Navigating school belonging in Qatari schools: A mixed‐methods study of student perspectives

Author:

Allen Kelly‐Ann1ORCID,McCarthy Shannon2,Sawalhi Rania3,Berger Emily24,May Fiona25,Patlamazoglou Lefteris2,Gamble Nicholas2,Grové Christine67,Wurf Gerald2,Arango Elisa Jones2,Warton William8,Reupert Andrea2

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Wellbeing Science, Faculty of Education The University of Melbourne Parkville Australia

2. School of Educational Psychology and Counselling, Faculty of Education Monash University Clayton Victoria Australia

3. Eduenterprise Doha Qatar

4. School of Rural Health Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University Churchill Victoria Australia

5. Parenting Research Centre Mebourne Australia

6. Eastern Health Clinical School Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University Clayton Victoria Australia

7. School of Health and Biomedial Sciences RMIT University Bundoora Victoria Australia

8. Psychological Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences Monash University Clayton Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractA sense of school belonging is essential for adolescent development, though there is limited research investigating ways to improve students' sense of school belonging in Qatar. With 116 Qatari secondary school students, the current study explored student perspectives of ways teachers and schools could improve their sense of school belonging. Students responded to a survey including open‐ended questions and a descriptive scale measuring the usefulness of established belonging strategies during remote learning, in‐person, or all the time (both). Encouragement and support from teachers were found to be useful all the time, with school activities during breaks and opportunities to make friends only being useful during school‐based learning. From the examination of open‐ended responses using a hybrid qualitative approach with inductive and deductive coding, two overarching themes each at the teacher‐level and school‐level were found, defined by several subthemes. Belonging practices at the teacher‐level included caring and supportive teachers and teachers treating students as people. Belonging practices at the school‐level included student engagement and a positive and supportive school environment. For Qatari students practices such as prioritising supportive student–teacher relationships, introducing policies which promote a respectful, fair and safe environment, and offering school wide‐extracurricular activities that encourage peer connections are important to develop their sense of school belonging.

Publisher

Wiley

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