The Significance of Students: Can Increasing “Student Voice” in Schools Lead to Gains in Youth Development?
Top Cited Papers
- 1 April 2004
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Teachers College Record: the Voice of Scholarship in Education
- Vol. 106 (4) , 651-688
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9620.2004.00354.x
Abstract
The notion of “student voice,” or a student role in the decision making and change efforts of schools, has emerged in the new millennium as a potential strategy for improving the success of school reform efforts. Yet few studies have examined this construct either theoretically or empirically. Grounded in a sociocultural perspective, this article provides some of the first empirical data on youth participation in student voice efforts by identifying how student voice opportunities appear to contribute to “youth development” outcomes in young people. The article finds that student voice activities can create meaningful experiences for youth that help to meet fundamental developmental needs—especially for students who otherwise do not find meaning in their school experiences. Specifically, this research finds a marked consistency in the growth of agency, belonging and competence—three assets that are central to youth development. While these outcomes were consistent across the students in this study, the data demonstrate how the structure of student voice efforts and nature of adult/student relations fundamentally influence the forms of youth development outcomes that emerge.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Opening the Floodgates: giving students a voice in school reformFORUM, 2001
- Self-Regulation in Democratic CommunitiesThe Elementary School Journal, 1999
- Promoting Healthy Adolescents: Synthesis of Youth Development Program EvaluationsJournal of Research on Adolescence, 1998
- The situativity of knowing, learning, and research.American Psychologist, 1998
- Perceptions of the school psychological environment and early adolescents' psychological and behavioral functioning in school: The mediating role of goals and belonging.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1996
- Songs “come back most to them”: Students’ experiences as researchersTheory Into Practice, 1995
- Voices we want to hear and voices we don'tTheory Into Practice, 1995
- Toward a Fair Community of Scholars: moral education as the negotiation of classroom practicesJournal of Moral Education, 1994
- Students as Partners in Research and Restructuring SchoolsThe Educational Forum, 1993
- Classroom Belonging among Early Adolescent StudentsThe Journal of Early Adolescence, 1993