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Stephen Corbett; Karen Johnston; Adele Bezuidenhout – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2025
This paper considers wellbeing in the context of those working in the further education (FE) sector in England and how this has been affected by the COVID pandemic. There has been a growth of research into the impact of the pandemic on the workforce in the higher education sector and some considerations for schools. However, research that examines…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Well Being, Continuing Education, COVID-19
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Carrino, Ludovico; Nafilyan, Vahé; Avendano, Mauricio – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2023
This paper provides novel evidence on how a sharp increase in labor force participation among older women affects the provision of informal care to their older parents. Based on data from Understanding Society -- The UK Household Longitudinal Study, we use an instrumental variable approach that exploits a unique reform that increased the female…
Descriptors: Labor Force, Older Adults, Parents, Caregivers
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Shaw, Luan – Music Education Research, 2023
A skilled music education workforce is essential to ensure longevity of music-making for future generations of young learners and access to high-quality instrumental music tuition remains crucial for school-aged pupils. Yet, Higher Education providers, including conservatoires, are not held accountable for providing high-quality pedagogical…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music Teachers, Teacher Education, Labor Force
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Bryson, Alex; Stokes, Lucy; Wilkinson, David – Education Economics, 2023
Linking the Workplace Employment Relations Surveys 2004 and 2011 to administrative data on pupil attainment in England we examine whether secondary and primary schools who deploy more intensive human resource management (HRM) practices have higher pupil attainment. We find intensive use of HRM practices is positively and significantly correlated…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Schools, Secondary Schools, Labor Force Development
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Michael Salmon – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
Analysis of strategic planning practices can offer insight into how universities operate and are structured as organisations, both in terms of where importance is placed and what is elided, and through discursive consideration of how strategy texts legitimate certain ways of thinking and acting and seek to produce consent around managerial…
Descriptors: Universities, Strategic Planning, Decision Making, Administrative Organization
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Griffioen, Didi M. E.; Ashwin, Paul; Scholkmann, Antonia – Policy Reviews in Higher Education, 2021
In this article, we examine how policy documents from three European countries -- the Netherlands, Germany and England -- position a key outcome of higher education: the development of high-level professionals. Our findings show significant differences between the policies in the three countries in terms of in definitions of high-level…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Educational Policy, Labor Force Development
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Sophie Cole; Richelle Duffy – Journal of Professional Capital and Community, 2024
Purpose: This paper shares findings from a constructivist grounded theory study, exploring Trainee Teachers' perceptions of their teaching and learning experienced during university-based teacher education programmes, specifically the theoretical components. Findings led to the development of a model of program design, pedagogy and teaching…
Descriptors: Professionalism, Human Capital, Preservice Teachers, Constructivism (Learning)
Evans, Stephen; Vaid, Lovedeep – Learning and Work Institute, 2022
Employment and skills contexts, opportunities, challenges and starting points vary across England. Employment rates vary significantly between geographic areas and demographic groups, as do qualification levels, and opportunities for growth. All of this means there has been an increasing focus in debate on how to tailor employment and skills…
Descriptors: Local Government, Foreign Countries, Employment, Employment Potential
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Rikowski, Glenn – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2021
This article explores how the UK Conservative Government's Department for Education is taking advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic to restructure higher education in England towards labour-power production. There is nothing new in UK governments seeking to reshape higher education for labour-power development. But under cover of apparent concern for…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Change, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Kay, Louise; Wood, Elizabeth; Nuttall, Joce; Henderson, Linda – Journal of Education Policy, 2021
This paper examines workforce reform in early childhood education in England, specifically the policy trajectory that led to implementation of the Early Years Teacher Status (EYTS) qualification in 2014. Taking a critical perspective on policy analysis, the paper uses rhetorical analysis to make sense of the how EYTS is understood within workforce…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Teachers, Educational Policy, Early Childhood Education
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Luan Shaw – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2024
Conservatoires train musicians to high levels of proficiency in performance and other 'principal study' disciplines, but often, teaching is perceived as a second-class profession, and little is known about how music students learn to facilitate music making in others. Yet, conservatoires have a responsibility to contribute to the development of…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Music Teachers, Music Education, Pedagogical Content Knowledge
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Angela Bate – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2024
The Labour Party's manifesto aims to reform further and higher education by integrating business, training providers and unions within a governmental effort to ensure a highly trained workforce. Skills England will align training with labour market needs, empower local leaders and enhance support for job seekers. However, the focus on young people…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Higher Education, Adult Education
Kate Alexander; Stephen Evans; Tony Wilson – Learning and Work Institute, 2022
One in seven people of working age in England live in social housing. Partly because of how the limited supply of social housing is allocated, tenants are more diverse than the population as a whole and more likely to live in relative poverty. Strategies to tackle the big workforce, growth, cost of living and inequality challenges the country…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Housing, Poverty, Labor Force Development
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Simon, Antonia – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2019
OECD countries have established statistical collections to ensure quality within Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC). Focusing on one part of ECEC -- preschool 'childcare services' -- this paper critically reviews statistical collections specifically designed to measure childcare patterns in England alongside UK data collected for other…
Descriptors: National Surveys, Child Care, Early Childhood Education, Foreign Countries
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Keep, Ewart – Journal of Education and Work, 2020
The question addressed in this paper is why expanding Higher Education (HE) has become the default policy position in England. One answer concerns the reluctance by employers to train. The paper adopts an historical perspective on the policy reviews into this issue which have displayed a remarkable policy amnesia, employers have not been engaged.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries, Educational History
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