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Showing 1 to 15 of 40 results Save | Export
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Hagen, Jamie J. – British Educational Research Journal, 2022
This paper considers queer feminist interruptions as a way to halt, reverse and rethink internationalisation in UK higher education (HE). These points of intervention are situated within the queer development studies literature, which provides a framework for understanding internationalisation practices alongside other strategies of Western…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Feminism, Social Theories, Higher Education
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Pardo-Guerra, Juan Pablo; Pahwa, Prithviraj – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
This paper considers the adoption of computational techniques within research designs modeled after the extended case method. Echoing calls to augment the power of contemporary researchers through the adoption of computational text analysis methods, we offer a framework for thinking about how such techniques can be integrated into…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Research Design, Marketing, Social Science Research
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Harriet Dismore; Verity Campbell-Barr; Rachel Manning; Paul Warwick – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
Reference to Knowledge Exchange (KE) in UK Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) has become common place, reflecting the continued changing role of universities within society. Arguably, KE draws together notions of HEIs as purveyors of knowledge, with students helping to create a tripartite relationship with HEIs and the wider community as well as…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Epistemology, Technology Transfer, Foreign Countries
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Smith, Jan; Billot, Jennie; Clouder, Lynn; King, Virginia – Higher Education Research and Development, 2020
This article explores the experiences of a group of established academic staff in New Zealand and the UK, as they undertake a doctorate in their home institutions. Our interest is in how individuals negotiate this dual status from a cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT) stance that explores how rules, tools, community and divisions of labour,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Doctoral Students, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Macdonald, Stephen – Insights into Learning Disabilities, 2019
This article discusses six theoretical frameworks of disability which dominate studies of dyslexia: (1) the biomedical, (2) the biopsychosocial, (3) the social model, (4) the critical realist, (5) the post-structuralistic, and (6) the neurodivergent approach. The aim of this paper is to demonstrate how models of disability alter our understandings…
Descriptors: Models, Dyslexia, Foreign Countries, Learning Disabilities
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Bunnell, Tristan; Atkinson, Cherry – Journal of Research in International Education, 2020
Volume 2 of this journal included an article (Canterford, 2003) which discussed 'segmented labour markets' in 'international schools'. Using an economics lens, that paper investigated the predominance of British and American educators, concluding that a form of discrimination existed which was driven by demand-side factors. In particular,…
Descriptors: International Schools, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Teacher Characteristics, Teacher Selection
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Bowman, Paul – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
Culture has been theorized as pedagogy. In several languages and many contexts "culture" and "education" can be used interchangeably. This issue of the journal "Educational Philosophy and Theory" seeks to explore the dual proposition (1) that pedagogy is central to politicized cultural theory, but (2) that it has been…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Teaching Methods, Political Issues, Social Theories
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Clegg, Sue – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2011
This paper explores some of the unresolved tensions in higher education systems and the contradiction between widening participation and the consolidation of social position. It shows how concepts of capital derived from Bourdieu, Coleman and Putnam provide a powerful basis for critique, but risk a deficit view of students from less privileged…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Public Policy, Cultural Capital, Criticism
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Rasmussen, Mary Lou – Journal of LGBT Youth, 2011
"Interrogating Heteronormativity in Primary Schools: The No Outsiders Project" is a book that reflects on a research project based in primary schools and funded by The Economic and Social Research Council of the UK. This text is accompanied by another practice-focused work: "Undoing Homophobia in Primary Schools". The project…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Homosexuality, Social Attitudes, Social Bias
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Kahn, Peter – London Review of Education, 2009
It is becoming increasingly clear that the notion of "removing barriers" offers a limited foundation for widening participation to higher education. Drawing on realist social theory, we consider how decisions to participate or not participate form part of a process to establish a "modus vivendi" or "way of life" for…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Social Theories, Foreign Countries, Social Mobility
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Morgan, John; Firth, Roger – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2010
This short article explores the role of theory in the field of research in geographical education in the UK. It suggests that the fact that the field is dominated by teacher educators has led to the adoption of theories closely associated with the classroom practice of teachers. Although in the 1980s there were signs that geographical education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Geography Instruction, Educational Research, Teacher Education
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Chapman, Dave; Smith, Helen Lawton; Wood, Peter; Barnes, Timothy; Romeo, Saverio – Industry and Higher Education, 2011
Over the last decade policies framing the enterprise agenda for UK higher education institutions (HEIs) have consistently emphasized the potential impact of successful universities on both regional and national economies. Such policies have been backed by significant public funding to ensure that the UK HEI sector is able to compete globally in…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Economic Impact, Entrepreneurship, School Business Relationship
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Pollmann, Andreas – Educational Studies, 2009
Schooling and school management can play an important part in promoting inclusive forms of national attachment, intercultural dialogue and reflexive engagements with the "Unfamiliar". The (inter) personal benefits of intercultural experiences and skills are widely acknowledged. But can we really learn to be intercultural? And what are…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Intercultural Communication, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Capital
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Dyke, Martin – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2009
The paper presents an enabling framework for experiential learning that connects with reflexive modernity. This framework places an emphasis on learning with others and on the role of theory, practice and reflection. A sociological argument is constructed for an alternative framework for experiential learning that derives from social theory. It is…
Descriptors: Compulsory Education, Experiential Learning, Social Theories, Role Theory
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Davis, Robert A. – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay, Robert Davis argues that much of the moral anxiety currently surrounding children in Europe and North America emerges at ages and stages curiously familiar from traditional Western constructions of childhood. The symbolism of infancy has proven enduringly effective over the last two centuries in associating the earliest years of…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Child Rearing, Infants, Access to Education
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