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  • Young people's aspirations for education, work, family and leisure

    Author(s)
    McDonald, Paula
    Pini, Barbara
    Bailey, Janis
    Price, Robin
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Bailey, Janis M.
    Pini, Barbara M.
    Year published
    2011
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Young people are arguably facing more 'complex and contested' transitions to adulthood and an increasing array of 'non-linear' paths. Education and training have been extended, identity is increasingly shaped through leisure and consumerism and youth must navigate their life trajectories in highly individualised ways. The study utilises 819 short essays compiled by students aged 14–16 years from 19 schools in Australia. It examines how young people understand their own unique positions and the possibilities open to them through their aspirations and future orientations to employment and family life. These young people do not ...
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    Young people are arguably facing more 'complex and contested' transitions to adulthood and an increasing array of 'non-linear' paths. Education and training have been extended, identity is increasingly shaped through leisure and consumerism and youth must navigate their life trajectories in highly individualised ways. The study utilises 819 short essays compiled by students aged 14–16 years from 19 schools in Australia. It examines how young people understand their own unique positions and the possibilities open to them through their aspirations and future orientations to employment and family life. These young people do not anticipate postponing work identities, but rather embrace post-school options such as gaining qualifications, work experience and achieving financial security. Boys expected a distant involvement in family life secondary to participation in paid work. In contrast, around half the girls simultaneously expected a future involving primary care-giving and an autonomous, independent career, suggesting attempts to remake gendered inequalities.
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    Journal Title
    Work, Employment and Society
    Volume
    25
    Issue
    1
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017010389242
    Subject
    Industrial Relations
    Applied Economics
    Business and Management
    Sociology
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/62751.1
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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