- Author:
Olha Telna
- E-mail:
olga_tilna@ukr.net
- Institution:
Municipal Establishment” Kharkiv Humanitarian-Pedagogical Academy” of the Kharkiv Regional Council
- Author:
Yevhenii Klopota
- E-mail:
klopota-ea@ukr.net
- Institution:
Zaporizhzhya National University
- Author:
Olha Klopota
- E-mail:
oa-klopota@ukr.net
- Institution:
Khortytska National Educational Rehabilitation Academy
- Author:
Olena Okolovych
- E-mail:
dnz144zp@gmail.com
- Institution:
Zaporizhzhya National University, Zaporizhzhya
- Year of publication:
2021
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
225-235
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/tner.21.64.2.18
- PDF:
tner/202102/tner6418.pdf
Social and political transformations inevitably cause changes in people’s mindsets and result in conversion of a national educational system. Ukraine, as a post soviet country, is still trying to put away its totalitarian past and adopt the latest human rights policies that have been successfully functioning in the “developed” world for several decades. This study evaluates the quality of inclusive education in Ukraine, specifically focusing on services provided to families of students with disabilities whose views and opinions are often neglected by governmental officials responsible for creating inclusive environments.
- Author:
Izabela Kapsa
- Institution:
Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz
- Author:
Natasza Lubik-Reczek
- Institution:
Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań
- Author:
Jaroslav Ušiak
- Institution:
Matej Bel University in Banská Bystrica
- Year of publication:
2022
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
270-287
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/athena.2022.75.16
- PDF:
apsp/75/apsp7516.pdf
In the aftermath of the Russia’s annexation of Crimea and the outburst of conflict in the eastern part of Ukraine in 2014, thousands of Ukrainian migrants came to Poland. Many of them settled down and found jobs. On the onset of war in 2022, Ukrainian students were the most populous group among foreigners at Polish universities. The war in their home country had an impact on their families and friends. Young Poles, who made friends with Ukrainian students, take the war personally. Due to its unique nature, the perception of the conflict among young people has attracted the authors’ research interest. Additionally, it seems to be an added value when we compare attitudes of Polish students with those of Slovakian ones, as the latter do not share the same experience. The main goal of this article is to analyse opinions about the war in Ukraine among students studying in Poland and Slovakia, and their attitudes and behaviours towards refugees expressed online and offline. Results presented in the article have been taken from a questionnaire survey involving a group of 459 students. The survey took place in Spring 2022. The quantitative analysis of data is designed to provide answers to the following research questions: What sources of information about the war do young people use? What do young people think about the war in Ukraine, its causes and consequences? What forms of refugee-oriented activity do young people resort to? Have students encountered any form of resentment towards particular nationality groups in connection with the outbreak of the war?