TY - JOUR
T1 - Children’s perspective on fears connected to school transition and intended coping strategies
AU - Stiehl, Katharina A. M.
AU - Krammer, Ina
AU - Schrank, Beate
AU - Pollak, Isabella
AU - Silani, Giorgia
AU - Woodcock, Kate A.
N1 - Funding Information:
The D.O.T. (Die Offene Tür—The Open Door) team of co-investigators—Adam Barnard (playwright and theatre director), João Dias (computer scientist), Marija Mitic (medical doctor), Beate Schrank (practicing & research psychiatrist) and Kate Woodcock (research psychologist)—grew during a sandpit event organised by the Open Innovation Center of Ludwig Boltzmann Society and facilitated by Know Innovation. The team would like to thank these organisations for their role in its formation. D.O.T team work is jointly conceived and led by the co-investigators. The team sees this as a fully meaningful interdisciplinary collaboration. The authors would also like to acknowledge Sylvia Dörfler and Anna-Lena Mädge for supporting the data collection procedures and organisational collaboration with schools. We want to thank all workshop assistants, Lower Austrian schools, children and adult stakeholders who supported the workshop activities.
Funding Information:
Open access funding provided by Karl Landsteiner Privatuniversität für Gesundheitswissenschaften. This research was supported by the Ludwig Boltzmann Society Open Innovation for Science and Karl Landsteiner University of Heath Sciences.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).
PY - 2023/1/22
Y1 - 2023/1/22
N2 - The transition from primary to secondary school comes with major changes in the lives of children. There is a shortage of in-depth analyses of young people’s perspectives concerning their fears and strategies to address these. This qualitative study aims to gain first-hand understanding of children’s fears and the intended coping strategies used during school transition. Data from 52 workshops were analysed, with a total of 896 students (M age = 10.40, SD = .839) in lower Austria. First, in the classroom setting, a vignette story about a child facing fears about school transition from primary to secondary school was developed with pupils in a brainstorming session. This was followed by self-selected small group discussions, where pupils proposed strategies to help cope with these fears. A thematic analysis was carried out. Major thematic clusters distinguished between four types of fears: peer victimisation, being alone, victimisation by authority figures, and academic failure. Three additional thematic clusters described strategies for countering the fears: enacting supportive networks, personal emotion regulation, and controlling behaviour. In addition to these connected clusters, two further themes were identified: strategy outcomes and consequences, i.e., personal experiences with using specific strategies, and the discussion of participants about contradictions and questionable usefulness of identified strategy outcomes. In conclusion, the children in our study reported more social fears as compared to academic fears. Children seem reasonably competent at naming and identifying strategies; however, maladaptive strategies, as well as controversies within the described strategies may indicate a lack of certainty and competence at engaging with these strategies on a practical level.
AB - The transition from primary to secondary school comes with major changes in the lives of children. There is a shortage of in-depth analyses of young people’s perspectives concerning their fears and strategies to address these. This qualitative study aims to gain first-hand understanding of children’s fears and the intended coping strategies used during school transition. Data from 52 workshops were analysed, with a total of 896 students (M age = 10.40, SD = .839) in lower Austria. First, in the classroom setting, a vignette story about a child facing fears about school transition from primary to secondary school was developed with pupils in a brainstorming session. This was followed by self-selected small group discussions, where pupils proposed strategies to help cope with these fears. A thematic analysis was carried out. Major thematic clusters distinguished between four types of fears: peer victimisation, being alone, victimisation by authority figures, and academic failure. Three additional thematic clusters described strategies for countering the fears: enacting supportive networks, personal emotion regulation, and controlling behaviour. In addition to these connected clusters, two further themes were identified: strategy outcomes and consequences, i.e., personal experiences with using specific strategies, and the discussion of participants about contradictions and questionable usefulness of identified strategy outcomes. In conclusion, the children in our study reported more social fears as compared to academic fears. Children seem reasonably competent at naming and identifying strategies; however, maladaptive strategies, as well as controversies within the described strategies may indicate a lack of certainty and competence at engaging with these strategies on a practical level.
KW - Coping strategies
KW - Early adolescence
KW - Fears
KW - Qualitative analysis
KW - School transition
KW - Victimization
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85146692161&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11218-023-09759-1
DO - 10.1007/s11218-023-09759-1
M3 - Article
VL - 26
SP - 603
EP - 637
JO - Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal
JF - Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal
SN - 1381-2890
IS - 3
ER -