Children with Disabilities Growing Up and Becoming Adults: Sociocultural Challenges around the Transition to Adulthood

Author(s):  
Louise Bøttcher
1982 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Ann O'loughlin ◽  
Kenneth E. Sinclair

The study focuses attention on the different patterns of transition to adulthood experienced by the members of a hypothetical three-generation Australian family consisting of grandparents, parents and their adolescent children. For each of these three generations data from the Bureau of Census and Statistics were examined to determine the age at which they left school and entered a job, married, and began a family. The data indicate that when the transition to adulthood is measured in terms of these variables the process of growing up was accomplished by the most recent adolescent generation in a shorter space of time, at a younger age, and by a greater proportion of the cohort than for either the parent or grandparent generations.


Author(s):  
Jennie Bristow ◽  
Sarah Cant ◽  
Anwesa Chatterjee

This chapter expands on the discussion of generational encounters with Higher Education, by indicating some ways in which current and prospective students articulate their expectations, hopes, aspirations and experiences of ‘going to University’. It discusses the implications for the relationship between academics and students in a context where transition to adulthood is delayed. As Universities have become more explicitly situated as institutions geared towards socialisation and the inculcation of a distinct set of values and attributes, relations between academics and students have become increasingly formalised. The concern that students’ need for pastoral support and concessions is both provided and regulated has added layers of bureaucratic restriction and accountability to interactions between staff and students. The chapter explores the ways in which these processes impinge on the interaction between academics and students, interposing a distance between the generations.


Author(s):  
Thierry Gagné ◽  
Amanda Sacker ◽  
Ingrid Schoon

AbstractChanges across education, employment, and family life over the past 20 years challenges the capacity of previously established social role combinations to continue representing the experiences of young men and women born since the late 1980s. Latent class analysis was used to derive patterns of role combinations at ages 25–26 in those growing up in England, using data from 3191 men and 3921 women in the 1970 British Cohort Study (1996) and 3426 men and 4281 women in the Next Steps study born in 1989–90 (2015–16). Role combinations in 1996 were well defined by five patterns across genders: educated, work-oriented, traditional family, fragile family, and slow starters. Patterns in 2015–16 diverged across genders (e.g., disappearance of home ownership in the traditional family group among men and higher education as a group identifier among women) and included across genders fewer work-oriented, more slow starters, and a new group of “left behind” who are excluded from work and relationships. Young men and women born around 1990 experienced diverging role combinations characterized by increased delays and inequalities, with fewer being able to attain the milestones traditionally associated with the transition to adulthood by the mid-20s.


Leaving Care and the Transition to Adulthood: International Contributions to Theory, Research, and Practice advances the current literature on the situation of young people growing up in substitute care who age out at the age of majority. In most parts of the world, these emerging adults are left to navigate the transition to adulthood with minimal support. This volume seeks to advance the literature in order to support better policies and services by providing an overview of relevant theoretical frameworks, the newest international research, and contributions to promising practices. Major themes are the elaboration of developmentally appropriate approaches to intervention and advocacy for the optimal conditions for the provision of extended services well into emerging adulthood and beyond.


Author(s):  
Xiaoyuan Shang ◽  
Karen R. Fisher

This chapter discusses how, in addition to formal foster care in families, some state child welfare institutions also provide alternative care in family groups with a paid house mother on the site of the institution. This type of alternative care raises questions about whether this grouping is sufficient to simulate the benefits of family based care in relation to outcomes for children when they are growing up, and the impact on their transition to adulthood. The chapter looks at the experiences of seven young people in one city who had lived in this arrangement. It considers the differences for these young people during their childhood and as they prepared for possibilities to leave the family group care in the institution.


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