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Carol Mutch – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
Schools can be permanently closed for many reasons -- economic rationalisation, post-disaster relocations, population decline or educational failure. Research on permanent school closures reports mostly negative and long-lasting consequences, not just for the school's staff and students, but for the local community. After the 2010/2011 Canterbury…
Descriptors: School Closing, Emergency Programs, Natural Disasters, Foreign Countries
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Annelies Kamp – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2024
This article takes up an ANTian sensibility to explore the enactment of a policy for educational collaboration in one region in the South Island of Aotearoa New Zealand (New Zealand). The case offers potential for considering the benefits of a sociology of associations (Latour 2005/2007): a Treaty-based bicultural nation, school atomisation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Educational Change, Seismology
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Clum, Katie; Ebersole, Liz; Wicks, David; Shea, Munyi – Online Learning, 2022
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 and the ensuing public health crisis, thousands of higher education institutions (HEIs) worldwide have had to grapple with rapid pivots to emergency remote online learning modalities with relatively little time to prepare, and the need to maintain these modalities continues to extend longer than most…
Descriptors: Online Courses, COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing
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Wake, Alexandra; Smith, Erin; Ricketson, Matthew – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 2023
Australia and New Zealand have reputations as countries prone to catastrophic and frequent natural and man-made disasters. Therefore, it is no surprise that antipodean academics want trauma-informed education for their journalism students. This study presents the Australian-New Zealand results of a 2021 survey exploring educators' attitudes toward…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, College Faculty, Trauma, Journalism Education
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Collings, David A.; Gerrard, Juliet A.; Garrill, Ashley – Journal of Biological Education, 2019
While most studies concerning how Universities respond to crises are based on simulations, we describe how the University of Canterbury responded to a real crisis, a series of major seismic events that caused significant disruption in 2010/2011. We focus on a single, first-year undergraduate biology course in which we modified our teaching…
Descriptors: Biology, Cytology, Biochemistry, College Freshmen
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Heinemann, Jack A.; Goldstien, Sharyn – Journal of Biological Education, 2022
Institution-crippling earthquakes limited teaching contact hours and range of teaching environments. New ways became needed to achieve the same learning outcomes in less time. Following that disaster, new methods based on active and test-enhanced learning were introduced into two undergraduate molecular biology courses. The courses had a mixture…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Undergraduate Students, Molecular Biology, Science Instruction
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Bateman, Amanda; Robinson, Paula – Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education, 2020
Even though natural disasters are becoming increasingly prevalent, research investigating and offering practical advice to teachers around caring for children during and after an earthquake event is limited. This article aims to provide unique insight from early childhood teachers into a real-life experience of caring for children at their early…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Natural Disasters, Early Childhood Teachers, Teaching Experience
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Mutch, Carol; Latai, Leua – Pastoral Care in Education, 2019
Schools regularly find themselves dealing with the aftermath of family, community and national tragedies. In this article, two university-based educators share their experiences of working with schools to engage children in arts-based activities to support the processing of the traumatic events they endured. In both cases, children in local…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Art Activities, Trauma, Natural Disasters
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Dombroski, Kelly; Watkins, Alison F.; Fitt, Helen; Frater, Jillian; Banwell, Karen; Mackenzie, Kierin; Mutambo, Levi; Hawke, Kerryn; Persendt, Frans; Turkovic, Jasna; Ko, Su Young; Hart, Deirdre – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2018
Completing a PhD is difficult. Add a major earthquake sequence and general stress levels become much higher. Caring for some of the nonacademic needs of doctoral scholars in this environment becomes critical to their scholarly success. Yet academic supervisors, who are in the same challenging environment, may already be stretched to capacity. How…
Descriptors: Geography, Geography Instruction, Doctoral Programs, Supervision
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Rivera-Muñoz, Graciela; Howden-Chapman, Philippa – Health Education & Behavior, 2020
Background: This project is a case study of postdisaster housing recovery in Christchurch, New Zealand, after the Canterbury earthquakes of 2010 and 2011. Aims: In this qualitative study, we analyzed the statutory framework governing the process of postdisaster housing recovery and its impact on local democracy. We also explored the role of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Natural Disasters, Housing, Community Role
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Suárez-Orozco, Marcelo M. – Intercultural Education, 2020
In the modern era migrations are complex, multi-determined and elude vulgar mechanistic models of causality. Migrations unfold in complex ecologies involving broad features of the state -- borders, demography, economy, and society. Furthermore, historical relationships, cultural affinities, political interests, and the environment itself continue…
Descriptors: Immigration, Refugees, Global Approach, Climate
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Gampell, Anthony; Gaillard, J. C.; Parsons, Meg; Le Dé, Loïc – Journal of Geography, 2020
Scholars, practitioners and educators propose video games as innovative teaching methods to engage geography students. A methodological framework, informed by constructivist learning theory, explored the ability of 'serious' disaster video games to foster student participation in learning within four New Zealand schools. The findings indicate the…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Video Games, Natural Disasters, Emergency Programs
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Collings, David; Garrill, Ashley; Johnston, Lucy – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2018
Universities have a long-established tradition of granting students special consideration when circumstances beyond their control negatively affect performance in assessments. Typically, such situations affect only one student (e.g. medical emergencies) but we consider the impact of a natural disaster that led to all students being eligible for…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Foreign Countries, College Students, Testing Accommodations
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Rickson, Daphne; Legg, Robert; Reynolds, Dianna – New Zealand Journal of Teachers' Work, 2018
Since the 2010-2011 Christchurch earthquakes staff and learners at Waitakiri School have been participating in daily singing specifically to promote wellbeing, and wellbeing scores have remained high. Facilitation of the singing involved the creation of "no pressure", democratic and participatory conditions, with teachers specifically…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Singing, Well Being, Music Education
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Ronoh, Steve; Gaillard, J. C.; Marlowe, Jay – Policy Futures in Education, 2017
Every year, worldwide, disasters affect approximately seven million children with disabilities, highlighting their potential vulnerability. Although there is a growing move internationally to promote the rights of children with disabilities, they still receive little attention from disaster risk reduction (DRR) researchers and policy makers. They…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Risk, Correlation, Disadvantaged
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