Moroccan immigrant mothers’ experiences of Italian preschool institutions. A mixed-method study

Giulia Pastori, Irene Capelli, Alessandra Mussi, Ryanne Francot

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Being an immigrant mother demands both the redefinition of one’s identity as a woman and as a mother and a ‘double cultural mediation’ in children’s upbringing, between the culture of origin and that of the host country. Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) are key settings to supporting the wellbeing and the integration of immigrants. This contribution presents research conducted in Italy within the international ISOTIS project (www.isotis.org). Drawing on 114 structured interviews and 12 narrative-biographical interviews, this paper analyses how Moroccan mothers described their relationship with the ECEC system, teachers, and other parents. While survey data indicated that mothers who perceived discrimination were likely to participate less, the qualitative interviews showed that the ECEC settings were generally supportive and non-discriminatory. The ECEC services’ support resulted to be a turning point in the educational and social path of children and mothers themselves. The relationship with the teacher was depicted mostly as positive and meaningful, though the Italian parents’ network seemed harder to join, unveiling a segmented experience of social inclusion and exclusion between in and out of the school context. The findings may contribute to identifying factors facilitating or hindering immigrant parents’ full inclusion and participation in the community life.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)432-447
Number of pages16
JournalContemporary Social Science
Volume16
Issue number4
Early online date19 Jan 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Ryanne Francot started her PhD at the department of Development and Education in Diverse Societies of Utrecht University in 2017. She graduated Cum Laude from the Research Master Educational Sciences at Utrecht University (2015). Her main research interests concern educational partnerships between parents and (pre)schools in multicultural societies, and the home learning and language environment of multilingual families. She was involved in the ISOTIS project, funded by the EU (2016–2019), and is currently involved in several national projects focusing on early education in the Netherlands.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Academy of Social Sciences.

Keywords

  • Immigration and motherhood
  • educational inequalities
  • mixed-methods
  • narrative research
  • parent-school relationship and communication

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