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Rebecca Wood; Laura Crane; Francesca Happé; Ruth Moyse – Educational Review, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in major upheavals in the school education sector, particularly during periods of "lockdown" and remote working. While the impact of these changes on pupils, parents and school staff, both nationally and internationally, has been well-documented, there has been scant consideration of the effects on disabled…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Teachers, COVID-19
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Henderson, Holly – Educational Review, 2023
The decision of whether and where to attend higher education is an inherently geographical decision. Amongst the structural inequalities that determine how decisions about higher education are made are a number of complex socio-spatial factors ranging from proximity of higher education institution to place of residence and availability of…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Mobility, Decision Making, Foreign Countries
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Goldstone, Ross; Zhang, Jingwen – Educational Review, 2022
In response to the rapidly deteriorating pandemic situation, a national lockdown was imposed in March 2020 which had profound effects for students across the UK higher education sector. Given their precarious and isolated position in UK higher education, understanding how the pandemic has affected postgraduate research (PGR) students, relating to…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Student Research, Student Experience, COVID-19
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Wilkinson, Gary – Educational Review, 2016
Capitalist expansion is predicated on consumption and growth driven by citizens following their individual preferences in the marketplace. To promote consumption and influence consumer wants and desire, propaganda is used to persuade citizens to purchase products using a wide and diverse range of techniques. In recent decades, this has involved an…
Descriptors: Life Style, Sustainability, Commercialization, Preferences
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Housee, Shirin – Educational Review, 2010
This article reports on the views of seven Asian female Social Science students following a class seminar on religious issues and schooling at a university in the UK. It explores the importance of the post-class spontaneous student dialogue where participation in much teaching and learning is voluntary. The concern is with engaged pedagogy and…
Descriptors: Discussion, Classroom Communication, Social Influences, Classroom Environment
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McIntyre-Bhatty, Karen – Educational Review, 2008
This paper suggests that rather than criminalising or pathologising truancy as a "deviant" behaviour in need of either treatment or punishment, truancy should be considered as a rational enactment of dissatisfaction with State educational provision. It should be of little surprise that attempts to "solve" the truancy…
Descriptors: Truancy, Home Schooling, Relevance (Education), Educational Environment
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Hodkinson, Phil; Biesta, Gert; James, David – Educational Review, 2007
This paper sets out an explanation about the nature of learning cultures and how they work. In so doing, it directly addresses some key weaknesses in current situated learning theoretical writing, by working to overcome unhelpful dualisms, such as the individual and the social, and structure and agency. It does this through extensive use of some…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Learning Theories, Social Influences, Individual Characteristics
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Bailey, Mary; Thompson, Paul – Educational Review, 2008
This paper arises from an evaluation of the study support programme developed in a midlands city in the UK, in the context of the national extended schools initiative. It offers a framework based on activity theory to explain how and why "out-of-lesson-time learning" is felt by many students to impact positively on their self-esteem and…
Descriptors: After School Programs, Academic Support Services, Student Attitudes, Self Esteem
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Redman, Peter – Educational Review, 1996
Interviews with British boys in years five through eight form the basis of a suggestion that the formation of sexual identity as something biologically or psychologically fixed in early childhood should be rethought. Sociocultural practices and relationships with school, home, and society have significant effects on formation of sexual identity.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Foreign Countries, Heterosexuality, Interpersonal Relationship
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Dunne, Mairead – Educational Review, 1999
British math teachers' accounts of their classroom life show how their daily work builds classroom culture and how they have been limited by the imposition of the National Curriculum. Because of it, teachers construct a position of neutrality about student achievement despite the way they shape the learning conditions that influence it. (SK)
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Classroom Environment, Foreign Countries, Mathematics Achievement
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Angier, Corinne; Povey, Hilary – Educational Review, 1999
The metaphor of spaciousness emerged in an examination of one math teacher and one class of students. Spacious math embraces large problems with mathematically rich activities. Spacious teaching and learning is large enough to include social relationships. Students felt that the teacher, group, and class organization mattered to learning. (SK)
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Classroom Environment, Foreign Countries, Mathematics Instruction