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Stefan Kucharczyk; Kenneth Pettersen; Jennifer Rowsell – Qualitative Research Journal, 2025
Purpose: This short article takes the play and passion of children's literacy as its focal point. Rather than orienting reading and writing around what should be taught or how children should respond and understand written text, in this short reflective essay we aim to explore the play and passion inherent in children's literacy practices. We do…
Descriptors: Play, Literacy, Early Childhood Education, Family Environment
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Sheena J. Vachhani; Emma Bell – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
In this paper we move from considering the chair as an (inanimate) object, to exploring its vitality through a more vibrant and active reading of this inescapable everyday item. We are inspired by feminist new materialism and how affect shapes our understanding of matter. Reading matter in this way surfaces our orientations toward everyday items…
Descriptors: Department Heads, Foreign Countries, Status, Professional Recognition
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Marie Lavelle; Joanna Haynes; Emma Macleod-Johnstone – Gender and Education, 2024
This writing is born out of our experiences of becoming older women, academy hags, facing the performative demands of the neoliberalizing patriarchal university. We are raging. With the figure of the Crone, and feminist-killjoy-croning as our creative and livid research method (Ahmed, S. 2023. "Feminist Killjoy." London: Penguin Random…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Physiology, Gender Bias
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Emily Danvers; Abigail Wells – Higher Education Research and Development, 2025
Homeification refers to the intensification of the home environment through the accelerated lifestyle changes triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic. These changes resulted in blurred and altered boundaries between places and new relations with spaces, things, and technologies. Drawing on multi-modal creative research with UK undergraduate students,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Seniors, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Kazuya Yanagida – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Higher education has often been accused of its anti-social character, represented by the metaphor of the 'ivory tower'. However, the idea of the pursuit of knowledge per se, which is associated with the ivory tower, has not been widely recognized as a public ideal of higher education. In this study, by drawing on the 20th-century British…
Descriptors: General Education, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Learning
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Rebecca Murray; Sally Baker – Critical Studies in Education, 2024
Despite their geographical distance, the UK and Australia share proximity with their hostile immigration policies and managed migration practices, characterised by inhumanity under the guise of deterrence. People Seeking Asylum (PSA) who seek sanctuary typically endure protracted temporariness, which denies them access to state resources and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Immigration, Educational Policy
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Andrea Middleton – International Journal of Nurture in Education, 2020
From its origins within the deprived schools of inner London in the late 1960s, nurture group practice has evolved organically. Based on instinctive, clinically observed and evidence-based principles, nurture groups continue to offer a viable educational response in providing for the fundamental attachment needs of vulnerable children in schools.…
Descriptors: Place Based Education, Educational Practices, Foreign Countries, Classroom Environment
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Beverley Morris; Jon Thedham – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2025
Resilience training for Further Education (FE) managers has become an increasingly familiar aspect of management development. This paper challenges the accepted orthodoxies underpinning resilience as a 'learnable' skill required to succeed as a manager. In particular, it addresses the concepts of toxic positivity, growth mindset (Dweck) and Grit…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Postsecondary Education, Neoliberalism, Cooperation
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Sophie Atherton – Gender and Education, 2024
Trans people's use of single-sex toilet facilities has become the subject of public attention, academic debate and research in recent years. One common solution is to offer transgender students access to an alternative toilet or changing space, such as an accessible toilet. However, in this paper, I critically engage with the suggestion that…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Sexual Identity, Student Experience, Sanitary Facilities
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Alende Amisi; Elizabeth A. Bates; Susan J. Wilbraham – Psychology Teaching Review, 2024
This paper is a critical discussion about how the curriculum contributes to the sense of belonginess within Higher Education (HE), and how the ongoing aim of decolonisation needs to incorporate a more consistent intersectional lens with the curriculum within psychology. Psychology as a discipline has been criticised for its focus on primarily…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Decolonization, Curriculum Development, Psychology
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Woolhouse, Clare; Hastings, Charlotte; Hallett, Fiona – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2021
This article considers what might be learnt about inclusion as a concept and practice from sharing visual research data within a public art exhibition and associated workshops. The catalyst for the exhibition and workshops stemmed from a project that involved children and young people creating visual images that they felt represented inclusion or…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Art Activities, Foreign Countries, Children
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Moncrieffe, Marlon – Psychology of Education Review, 2021
Marlon Moncrieffe responds to Dr. Louise Taylor's article on the educational disparities of Black students in higher education. Her reflection prompts him to consider his past as a black British child learning in a dominant white British primary school space. In this article, he has two aims in his response. Firstly, to leave further consideration…
Descriptors: Minority Group Students, College Students, Student Experience, Blacks
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Ciaran Burke; Tracy Scurry – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2024
This paper draws on Bourdieusian social theory to reconceptualise graduate resilience in post-industrial societies to provide a fresh perspective on a concept that has gained increasing prominence in recent years. Through a review of sociological critiques of resilience, this paper argues that graduate resilience is a complex social phenomenon…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Resilience (Psychology), Employment Potential, Neoliberalism
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Denne, Louise D.; Grindle, Corinna F.; Sapiets, Suzi J.; Blandford-Elliott, Millie; Hastings, Richard P.; Hoerger, Marguerite; Lambert-Lee, Katy; Paris, Andreas; Nicholls, Gemma; Hughes, J. Carl – Support for Learning, 2023
The importance of reducing restraint and restrictive interventions in special schools has been recognised across the four nations of the UK. Government guidance for England and Wales, and recommendations produced by Restraint Reduction Scotland, both reference Positive behavioural support (PBS) as an evidence-based approach that can be used to…
Descriptors: Instructional Effectiveness, Educational Environment, Positive Behavior Supports, Foreign Countries
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Vincent Carpentier; Emmanuelle Picard – Comparative Education, 2024
This historical exploration of the development of the academic workforce in the UK and France was triggered by the observation of significant similarities in contemporary debates on casualisation, and segmentation despite their distinctive HE systems. We develop a quantitative history of academic staff to understand why the differences in the two…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Higher Education, Data Analysis
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