Panagiota Gkofa’s paper ‘Greek Roma’s Educational Pathways: Mapping Factors Leading to Success’ is based on a qualitative study which examines how twenty Greek Roma who have entered higher education account for their educational success. The paper presents five key factors which influenced the participants’ uptake of higher education: a) family/home circumstances; b) school factors; c) community factors; d) locality; and e) individual issues and circumstances. It argues that supportive parenting and teacher mentoring made a significant difference to the participants’ educational success. The paper highlights some of the lessons from the Greek setting that may contribute towards addressing aspects related to Roma’s educational exclusion in the European context more widely.
Panagiota has recently passed her PhD viva/exam at the Department of Education and Professional Studies, King’s College London. Her research interests include social justice and inequalities, school exclusion and educational success, issues of class, race, gender, teachers’ development and school curriculum.
She will be attending ERC and ECER 2016 in Dublin in August.
Best Paper Award 2022
Submission deadline | 20 Nov 2022 |
Formative feedback given | 10 Feb 2023 |
Re-Submission deadline | 10 March 2023 |
Winner announced | early May 2023 |
EERJ presentation at ECER 2021
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Learn what Sofia Eleftheriadou, winner of the Best Paper Award 2019, found useful about the Emerging Researcher's Conference and the Best Paper Award on the EERA Blog.