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Featured researches published by Tero Järvinen.


International Journal of Lifelong Education | 2006

The young outsiders: the later life courses of ‘drop‐out youths’

Markku Vanttaja; Tero Järvinen

The aim of the article is to examine the consequences of exclusion from school and work on the later life of young people. The article is based on a longitudinal study concerning Finnish youths who were unemployed and had not continued their schooling after compulsory school in 1985 (n = 6983). The life‐courses of these youths were followed up to and including the year 2000. According to the results, dropping out of education and working life after compulsory schooling quite strongly predicted a weak educational and labour market position. However, there were also many persons in the target group who had continued their education at a later age and succeeded in finding their place in working life. Altogether, the results suggest that it should not be taken for granted that dropping out of education and work in youth necessarily lead to exclusion in later life. Both exclusionary and successful life careers were represented in the data, although the former were more common.


Disability & Society | 2005

Risk factors and survival routes: social exclusion as a life‐historical phenomenon

Markku Jahnukainen; Tero Järvinen

Social exclusion is a popular and widely used concept in the social sciences as well as in current European policy rhetoric. However, there is no general agreement on the content and use of the term; it has been used differently and for different purposes in different historical and social contexts. In this article, the social exclusion is understood as life‐historical phenomenon. Two cases have been selected as representing the most extreme trajectories based on a larger follow‐up study concerning former students of residential institutions for young people with emotional and/or behavioural difficulties in Finland. The cases give us an example of a detailed life‐course analysis, with the emphasis on risk and protective factors and demonstrate that the process of social exclusion is a complicated issue that cannot totally be understood by analysing the statistical connections between certain risk factors and the life‐course.


European Education | 2015

Institutional Frameworks and Structural Factors Relating to Educational Access Across Europe

Andrew Biggart; Tero Järvinen; Marcelo Parreira do Amaral

In this article institutional and structural factors relating to access to education are assessed. First, the macro frameworks of institutional regulation that exert influence on the educational trajectories of young Europeans are demonstrated. Based on different aspects of these frameworks and drawing from extant research, the article presents a typology of education systems that provide varying levels of access to and accessibility of education in Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, the Netherlands, Slovenia, and the United Kingdom. Second, using survey data (N = 6,366) it analyzes the impact of gender and parental education on young people’s educational aspirations and early labor-market entry across the countries.


Compare | 2016

Changes in education policies and the status of schools in Europe: the views of school principals from eight European countries

Risto Rinne; Tero Järvinen; Jenni Tikkanen; Mikko Aro

Neoliberal education policies have altered the operational environments of schools and affected school principals’ job descriptions and requirements. As a result of managerialism, decentralisation and marketisation of education, principals are increasingly responsible for profitability, marketing and striving in competition, in addition to their role as pedagogical leaders. In this study, the opinions and views of European principals on the changes in the governing of education, relevance of education, educational transitions and different factors affecting coping with the demands of education are analysed. The views of the principals do not consistently reflect the structures of the national education systems. Questions related to educational equality highlighted the clearest differences. The more unequal the education system, the more important supporting the students in the weakest positions is to the principals.


Comparative Education | 2016

Are model PISA pupils happy at school? Quality of school life of adolescents in Finland and Korea

Junghyun Yoon; Tero Järvinen

ABSTRACT This paper explores the quality of school life (QSL) of two ‘model pupils’ in Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) tests, Finland and Korea, and investigates students’ views on the central aspects of QSL (general satisfaction, peer relations and teacher–student relations) using PISA 2012 data. It also seeks to interpret how specific institutional and sociocultural aspects are linked to QSL. The analyses show that Finnish and Korean adolescents’ views on QSL are less positive compared with the OECD average; Finnish adolescents’ views on QSL are more positive than those of Korean adolescents regarding general satisfaction and peer relations but are not clearly related to teacher–student relations. Since Finnish and Korean adolescents’ views on QSL partly differ from those of their Nordic and East Asian counterparts, the distinct Nordic or East Asian image of QSL could not be revealed in the study. This article proposes that QSL demands more attention in the era of ‘rankings and benchmarked educational models’, with consideration to the universality and uniqueness of institutional, sociocultural and historical factors of one’s own and others’ schooling.


Archive | 2017

Cultural Capital, Equality and Diversifying Education

Anna-Kaisa Berisha; Risto Rinne; Tero Järvinen; Heikki Kinnari

The chapter analyses the significance of cultural capital for a social and cultural inheritance of education in the context of diversifying education. It gives the holistic picture of the state of equity and equality of education in the Finnish educational system and policy by analysing the mechanisms of educational selection at different educational levels, from primary to higher education. The chapter examines the origins of the concept of ‘cultural capital’ by Pierre Bourdieu, after which the significance of cultural capital on the social reproduction and social inheritance of education is examined by taking into account the recent changes in both policy practices and institutional arrangements in comprehensive, upper secondary and higher education.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2001

Young People, Education and Work: Trends and Changes in Finland in the 1990s

Tero Järvinen; Markku Vanttaja


Archive | 2011

Dropout and Completion in Upper Secondary Education in Finland

Risto Rinne; Tero Järvinen


Zeitschrift Fur Padagogik | 2010

The 'losers' in education, work and life chances - the case of Finland

Risto Rinne; Tero Järvinen


Archive | 2013

Koulupudokkaiden työurat. Vuosina 1985 ja 1995 koulutuksen ja työn ulkopuolella olleiden nuorten urapolkujen vertailua

Tero Järvinen; Markku Vanttaja

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