Educational Continuity
entry by Julie M. Marx, Global Family Expert at Expat Valley
The degree to which a child’s academic progression remains coherent and uninterrupted across transitions between schools, curricula, or educational systems resulting from international relocation. Disruptions to educational continuity are among the most frequently cited practical concerns of internationally mobile families.
Comparable terms
Academic continuity (education — equivalent) · Curricular continuity (education — focuses on curriculum alignment specifically) · Educational stability (education, counseling — broader; includes social and emotional dimensions) · School transition management (destination services, HR — operational framing)
Why this matters
Educational continuity is one of the top concerns for globally mobile parents. Breaks can derail qualifications, confidence, and future options. Making it explicit helps families, schools, and employers coordinate timing and type of moves.
Cross-references
IB (Education); International Curriculum (Education); School Transition (Education); SEN/SEND (Education); Boarding School (Education). The IB and international curriculum entries describe the structural mechanisms most directly designed to provide educational continuity; school transition documents the human process through which continuity is disrupted and must be rebuilt at each move. SEN/SEND describes the population for whom continuity breaks are most consequential and least well-managed; boarding school documents the specific trade-off between curricular continuity and family separation that internationally mobile families frequently navigate.
Sources
Pollock, D.C., Van Reken, R.E., & Pollock, M.V. (2017). Third Culture Kids: Growing Up Among Worlds (3rd ed.). Nicholas Brealey Publishing. Educational continuity and transition are treated throughout, particularly in relation to repeated school changes.
For research specific to school transitions in mobile populations, see: Fail, H., Thompson, J., & Walker, G. (2004). Belonging, identity and Third Culture Kids. Journal of Research in International Education, 3(3), 319–338.
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