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Do schools promote social inclusion? The experiences of intercountry adoptees in Australia

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journal contribution
posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by B Scarvelis, Beth CrispBeth Crisp, Sophie GoldingaySophie Goldingay
Intercountry adoption programs have brought children from racially and culturally diverse backgrounds to live as Australians, including 30 children from Rangsit Children’s Home who arrived in South Australia in the late 1980s and early 1990s. As part of a project which explored the life experiences of 12 adults who had arrived as children aged between 4 and 9 from Rangsit, this paper explores the role of schools in facilitating their inclusion into life in Australia. The school experience was often critical in learning English and was pre-requisite for acceptance in the school yard but also a place in which most of these Thai-born intercountry adoptees experienced racism. More than half of the participants did not complete secondary school but all had employment. However, many of these jobs were low-paying and this precluded them from participating in opportunities to return to Thailand to learn more about their Thai origins or participating as adoptive parents in intercountry adoption programs. Hence, while schools can play an important role in facilitating social inclusion, the school system alone may be unable to address the multiple dimensions of exclusion experienced by intercountry adoptees.

History

Journal

Journal of social inclusion

Volume

5

Issue

1

Pagination

61 - 77

Publisher

Griffith University, School of Human Services and Social Work

Location

Meadowbrook, QLD

ISSN

1836-8808

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Griffith University

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