Search

Published After
Published Before

Search Results

  • The Mentoring’s Role among Alumni Students of István Wáli Roma College for Advanced Studies of the Reformed Church
    36-52
    Views:
    420

    Colleges for Advanced Studies (CASs) are the oldest institutionalized talent development initiatives of higher education in Hungary (since 1895). The Act CCIV of 2011 on National Higher Education initiated the creation of a national network of denominational Roma CASs. In a CAS, students live in a dormitory, build a strong community, get scholarships and support from tutors and mentors. Important elements of Roma CASs are the following: religious education, social responsibility for society, and Roma identity empowerment (Godó et al., 2019; Kardos, 2013; Charta, 2011). In this study, we examined alumni (ex-university students) of a Roma CAS in Debrecen. Among other things, we were interested in how they relate to the mentoring process, how they feel about it, and how mentoring is perceived in their own lives. We are also interested in what types of mentors are mentioned and whether there is any form of mentoring in their current activities. Method of our research: qualitative interview analysis. Semi-structured interviews were conducted in 2018 with 17 alumni selected by snowball method. According to our results, the former students named 2 types of mentors who were next to them: layman and professional mentors, or they themselves can be typed as mentors on the basis of the following: layman mentors (layman persons involved in mentoring activities) and professional mentors. We consider it important to emphasize the role of the pastor in a Reformed institution, who has also been promoted to the professional mentoring category. In addition, our goal is to investigate the characteristics of networking patterns that emerge around specialist college students.

  • Strengthening family–school partnerships through research, training and innovation: Reflections from the MTA‑DE‑PARTNERED program
    71-84
    Views:
    132

    This study presents the comprehensive findings of the MTA-DE-PARTNERED research and development program, which ran from 2021 to 2025, and aimed to explore and develop the theoretical, empirical, and practical dimensions of family-school partnerships. Within the framework of Epstein’s model of parental involvement, the research examined parents’ educational and learning-support activities at home, school–parent communication, volunteering, participation in decision-making, and community building. Analyses based on a review of the literature, large-scale questionnaire surveys, interviews, and case studies show that patterns of parental involvement are influenced by the child’s achievement, school type, school sector, and social background. The MTA-DE-PARTNERED program placed a strong emphasis on improving teacher training, recognizing that teachers’ preparedness and attitudes play a key role in the quality of the partnership. During the development phase, we created an evidence-based collection of best practices, a university toolkit, and an innovative educational board game based on cooperative. The board game aimed to support the positive development of asset-based attitudes among students and teachers through the simulation of various parental involvement scenarios. The results of the impact assessments suggest that the board game significantly contributes to the development of reflective thinking, a multi-perspective approach, and partnership-centered attitudes. This study shows that strengthening family-school collaboration requires systemic, research-based, and training-related innovations that will, in the long term, contribute to the improvement of student achievement and the development of pedagogical culture.

  • Insuperable Language Inequalities? A Reflecting Study on Bernstein's Linguistic Codes Theory and its Critique
    Views:
    191

    Kindergarten education is compulsory in Hungary, and the National Basic Programme for Kindergarten Education foresees effective language activities. This is in line with what Bernstein has proposed to address language inequalities. The research question is whether linguistic differences can be observed among kindergarten students in Hungary based on the socio-economic situation of the place of residence. The investigated settlement categories according to Government Decree 105/2015. (IV. 23.), and the Central Statistical Office data were the following: disadvantaged, less disadvantaged and advantaged (N=39). The speech of kindergarteners was examined using three playful tests, which were analyzed applying dimensions and indicators determined by reviewing the literature written by Bernstein, his followers, and critics, and a pilot study. During the analysis, the underperformance of the disadvantaged settlement’s children was detected in several scales, sometimes spectacularly (adjectives, word count, sentence coherence in the first test, noun-verb relationship), sometimes only to a lesser extent (the use of conjunctions, extended sentences, personal pronouns). Overall, the results support that Bernstein’s theory created two generations ago are still valid today: language inequalities can still be experienced in terms of the settlement disadvantages. The research draws attention to the need to increase the efficiency of mother tongue development in kindergartens.

  • Educational Psychology
    107-111
    Views:
    490

    Bibliography of the reviewed book: Santrock, J. W. (2018). Educational Psychology (6 Ed). McGraw-Hill Education.

     

  • Curricular and Extracurricular Learning among Students with Resilience Potential. Social Inequalities in Higher Education
    37-42
    Views:
    375

    Does resilience potential in higher education mature into success or does it remain merely a promise of success due to rising social inequality? We studied curricular and extracurricular learning of students with outstanding academic achievement who entered higher education despite their disadvantage of social background (= students with resilience potential). A student survey database compiled in the research project “Higher Education for Social Cohesion – Cooperative Research and Development in a Cross-border Area” (HERD) (HURO/0901/253/2.2.2.) in 2012 was analyzed. Students of three Eastern Hungarian higher education institutions were surveyed (N = 1205). Students with resilience potential were identified in the intersection of two groups of variables: social background and input academic achievement. We have conducted a cluster analysis, which has resulted in the identification of students with resilience potential and other researched groups: drifters (low social background and low input academic achievement), beneficiaries (high social background and high academic achievement) and indifferent prodigals (high social background and low academic achievement). To sum up our results, the students with resilience potential only use higher education to fulfill curricular requirements, and hit a ceiling, compared to the beneficiaries, when it comes to the student year mining, meaningful extracurricular activities. Thus social inequalities crawl through these invisible channels into higher education and beyond.