“…The interviews involved the following steps: 1) the participants firstly declared whether they saw themselves as successful or unsuccessful students; 2) then they were encouraged to recognize in themselves different ways of thinking about their school success, different ways in which they perceived their personal experiences of school success; 3) leading from the standpoint of polyphony, the researchers encouraged the students to perceive those various viewpoints as metaphoric voices, which could be in different mutual relationships; 4) then followed the elicitation of voices and their graphic presentation, whereby the students named the voices and wrote down short narratives which reflected the position of each one; 5) further on, the participants were encouraged to "recognize" in some of their thoughts and messages the voices of significant others, such as those of their parents, teachers, peers, and similar, and to complement their communities of selves with them; 6) finally, the participants described the relationships between the elicited voices taking into consideration the dimensions of domination versus marginalization and cooperation versus conflict. The laddering technique (Hinkle, 1965;Walker & Crittenden, 2012) was used in the interviews to map personal constructs as semantic bipolar dimensions through which the participants conceptualized opposing experiences regarding school success. The interviews lasted around one hour and audio recordings were made with the participants' approval.…”