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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
Kelsey A. Dalrymple; Joel M. Phillips – Harvard Educational Review, 2024
In this article examining the history of social emotional learning (SEL) in the United States, Kelsey A. Dalrymple and Joel M. Phillips use an intellectual history approach to demonstrate that the development of contemporary SEL was significantly influenced by different sociocultural, political, and economic factors. They highlight how…
Descriptors: Social Emotional Learning, Educational History, Social Influences, Political Influences
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Odongo, George – International Journal of Special Education, 2018
In Kenya, the subject of parental participation has not received much attention in terms of research, and roles of parents in their children's education are not normally well defined (Njeru, 2015). Based on observations, reports and research, parental participation remains low especially in the rural areas. This paper will discuss the barriers to…
Descriptors: Barriers, Parent Participation, Disabilities, Nongovernmental Organizations
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Eidson, Karla W.; Nickson, Lautrice; Hughes, Teresa – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2014
Preservice teacher education candidates identified personal and professional benefits of participating in a service-learning project helping a food pantry, culminating in a 48-hour fast. At the end of the project, student reflections revealed that the service-learning component influenced participants' preconceptions about hunger.
Descriptors: Service Learning, Social Action, Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education
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Read, Janet; Blackburn, Clare; Spencer, Nick – Children & Society, 2012
Focusing mainly on the United Kingdom, this article reviews a decade of national and international policy and legal changes in relation to disabled children and their families. It discusses attempts to transform the ways that disabled children are perceived and the rights accorded to them. The UN Convention on the Rights of Disabled Persons,…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Foreign Countries, Family Environment, Public Policy
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Desmond, Matthew; Emirbayer, Mustafa – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2012
At the conclusion of many courses on race and racism, students, having learned, some for the first time, about the existence, origins, and complex dimensions of racial domination in America, are left pondering their next steps. "What is to be done?" many ask. "And what, exactly, is it that we want?" Important as they are, these…
Descriptors: Race, Ethnic Diversity, Cultural Pluralism, Social Justice
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Grano, Daniel A.; Zagacki, Kenneth S. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
The reopening of the New Orleans Superdome after Hurricane Katrina on Monday Night Football dramatized problematic rhetorical, visual, and spatial norms of purification rituals bound up in what Burke calls the paradox of purity. Hurricane Katrina was significant as a visually traumatic event in large part because it signified the ghetto as a…
Descriptors: Social Class, Natural Disasters, Urban Areas, Racial Bias
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Gifford, Rob – Social Education, 2010
Panda-hugger and dragon-slayer are phrases used to describe two different kinds of China-watchers, and increasingly, two different types of people in the general public. A panda-hugger is someone who says that almost everything going on in China is good, that China's progress is a great thing for the world, and that any problems are peripheral. A…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Foreign Countries, Political Attitudes, Social Studies
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Ungruhe, Christian – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 2010
Independent youth migration is socially embedded in many African societies. While it is often exclusively perceived of as a process of intergenerational negotiation which leads to higher social positions after returning home, this article points out that peer influences play a major role in the process of decision-making of leaving and returning…
Descriptors: Motivation, Foreign Countries, Peer Influence, Migrants
Armstrong, Alice – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2010
A full stomach and clear mind are prerequisites for learning. Many children who live in poverty have neither. And the number of children who might be considered "food challenged" is growing at an alarming rate. This economic reality translates into ever-growing challenges for the public education system, which already struggles to provide all the…
Descriptors: Poverty, Homeless People, Cognitive Ability, Academic Achievement
Gibson, Cynthia – Teaching Tolerance, 2009
This article is a part of the "Why I Teach" series. The author has been immersed in the culture of Selma, Alabama for the past 15 months. The world knows Selma as a focal point of the Civil Rights Movement. Presidents and presidents-to-be have come here to commemorate the city's role in the struggle for equal voting rights. Despite the city's…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Poverty, Social Bias, Racial Bias
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Fox, Kathy R. – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2008
In the elementary school, poverty, hunger, and homelessness are most often discussed in terms of a canned food drive conducted during a holiday season, but there are other options for activities in which children can learn about poverty, and to do something about it. This article describes ways to develop students awareness of poverty. Some print…
Descriptors: Poverty, Homeless People, Internet, Teaching Methods
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Richardson, Elaine – Gender and Education, 2009
Hegemonic discourses authorise certain ways of being, knowing, and doing. We internalise or appropriate images, patterns, and words from the social activities in which we have participated. Race, gender, sexuality, age, education, class are among aspects of identity (social constructions) that affect our language and literacy acquisition, the way…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Ideology, Sexuality
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Mitchell, Claudia; De Lange, Naydene; Thuy, Nguyen-Thi Xuan – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2008
Inclusive education represents a new agenda for educational reform that spans a wide range of socio-political, cultural, ethical, personal and interpersonal dimensions. Working towards educational inclusion demands commitments, responsibilities and initiatives on the part of all parties to take into consideration the meanings and purpose of…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Inclusive Schools, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
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Mung'omba, James – Journal of Policy and Practice in Intellectual Disabilities, 2008
In the Republic of Zambia, an estimated 256,000 persons have some form of disability, and of these, 5.4% have intellectual disabilities. Even now, traditional beliefs about the etiology of intellectual disabilities persist and considerable stigma is attached to the presence of persons with intellectual disabilities who are often excluded from…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Poverty, Mental Retardation, Etiology
Gardner, David – Phi Delta Kappan, 2007
This article talks about the large achievement gap between children of color and their white peers. The reasons for the achievement gap are varied. First, many urban minorities come from a background of poverty. One of the detrimental effects of growing up in poverty is receiving inadequate nourishment at a time when bodies and brains are rapidly…
Descriptors: Poverty, Locus of Control, Dietetics, Academic Achievement
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