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Mind the aspiration gap: how primary school pupils perceive their future adult selves and the perspectives and expectations of parents and teachers

Forrester, Gillian; Hudson, Ruth; Rowley, Jane; Pugh, Jim

Authors

Gillian Forrester

Jane Rowley

Jim Pugh



Abstract

This article reports on research investigating the aspirations of pupils in primary schools located in low-socioeconomic areas in one English county. The research adopted a qualitative approach to explore aspirations, self-efficacy, opinions regarding the merits of investment in education, and notions of perceived future selves. The research also considered the expectations of parents and teachers providing insight into how they support children's aspirations and expose them to opportunities and ideas. The study utilised various trigger activities as a precursor to focus groups. The findings show a distinct gap between pupils’ conception of their current selves and their future selves whereby there is uncertainty and insecurity about the appropriate steps needed to make informed choices and realise aspirations. Parents and extended family are the predominant idea source for aspirations and their assistance is recognised, above all, as important by pupils. Aspirations are also fashioned by pupils’ gender-specific ideas about certain jobs and cultural exposure to the media. Pupils discern the importance of working hard and performing well at school. Most parents just want their child to be happy in the future and, as such, would support their child’s career choices believing these could be achieved although believing qualifications are important, and the job market restricted. Teachers want their pupils to have options but identify barriers to achieving aspirations as worklessness in families, the locality of the school, low self-efficacy and unrealistic aspirations.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 1, 2022
Online Publication Date Nov 1, 2022
Publication Date Jun 6, 2024
Deposit Date Apr 1, 2025
Journal Educational Review
Print ISSN 0013-1911
Electronic ISSN 1465-3397
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 76
Issue 4
Pages 732-752
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/00131911.2022.2134845