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Jerome, Lee; Kisby, Ben – Critical Studies in Education, 2022
This article examines a number of teaching resources produced by the Jubilee Centre for Character and Virtues, the leading centre for character education in the UK, in the light of the claim advanced by Kristján Kristjánsson, the centre's deputy director, that various criticisms of character education are best regarded as 'myths'. The analysis…
Descriptors: Values Education, Teaching Methods, Neoliberalism, Educational Resources
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Jerome, Lee; Elwick, Alex – Oxford Review of Education, 2020
Government advice in relation to 'countering violent extremism' (CVE) in English schools requires teachers to identify students 'at risk' of radicalisation whilst also encouraging them to facilitate open classroom discussions of controversial issues. Data collected in seven schools illustrate how teachers are responding to this advice and…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Terrorism, Foreign Countries, Crime Prevention
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Elwick, Alex; Jerome, Lee – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2019
Since the introduction of the Prevent duty across the UK, schools have had to balance the need to fulfil their responsibilities under the duty -- often understood to include monitoring and surveillance -- with their ultimate purpose to educate their students. This positions teachers within a particular set of tensions about their own beliefs about…
Descriptors: School Safety, Prevention, Teacher Responsibility, Teacher Role
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Jerome, Lee; Elwick, Alex – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2019
School responses to the Prevent agenda have tended to focus primarily on 'safeguarding' approaches, which essentially perceive some young people as being 'at risk' and potentially as presenting a risk to others. In this article, we consider evidence from secondary school students who experienced a curriculum project on terrorism, extremism and…
Descriptors: Terrorism, National Security, Antisocial Behavior, At Risk Persons
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Hayward, Jeremy; Jerome, Lee – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2010
Almost a decade ago, the new subject of citizenship was created in the English National Curriculum and several universities were funded to train teachers in this new subject. This presented a rare challenge, namely how to train people to teach a subject that did not exist in schools, and in which they were unlikely to have a specialist degree. In…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Citizenship, Citizenship Education
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Starkey, Hugh; Akar, Bassel; Jerome, Lee – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2014
This article addresses issues of methodology and ethical reflexivity when attempting to investigate the opinions of young people. Drawing specifically on three studies of young people's understandings of citizenship and their views on topical issues, two from England and one from Lebanon, the authors present ways in which the ethical and practical…
Descriptors: Ethics, Teaching Methods, Educational Research, Teacher Educators
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Jerome, Lee; Algarra, Bhavini – Curriculum Journal, 2005
This article is based on the authors' reflections on observations and interviews with students and staff involved in a debate competition in London secondary schools. Taking the data we collected as our starting point, we seek to draw on research from a range of perspectives, including political education, political philosophy and debate as a…
Descriptors: Debate, Teaching Methods, Secondary Education, Citizenship Education