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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Sandretto, Susan – Journal of LGBT Youth, 2018
Teachers are obligated to construct an environment inclusive of "all" students. This article argues critical literacy with queer intent can offer strategies to expose normative constructions of gender and sexuality that can exclude some students. I initiate the case with a queer theory analysis of a description of critical literacy…
Descriptors: Critical Literacy, Foreign Countries, Social Theories, Gender Issues
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Devine, Nesta – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2014
In this article, Nesta Devine responds to Jonathan Boston's article "Child Poverty in New Zealand: Why It Matters and How It Can Be Reduced" ("Educational Philosophy and Theory," v46 n9 p995-999, 2014). Devine wishes to consider Boston's position from two angles: one is to rehearse the point that these statistics are an…
Descriptors: Poverty, Foreign Countries, Human Capital, Social Theories
Anthony, Glenda; Hunter, Roberta; Hunter, Jodie – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2016
Grouping children by achievement levels is a thriving practice in New Zealand primary school mathematics classrooms. In this paper we look at the impact of a formative intervention project--"Developing Communities of Mathematics Inquiry"--that required a whole-school shift to mixed achievement grouping. Engeström's Cultural Historical…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Elementary School Mathematics, Intervention
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Tulloch, Lynley – Open Review of Educational Research, 2015
Children are particularly vulnerable to structured inequalities in society. Building on the work of Erich Fromm (1900-1980), this article contends that modern (post)industrial capitalism corrupts the human capacity to operate in the "being mode"--that is, in altruistic and compassionate ways. Rather, within the individualistic logic of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Critical Theory, Humanism, Children
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Rasmussen, Mary Lou; Allen, Louisa – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2014
In a discussion of Deleuze's theorization of concepts, Todd May asks "what can a concept do with that which cannot be identified?" Or to put it another way, May writes--"A concept is a way of addressing the difference that lies beneath the identities we experience." This is not to say that identities, concepts, and experiences…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Feminism, Social Science Research, Social Attitudes
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Hargraves, Vicki – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2014
"Working theories" are described as one of the two principal outcomes of Te Whariki, the early childhood curriculum in Aotearoa New Zealand. Despite its prominence as a curricular outcome, the theoretical positioning of the concept of working theory remains relatively undebated, with researchers readily attributing the term to a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Curriculum, Theories
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Stuart, Margaret – Open Review of Educational Research, 2014
This article offers a case-study of specific shifts in the view of state responsibility for the less fortunate in Aotearoa, New Zealand. Current welfare policy aims to reduce the state benefits of parents if they do enrol their preschool children in an early childhood centre. I undertake a genealogical investigation and suggest that state…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Preschool Children, Low Income Students
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Priestley, Mark – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2011
In the face of what has been characterised by some as a "crisis" in curriculum--an apparent decline of some aspects of curriculum studies combined with the emergence of new types of national curricula which downgrade knowledge--some writers have been arguing for the use of realist theory to address these issues. This article offers a…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Realism, Curriculum Research, Social Theories
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Harding, Jessica F.; Sibley, Chris G.; Robertson, Andrew – Social Indicators Research, 2011
New Zealand (NZ) Europeans show a unique implicit bicultural effect, with research using the Implicit Association Test consistently showing that they associate Maori (the Indigenous peoples) and their own (dominant/advantaged majority) group as equally representative of the nation. We replicated and extended this NZ = bicultural effect in a small…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Differences, Whites, Social Indicators
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Fitzpatrick, Katie – Policy Futures in Education, 2011
Assumptions and interventions about the so-called "obesity epidemic" pervade health and physical education classrooms and national policy agendas in New Zealand, as they do elsewhere in the Western world. In contrast, critical scholars in these subjects advocate an active deconstruction of the tenets and presumptions underpinning public…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Obesity, Physical Activities, Ethnography
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Youngs, Howard – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2009
It is time to situate distributed leadership as a critical conceptualisation of school leadership; its popularisation has generally preceded conceptual and empirical development. Over the last 10 years distributed leadership has often been presented as a new construct of school leadership, though critique against education policy reforms and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Power Structure, Participative Decision Making, Educational Change
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Mackey, Julie; Evans, Terry – International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning, 2011
The article explores the complementary connections between communities of practice and the ways in which individuals orchestrate their engagement with others to further their professional learning. It does so by reporting on part of a research project conducted in New Zealand on teachers' online professional learning in a university graduate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Communities of Practice, Constructivism (Learning), Social Theories
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Tharmaseelan, Nithiyaluxmy – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2008
This study addressed career transitions in view of new environments along with the mobility of individuals across cultural territories. It paid attention to various adjustments individuals can make in their career in relation to their new environment and analysed those adjustment modes in relation to Nicholson's theory of work role transitions.…
Descriptors: Migrants, Adjustment (to Environment), Career Development, Occupational Clusters
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Middleton, Sue – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2007
The year 1998 marked 50 years of doctoral study in New Zealand, and in 1999 I embarked on a history of Ph.D. theses in Education. Influenced by Foucaultian genealogy, this employed a fusion of bibliographic, archival and life-history interview methods. One hundred and eighty-three Education theses were identified and 57 of these graduates…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Theories, Doctoral Dissertations, Place of Residence
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Jiang, Xiaoping – Intercultural Education, 2006
This paper investigates intercultural communication and its significance to higher education. The paper briefly discusses culture, subculture and the meeting of cultures. It also provides a brief survey of developments in intercultural communication research. With reference to New Zealand, the paper further points to some limitations of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Communication Research, Intercultural Communication
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