Ally Bull and Jane Gilbert
This report looks at the impact of student mobility on both students and schools. It is part of a wider project on the effects of mobility on communities.
This is the second phase of the study and backs up the preliminary findings, released in late 2005, which found no statistically significant differences between the students who moved frequently and those who were less mobile. The researchers argue that student mobility is a problem for schools because of schools’ view of themselves as a family. When students leave and new ones arrive, the school family’s sense of cohesion is upset.
Funded by the Centre for Research, Evaluation, and Social Assessment, 2007
Read the media release [pdf file, 84 KB] Read the background paper [pdf file, 88 KB] Download the full text of the Student movement and schools report [3.07 MB pdf] |