6 research outputs found

    Educational activities of secondary school students in Serbia: A time-diary analysis

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    The aim of this study was to determine the time allocation of various educational activities within the structure of a typical day of Serbian secondary school students, and whether there were significant differences in this respect depending on their socio-demographic characteristics. The 24-hour time diary method was applied: the subjects described chronologically, at half-hourly intervals, their activities in one weekday an done weekend day. The research was conducted on a sample of 922 secondary school students, Structured by region, age and type of school. The analysis revealed that on weekdays students spent about 5 hours in school. In work activities outside school they spent almost 2 hours, out of which the largest part in learning (81 minutes), and significantly less in housework (23 minutes) and economically productive work (7 minutes). From a total of5 hours and22 minutes of free time, only 5 minutes were devoted to organized extracurricular activities. Significant differences were obtained with regard to students’ gender, type of school, and level of parents’ education. When these results are compared with the data from other countries, it is shown that secondary school students in Serbia, compared to the U.S., spend more time in learning, and significantly less in economically productive work and house­work, much like the youth in European countries. A very low proportion of extracurricular activities shows that school learning is almost the only context of developing educational competencies. The implications of these findings are discussed from the perspective of positive youth development. [Projekat Ministarstva nauke Republike Srbije: Identifikacija, merenje i razvoj kognitivnih i emocionalnih kompetencija važnih društvu orijentisanom na evropske integracije

    SUnStAR IO1: Literature Review and Conceptualization

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    This report includes: a brief description of the access process to Higher Education among partners' countries (Germany, Greece, Portugal and Serbia); the definition of drop-out in each country, how it is measured and reports on drop-out; a literature review on the factors linked to drop-out and to successful adaptation to higher education and a brief conceptualisation of the SUnStAR project as a possible response to students' intention of dropping-out
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