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Showing 1 to 15 of 49 results Save | Export
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Angel Chan; Jenny Ritchie – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
This paper performs a critical qualitative inquiry exploring supervision pedagogies utilising duoethnography as both methodology and conceptual framing. We begin the inquiry by reflecting upon our social and cultural identities and our evolving supervisor/supervisee-colleague-friend relationship. Our critical dialogue then shifts to scrutinising…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Supervisors, Supervisory Methods, Supervisor Supervisee Relationship
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Rhonda Povey; Michelle Trudgett; Susan Page; Stacey Kim Coates – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
Indigenous leaders in higher education are restive, disaffected, and dissatisfied with the slow gyrations of change. Using Interest Convergence Theory, this paper will unravel the constraints inherent in institutional reform that delimit the influence of Indigenous senior leaders in the sector. Positioned amidst the burgeoning impact of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Personnel, Higher Education
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Helen Sara Farley; James Mehigan – Open Praxis, 2024
This article documents endeavours to establish a higher education program for incarcerated learners in Aotearoa New Zealand. Presently, prisoners serving lengthy sentences in the country are precluded from obtaining a degree while in custody, which is in stark contrast to other jurisdictions with comparable penal systems. This study examines the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Correctional Education, Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Institutions
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Healey, Nigel Martin – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2023
Post-pandemic, there is a growing recognition that higher education needs to take a more proactive role in addressing the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals -- the 17 goals for 2030 that aim to balance global economic development with the need to tackle climate change and protect our natural ecosystems. This change of focus has profound…
Descriptors: Higher Education, International Cooperation, Institutional Cooperation, Social Justice
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Joanne Hill; J. L. Walton-Fisette; M. Flemons; R. Philpot; S. Sutherland; S. Phillips; S. B. Flory; A. Ovens – Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 2024
Background: The imperative for social justice in education means that pre-service teachers should learn how to teach for and about social justice, including pedagogical and content knowledge. Understanding how physical education (PE) pre-service teachers and teacher educators construct and develop their knowledge of social justice pedagogies and…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Knowledge Level, Physical Education Teachers, Teacher Educators
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Elspeth Tilley – Research in Drama Education, 2024
This article advances transdisciplinarity as a potentially useful applied theatre theory and method. It maps the ways transdisciplinary research principles informed and framed an applied theatre project and suggests that making applied theatre explicit rather than implicit as a transdisciplinary research process may help practitioners…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Foreign Countries, Research Methodology, Theater Arts
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Shanee Barraclough – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2024
Processes of identity formation have long been a consideration for the field of counselling. Undertaking counselling education can be a fraught time for student counsellors, with increased anxiety and stress, and educators and researchers need to better grasp the complexities inherent in the development of new counsellors. This paper reviews…
Descriptors: Counselor Training, Professional Identity, Anxiety, Stress Variables
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Lynette Pretorius – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2024
There is an increasing focus on collecting more diverse demographic data from research participants but standard methodological approaches still hinder such efforts. This paper addresses the need for methodological improvements by advocating for the inclusion of self-written diversity statements in demographic surveys as a form of epistemic…
Descriptors: Position Papers, Intersectionality, Self Concept, Social Justice
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Kerry Shephard – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
Universities in Aotearoa New Zealand are increasingly espousing a democratic ideology that has much in common with some social justice elements of the internationally agreed Sustainable Development Goals. This trend, however, also relates to the more international 'universal' characterisation proposed by Trow in 1973 in the context of university…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Professionalism, Social Justice, Democracy
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Kamenarac, Olivera – Early Childhood Folio, 2021
The article opens a conversation about specificities and complexities of the positioning and identity constructions of early childhood (ECE) preservice teachers within initial teacher education (ITE) spaces and places. It draws on a study on if/how ITE can support preservice teachers to build a critical mentality to engage with robust professional…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Professional Identity, Preservice Teacher Education, Early Childhood Education
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Ashley G. Lucas; Andrea Milligan; Sondra Bacharach – Democracy & Education, 2024
This article examines the democratic hopes for the community of philosophical inquiry (CPI), a mode of deliberative discussion, when social justice is both the topic and the goal of discussion. It shares insights from a CPI that was used as an intersubjective research method (Golding, 2015) to enable the authors to interrogate their assumptions…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Communities of Practice, Inquiry, Democracy
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Came, H.A.; Warbrick, I.; Doole, C.; Hotere-Barnes, A.; Sessa, M. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2020
Te Tiriti o Waitangi [te Tiriti] articulates the relationship between the government and Maori [Indigenous New Zealanders]. Universities have a responsibility to prepare graduates to work with te Tiriti. The literature on teaching te Tiriti is sparse. In this conceptual paper, we propose "he hokinga ki te mauri" [a return to vibrancy] as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Pacific Islanders, Indigenous Populations, Public Health
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Lunn Brownlee, Jo; Bourke, Terri; Rowan, Leonie; Ryan, Mary; Churchward, Peter; Walker, Sue; L'Estrange, Lyra; Berge, Anita; Johansson, Eva – British Educational Research Journal, 2022
Recent research points to the importance of teacher educators teaching "for" diversity in initial teacher education programmes. Teaching "for" diversity is an approach to teacher education in which an understanding of specialist literature and a focus on critical thinking supports a social justice agenda as opposed to merely…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Diversity, Epistemology, Teacher Educators
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Thomas, Amanda; Stupples, Polly; Kiddle, Rebecca; Hall, Meegan; Palomino-Schalscha, Marcela – Power and Education, 2019
Discussions around civic engagement are now commonplace in Aotearoa New Zealand universities, albeit to varying degrees of intensity. The results of these discussions are realised in strategic plans, curricular development and the commitments of individual academics to engage with the world outside the university. This article explores the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Citizen Participation, Neoliberalism, College Students
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Crawford-Garrett, Katherine – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2020
Drawing on data from a phenomenological research study of Ako Matatupu/TeachFirst New Zealand (TFNZ), an affiliate of Teach for All, this article considers how differently positioned actors within New Zealand theorize the appeal of TFNZ as opposed to university-based pathways. Findings suggest that a multiplicity of factors influence the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Alternative Teacher Certification, Equal Education
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