TY - JOUR
T1 - The impact of school experiences and relationships on high school students’ activism
T2 - Support, constraints and tensions
AU - Assan, Thalia Thereza
AU - Levy, Gal
AU - Massalha, Mohammad
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - This article responds to the global rise in activism led by high school-aged youth by asking: How do students perceive high schools as arenas for socialisation into political activism? Although non-religious Jewish state schools in Israel typically avoid encouraging political engagement, high school students were prominently involved in the 2023 Protest Movement against the government’s “judicial reform”, with some schools supporting and even initiating student protests. Drawing on interviews with high school activist students, the article investigates how and under what conditions schools facilitate political engagement. Our findings show that certain schools fostered students’ activism implicitly or explicitly — for example, through extra-curricular teaching about democracy, excusing protest-related absences, and other practices. Participants, however, described these schools as atypical. Indeed, these schools mostly serve higher socioeconomic communities closely identified with the protest milieu. Participants also pointed to clear limits of institutional support, such as barring criticism of politicians or the Occupation. Furthermore, while most research on political socialisation into activism and education for citizenship emphasises the role of adults, our findings highlight the importance of school peers. Activists engaged in meaningful political dialogue with classmates and encouraged their participation, yet these interactions also produced conflicts and strained relationships. This paper therefore draws attention to the informal, relational aspects of schooling that shape youth activism and calls on scholars, educators, and policymakers to recognise students’ political agency, their present stakes in society, and the ways political socialisation is facilitated by youth through their interactions with both school staff and peers.
AB - This article responds to the global rise in activism led by high school-aged youth by asking: How do students perceive high schools as arenas for socialisation into political activism? Although non-religious Jewish state schools in Israel typically avoid encouraging political engagement, high school students were prominently involved in the 2023 Protest Movement against the government’s “judicial reform”, with some schools supporting and even initiating student protests. Drawing on interviews with high school activist students, the article investigates how and under what conditions schools facilitate political engagement. Our findings show that certain schools fostered students’ activism implicitly or explicitly — for example, through extra-curricular teaching about democracy, excusing protest-related absences, and other practices. Participants, however, described these schools as atypical. Indeed, these schools mostly serve higher socioeconomic communities closely identified with the protest milieu. Participants also pointed to clear limits of institutional support, such as barring criticism of politicians or the Occupation. Furthermore, while most research on political socialisation into activism and education for citizenship emphasises the role of adults, our findings highlight the importance of school peers. Activists engaged in meaningful political dialogue with classmates and encouraged their participation, yet these interactions also produced conflicts and strained relationships. This paper therefore draws attention to the informal, relational aspects of schooling that shape youth activism and calls on scholars, educators, and policymakers to recognise students’ political agency, their present stakes in society, and the ways political socialisation is facilitated by youth through their interactions with both school staff and peers.
KW - Citizenship education
KW - High school
KW - Peer relationships
KW - Political socialisation
KW - Protest movement
KW - Student activism
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105025893821
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijer.2025.102913
DO - 10.1016/j.ijer.2025.102913
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AN - SCOPUS:105025893821
SN - 0883-0355
VL - 136
JO - International Journal of Educational Research
JF - International Journal of Educational Research
M1 - 102913
ER -