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Martin, Jane – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2020
This article re-visits contestation and critique over the nationwide introduction of comprehensive secondary schools in post-war England. In so doing, it considers the contribution of scholar-activist Caroline Benn (1926--2000) and a network of progressive educators who were challenging ideas about fixed ability or potential and aspiring to build…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational History, Politics of Education, Educational Policy
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Martin, Jane – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2019
England's premier league of public schools, educating less than three thousand boys, started life in medieval times as charity schools for the poor. Closely tied to the Church, they found favour as institutions of social mobility. By the turn of the eighteenth century, vandalism and violence were endemic in many; misrule and abuses so common that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Schools, Public Schools, Public Education
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Benn, Melissa; Martin, Jane – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2017
FORUM invited Melissa Benn and Jane Martin to interview Clyde Chitty, a brilliant and effective classroom and university teacher, one of the most well-known advocates of comprehensive education, a long-standing member of FORUM's editorial board, and for two decades co-editor of the publication. It was Michael Armstrong who called him 'the patron…
Descriptors: Secondary Education, Advocacy, Teacher Researchers, Transformative Learning
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Martin, Jane – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2015
This article is based on an inaugural professorial lecture given by Jane Martin at the University of Birmingham on 3 December 2014. It grew out of research in progress on the life and work of the leading educational reformer, Caroline Benn, wife of one of the most prominent and controversial post-war socialists in Britain, Tony Benn.
Descriptors: Profiles, Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational Quality
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Martin, Jane – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2013
In educational politics, Caroline Benn (1926-2000) played a leading role in the British comprehensive reform. Wife of one of the most prominent post-war socialists in Britain, the aim is to use Caroline's long campaign alongside teachers, trade unions, parents, progressive academics and activists as a starting point with which to explore a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational History, Politics of Education
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Martin, Jane – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2014
Joan Simon (née Peel, 1915-2005) was the life-long partner of Brian Simon who helped launch FORUM in September 1958. Like Brian, she embraced a Communist outlook and engagement in the area of education. Unlike Brian, she practiced the historian's craft outside the male academic hierarchy. Based on newly available personal papers this study…
Descriptors: Womens Studies, Females, Social Action, Scholarship
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Martin, Jane – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2012
The Inner London education authority was a notable example of a radical and powerful local government body from which the fight for the comprehensive principle in English secondary education emerged. Building on previous work of women's contribution to state education in London, this articles focuses on Anglo-Jewish educator activists who helped…
Descriptors: Jews, Siblings, Local Government, Secondary Education
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Martin, Jane – History of Education, 2012
At the time I began work in university, I entered a world which was leisured, privileged and patriarchal, in the United Kingdom at least...I came from a world in which only 3% of the population aspired to university. I belonged to a world in which, having got where I was through the eleven-plus and "A" levels, there was almost a sense…
Descriptors: Educational History, Foreign Countries, Womens Education, Autobiographies
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Martin, Jane – Gender and Education, 2013
This article explores feminist interventions in urban school politics. First, it argues that the female contribution was an essential component to politics and policy making in the 120-year period that London had a single education authority. Second, it suggests that these women politicians were advocates of a cultural praxis that involved…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Feminism, Gender Issues
Martin, Jane – Institute of Education - London, 2010
This lecture will revisit nineteenth and twentieth century education policy and politics in the light of the experiences and struggles of a (nowadays) virtually unknown educator activist. Beautiful, tireless, courageous and principled, socialist school teacher Mary Bridges Adams (1855-1939) gave up her life for the Cause. Encouraged by William…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Policy, Politics of Education, Activism
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Martin, Jane – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2008
The understanding of feminist pasts has been largely ignored in the history of education. This paper suggests that the historical sociology of Olive Banks provides fresh starting points for future research exploring the relationship between the history of social and political movements and a reassessment of contemporary and historical forms of…
Descriptors: Feminism, Social Systems, Educational History, Unions
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Martin, Jane – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2008
This article uses biographical approaches to recover the contribution of hitherto neglected figures in the history of education and the political history of the Left in London. Place and location are important since it is important to grasp the uniqueness of the London County Council within the framework of English local government and of the…
Descriptors: Politics, Females, Political Attitudes, Politics of Education
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Martin, Jane – History of Education, 2001
Reflects on the process of writing a biographical account about the female educator activist, Mary Bridges Adams. States the writing method should transpire in an analytical, linear, sociological narrative approach. Concludes that the past has been told from a masculine gendered narrative, not giving due attention to representing women. (MER)
Descriptors: Biographies, Educational History, Educational Research, Females
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Martin, Jane – History of Education, 2007
This paper forms part of a recent trend that aims to contribute to the writing of a more inclusive education history sensitive to the operation of gender. The author presents an analysis of educator activists in twentieth-century England that connects, rather than separates, the domains of education, labour history and politics. The paper also…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Change, Politics, State Schools
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Martin, Jane; Goodman, Joyce – History of Education, 2001
Discusses principles and educational change practices that led to educational progressivism in the second half of the twentieth century. Highlights elements of change and action expounded by educators who presented papers at the 2000 History of Education Society Conference (Birmingham, Alabama). (MER)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Environment, Educational History, Evaluation
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