1471 students leaving compulsory school in 1992 (50 percent form lower secondary
schoools) have participated in a longitudinal study that lasted 15 years until
2007. One main objective of the study was to identify and document logics and
strategies of vocational choice and career entry. In addition, the study captured
individual developments related to educational and vocational environments.
The study design facilitated an intense and sustainable processing of the data
as well as of the study’s topics (education, work, values, cultural issues,
socio-demographic effects, level of satisfaction etc.). The longitudinal study
revealed comprehensive data and information that yielded in several publications.
The study highlights that today’s 30 years old young adults are predominantly
satisfied with their lives, that they feel to have received a good education
and that they are integrated into the world of employment. Crucial values for
them are good relations to their family and to friends, leisure activities and
their work. They also state to trust in the work of teachers, scientists and
the police, a little less in the work of churches, political parties and politicians.
The
data demonstrates an image of a generation with mostly non-linear and disrupted
individual biographies, caused by changes in education, difficulties to find
a job, decrease of wage or wrong or problematic vocational choices.
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