic Education Quality, Beijing Normal University, 19 XinjiekouWai Street, Beijing 100875, China. [email protected]

Lin Du

Dr. Lin Du is an adjunct assistant professor at Teachers College, Columbia Univeristy. Her research interests include autism spectrum disorder, applied behavior analysis, and language development.

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