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Alesech, Julie; Nayar, Shoba – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2021
Acceptance and belonging are essential to human growth and development. Currently, there is limited literature regarding acceptance and belonging in the field of special education and what facilitates this experience within the classroom. This research study asks: 'How do New Zealand school settings help or hinder a sense of acceptance and…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Peer Acceptance, Sense of Community, Foreign Countries
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John Jerrim; Philip D. Parker; Nikki Shure – Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice, 2023
This paper investigates the phenomena of overclaiming -- the propensity for individuals to claim more knowledge about an issue or topic than they really (or could possibly) do. Using Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) data from nine Anglophone countries and over 40,000 young people, we examine teenagers' propensity to claim…
Descriptors: International Assessment, Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Achievement Tests
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Baskerville, Delia – Pastoral Care in Education, 2021
Truancy is a longstanding, unresolved educational issue in countries where there are compulsory attendance policies. It represents a long-term cost to society in expenditure on health, well-being and incarceration. Previous research has focused on key demographic variables related to truancy, causal factors, interventions and a variety of…
Descriptors: Truancy, Peer Relationship, Attendance, School Policy
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Yeo, Lindsay; Riley, Tracy; Dharan, Vijaya – Australasian Journal of Gifted Education, 2018
Despite significant evidence indicating its effectiveness in meeting the needs of academically gifted students, academic acceleration is not a popular provision in New Zealand schools. The literature suggests that parents and educators fear that removing students from their same-aged peers will damage their social-emotional development, although…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Males, Student Experience, Secondary School Students
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Taylor, Jane; Townsend, Michael – Kairaranga, 2016
Most of us intrinsically understand the importance of friendship in our lives, and although we may not spend time considering it, we are aware it is beneficial to our happiness and well-being. As educators, we are often conscious of the friendships that exist in our classrooms, and are particularly mindful of those students who have difficulties…
Descriptors: Friendship, Children, Teacher Role, Well Being
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Page, Angela; Smith, Lisa F. – Issues in Educational Research, 2016
Both physical and relational aggression are characterised by the intent to harm another. Physical aggression includes direct behaviours such as hitting or kicking; relational aggression involves behaviours designed to damage relationships, such as excluding others, spreading rumours, and delivering threats and verbal abuse. This study extended…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Adolescents, Aggression
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Mortlock, Anita; Greenn Vanessa A.; Shuker, Mary Jane; Johnston, Michael – New Zealand Journal of Teachers' Work, 2014
Learning as part of a group on the mat is a common experience in children's early education and socialisation. Indeed, many classrooms would have a mat, to which the children are called in addition to chairs and tables (Poveda, 2001). Nonetheless, very little research exists about activity using the mat in junior classrooms either locally or…
Descriptors: Group Activities, Educational Equipment, Childrens Attitudes, Student Participation
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Charteris, Jennifer – New Zealand Journal of Teachers' Work, 2014
As more than just knowledge and skills, The New Zealand Curriculum (Ministry of Education, 2007) key competencies encompass dispositions for lifelong learning (OECD, 2005). A range of studies associate learner agency within the dispositions that are embedded in these key competencies (Carr, 2004; Hipkins, 2010; Hipkins & Boyd, 2011). Drawn…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, National Curriculum, Competency Based Education, Foreign Countries
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Marsh, Louise; McGee, Rob; Nada-Raja, Shyamala; Williams, Sheila – Journal of Adolescence, 2010
This descriptive study examined text and traditional bullying in New Zealand (NZ), and the relationship between text bullying and traditional bullying, and feeling unsafe at school. A self-report online survey assessed the frequency of bullying among 1169 15 year old secondary students, for five categories of bullying: text messages, rumors,…
Descriptors: Bullying, Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Computer Mediated Communication
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Ward, Angela – Kairaranga, 2010
Students learn best when they feel accepted, included and have positive social relationships. Over a period of two school years, four students with disabilities told their stories of the reality of their secondary school experiences including their experiences of friendships and social relationships in their classrooms and out-of-class settings.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Interpersonal Competence, Social Development, Barriers
Mitchell, David R. – 1981
Twenty-four moderately subnormal children (6 to 17 years old) were integrated onto a campus in New Zealand serving nonhandicapped 11 to 13 year olds. Although the disabled students received primary instruction from their own teachers, there were social, sports, and extracurricular opportunities for mixing. Analysis of questionnaires completed by…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Mainstreaming, Moderate Mental Retardation
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Priest, Simon – Journal of Experiential Education, 1998
To determine the role that physical aspects of corporate adventure training played in the acquisition of trust, 75 employees from a New Zealand computer company were assigned to one of two groups with varying levels of physical activity or to a control group. Trust was enhanced in the two experimental groups but more so in the more active group.…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Comparative Analysis, Corporate Education, Foreign Countries
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Holmes, Janet; Fillary, Rose – International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 2000
This study analyzed tape-recorded workplace small talk collected in New Zealand workplaces, including workplaces employing workers with intellectual disabilities. The topics, the distributional patterns, and the functions of small talk are described, and aspects of the management of small talk which may present problems to workers with…
Descriptors: Adults, Communication Skills, Employment, Foreign Countries
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Lloyd, Claire; Wilton, Keri; Townsend, Michael – Education and Training in Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, 2000
Six case studies investigated the outcomes of inclusive education on six children with mild mental retardation. In five cases, teachers had attempted to modify their programs to provide individualized instruction for high-risk children. All six children made very poor academic progress and five were poorly accepted socially by their classmates.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Case Studies, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
Rietveld, Christine – SET: Research Information for Teachers, 1988
The study compared the adjustment to regular classes (in New Zealand) of eight 6- and 7-year-old children with Down Syndrome (DS) with that of 24 children rated by their eight teachers as being the "three least competent children in the class." The study evaluated teacher attitudes, social participation on the playground, and…
Descriptors: Compliance (Psychology), Downs Syndrome, Foreign Countries, Interpersonal Competence
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