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Deirdre Raftery; Catriona Delaney – Irish Educational Studies, 2024
This article discusses oral history sources that give insight into how a specific group of teaching sisters (also known as nuns or women religious) reflect on their primary identity as vowed women, and their professional identity as teachers. Their identity was bound up with the fact that they had taken religious vows, and entered a congregation…
Descriptors: Nuns, Catholic Educators, Religious Education, Educational History
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Brendan Walsh – History of Education, 2024
Between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries, various charitable, endowed or "free" schools were established in Ireland with a view to providing schooling, initially for children of primary and later secondary school age, the latter being the subject of this article. Sometimes these schools were state initiatives, such as the parish…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Endowment Funds, Educational Finance, Educational History
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Brendan Walsh – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
Discussions bearing upon the provision of intermediate (post-primary) schooling in Ireland in the nineteenth century were inextricably interwoven with debates regarding Catholic autonomy there. The establishment, in 1878, of the intermediate system, cannot be understood outside the context of Irish Catholic grievances, imagined or otherwise. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Secondary Schools, Catholic Schools
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Judith Harford; Brian Fleming; Áine Hyland – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
2022 marks one hundred years since the foundation of the Irish State, and thus an appropriate time in which to reflect on how educational policy has shaped the nation over the course of a century. This article examines one hundred years of education policy through an equality lens, asking how the concept of educational equality has been…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational History, Equal Education, Educational Change
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Breda McTaggart – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
Regional Technical Colleges, later Institutes of Technology, were developed just over fifty years ago in response to a perceived gap in knowledge, skills, and competencies required to promote market growth and success (Thorn, 2018). It was envisaged that this change to Ireland's higher education landscape would be capable of continuing adaptation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Technical Institutes, Educational History
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Patricia McGrath – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2024
This paper examined the impact of the 2017 Recognition of Irish Travellers as an Ethnic Minority through the lens of Fraser's model of justice. A number of interviews were held with a community development worker, a Traveller support worker, a Traveller education officer and three groups of Traveller women in relation to the impact of the…
Descriptors: Minority Group Students, Social Discrimination, Foreign Countries, Ethnic Groups
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Thomas Walsh; Noel Purdy – History of Education, 2025
A long tradition of both State and religious interest and support characterised provision for education on the island of Ireland from the 1700s. Following the partition of Ireland in the 1920s, the newly created political entities of the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland forged separate and distinct education policy trajectories that largely…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational History, Public Officials, Religious Factors
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Thomas Walsh – History of Education, 2024
By the time political independence was achieved in the 1920s in Ireland, its national education system over the previous century had been underpinned by imperial ideology and values. In the early 1920s, curriculum planning was influenced by the post-revolutionary and post-war context and, unsurprisingly, placed an emphasis on building nationhood…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Curriculum, Educational History, Ideology