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Darren Cogavin – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2023
This article examines the teach-outs organised by staff and students at Lancaster University during the 2021-22 UCU strike. Guided by a critical discourse analysis of blog posts co-produced by staff and students during the strike and teach-outs, this article will examine how the teach-outs developed an education programme critiquing the neoliberal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Higher Education, Teacher Strikes
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Chitpin, Stephanie – International Journal of Educational Management, 2021
Purpose: The present study contributes to research that examines the meanings of achievement gaps, when enacting policy. Its findings are both hopeful and unsettling. The absence of equitable outcomes and democratic citizenship, as elements of closing the achievement gaps in our participants' definitions, are troubling, particularly within the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Achievement Gap, Educational Policy
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Barnard, Mathew – English in Education, 2023
This paper theoretically demonstrates the potential of textual space in making an important contribution to school ethos and cultural pedagogy. It demonstrates how culturally-inclusive (representational) textual space can be expanded throughout the school and could contribute to social justice and decolonisation efforts beyond the English…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, English Literature, Educational Policy, Neoliberalism
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David Menendez Alvarez-Hevia; Nina Hidalgo; Rosario Cerrillo; Ignacio Lizana – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2024
This study explores the conceptions developed by primary and secondary education teachers in Spain and England about democracy in education. To this end, we conducted a phenomenographic study involving 39 teachers. The results identify four major conceptions of democracy in education: (a) democracy as freedom, (b) democracy understood as…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Democracy, Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers
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Donnelly, Michael; Evans, Ceryn – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2019
Since devolution of education policy to the four 'home' nations of the UK, distinct approaches to addressing social inequalities in higher education participation have developed across the four jurisdictions (England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland). From a critical examination of 12 policy documents, this paper presents a comparative policy…
Descriptors: International Education, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy
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Leaton Gray, Sandra – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2017
This article discusses how the introduction of technology has led to a fundamental shift in the relationship between education and time. As a means of analysing the extent of such changes on pupils from different backgrounds, I use Bernstein's "conditions for democracy" as a framework for evaluating the impact new understandings of time…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Time, Influence of Technology, Democracy
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Gibbs, Simon – Educational & Child Psychology, 2018
Aim: In this paper I start with the premise that democratic education (as a service to the future) is under threat. For educational psychologists to consider where they might stand in relation to their professional future, therefore, I set out to provide indications of psychological factors implicated in answering the question 'Can education in a…
Descriptors: Democratic Values, Democracy, Educational Psychology, Psychologists
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Swaffield, Sue; Major, Louis – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2019
One remarkable feature of the contemporary school landscape in England is the number of schools that have chosen the co-operative framework to shape their work and relationships. When a group of schools decides to become a co-operative trust, leadership challenges arise both in the process of establishing an inclusive collaborative cluster and in…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Instructional Leadership, Teacher Attitudes, Foreign Countries
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West, Anne; Wolfe, David – London Review of Education, 2019
This article focuses on the transformative academies policy in England. Based on an analysis of documentary evidence, we argue that the policy has resulted in the fragmentation of the state-funded school system and stark variation between academies, with those within multi-academy trusts (MATs) having no legal identity. We examine the variation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Governance, Elementary Secondary Education, Public Schools
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Heilbronn, Ruth – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2016
Can Dewey's Moral Principles in Education throw light on a contemporary policy issue in education, namely the privatisation of education through the establishment of academy schools in England? The article first considers what the policy entails, in terms of its conception of education as a market commodity. The next section suggests an…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Educational Philosophy, Educational Principles, Foreign Countries
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Ku, Hsiao-Yuh – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2016
R.H. Tawney (1880-1962), a leading English economic historian and prominent socialist, was vigorously involved in educational reconstruction during the Second World War. For Tawney, the war was a war for social democracy. His ideals of social democracy formed a basis for his case for Public (independent) School reform and free secondary education…
Descriptors: Democracy, War, Educational History, Educational Change
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Kinos, Jarmo; Robertson, Leena; Barbour, Nancy; Pukk, Maarika – Childhood Education, 2016
The Convention on the Rights of the Child calls for children to be treated as human beings with a distinct set of rights, instead of as passive objects of care. They can and should be agents in their own lives. Child-initiated pedagogy recognizes this by respecting children's individual and collective views, interests, and motivations.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Developmentally Appropriate Practices, Childrens Rights
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Robertson, Leena Helavaara; Hill, Dave – Management in Education, 2014
In this article we begin by discussing "ideology" as a theoretical construct, and the interconnections between policy and ideology in the education system in England. We analyse the main principles of education policies that can be broadly defined from Left to Right, according to the following ideologies: Marxism/Socialism/Radical…
Descriptors: Ideology, Educational Policy, Early Childhood Education, Leadership
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Devine, Dympna; Savage, Mike; Ingram, Nicola – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2012
The authors review "White middle class identities and urban schooling," by D. Reay, G. Crozier and D. James. This book focuses on the perspectives of white middle-class parents who make "against"-the-grain school choices for their children in urban England. It provides key insights into the dynamics of class practising that are…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Democracy, School Choice, Parent Attitudes
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Taysum, Alison, Ed.; Rayner, Stephen, Ed. – International Perspectives on Higher Education Research, 2014
This volume acknowledges the need for better understanding in leadership, management and administration of new knowledge which is crucial for effective leadership in a period of massive policy reform and deepening austerity in education. The doctorate is key to meeting this global challenge as it offers new and valid ways of enabling innovation…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Leadership Training, Educational Improvement, Leadership Effectiveness
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