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McDonough, Graham P. – Religious Education, 2019
One strand in the scholarship of Catholic school identity perceives that it has deteriorated since Vatican II (1962-1965) and therefore needs restoration. Unfortunately, this perception is based on an assumption that there is a "singular" Catholic identity. This article demonstrates a basis in theology, social theory, and educational…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Self Concept, Catholics, Educational History
Warren, Chezare A.; Venzant Chambers, Terah T. – Educational Researcher, 2020
This conceptual article aims to clarify the important relationship between the fields of social foundations of education (SFE) and urban education (UE). We argue that SFE (a) enables more precise understandings of "urban" in one's preparation to practice in or conduct research with implications for urban schooling contexts and (b)…
Descriptors: Urban Education, Foundations of Education, Social Theories, African American Education
Xiaohong, Li – Chinese Education & Society, 2019
The structure of higher education in China is characterized by a high degree of hierarchy as well as strong homogeneity, differing from not only American higher education, which features a high degree of both hierarchy and heterogeneity, but also higher education in continental Europe, which exhibits a low degree of hierarchy. Previous studies…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Federal Government, Power Structure
Alfrey, Laura; Gard, Michael – European Physical Education Review, 2019
This paper explores the ways in which figurational sociology can offer a useful lens through which to understand the ongoing use of fitness testing as a means to physically educate young people. We contribute to a theoretical discussion around how physical education teachers have come to think about and enact fitness testing so pervasively.…
Descriptors: Incidence, Physical Fitness, Physical Education Teachers, Tests
Rodriguez, Miguel; Barthelemy, Ramón; McCormick, Melinda – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2022
More progress is needed to achieve equity in racial and gender representation in the push to diversify the physical sciences. In order to continue moving towards representation and equity, there is a need for more analytic tools that can help us understand where we are and how we got here. This may also enable meaningful systemic change. In this…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Feminism, Physics
Boulard, Florence – Waikato Journal of Education, 2022
New Caledonia is a French overseas territory in the South Pacific with a long history of differing attitudes towards independence (Fisher, 2019). The local government aims to challenge French cultural hegemony by building a "New Caledonian School" (Gouvernement de la Nouvelle-Calédonie, 2016). That is, a school in which students are…
Descriptors: Picture Books, English (Second Language), French, Foreign Policy
Landri, Paolo; Grimaldi, Emiliano – European Educational Research Journal, 2020
This editorial introduces the "European Educational Research Journal" special issue that hosts four articles co-authored by emerging researchers in the field of educational research in Europe who participated in the Summer School in European Education Studies. We present the Summer School in European Education Studies project, its…
Descriptors: Summer Schools, Educational Research, Educational Researchers, Educational History
Hladchenko, Myroslava – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2020
The article explores academic identities in Ukrainian research universities whilst means-ends decoupling takes place at the state level. The latter term implies that the practices of state policies are disconnected from the state's core goal of creating public welfare. Such means-ends decoupling occurs in oligarchic economies, Ukraine being one.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Professional Identity, College Faculty, Research Universities
McPhail, Graham – British Journal of Music Education, 2016
The catalyst for this paper is the ongoing debate concerning formal and informal approaches to pedagogy within the music education literature. I utilise a chapter by Philpott (2010) as a means to continue discussion about the apparent dialectic between formal and informal approaches to music learning and the case Philpott raises for radical change…
Descriptors: Music Education, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational History
Christie, Pam; McKinney, Carolyn – Education as Change, 2017
This article argues that theories of "decoloniality" provide valuable insights into the social relations of "Model C" schools that have been brought into visibility in particular ways by the wave of student protests during and after 2016. Our starting point is to provide a brief outline of the central arguments made by a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Theories, Power Structure, Politics of Education
Hatch, Deryl K. – New Directions for Community Colleges, 2016
This chapter reviews ways that researchers have presented variously narrow and broad groupings of special student success programs over the course of decades. Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) is proposed as a way to conceptualize various kinds of community college student success programs as instances of a more general type of program.
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Two Year College Students, Academic Achievement, Social Theories
Muller, Johan; Young, Michael – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2014
Several authors have suggested that the contract between the university and society formulated in the nineteenth century is breaking down, and a new relation between knowledge and society is being installed. This paper investigates what is at stake in this shift by re-visiting the roots of disciplinary knowledge, examining Durkheim's social…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Intellectual Disciplines, Knowledge Level, Universities
Heidt, Irene – L2 Journal, 2015
In this article, I endeavor to explore the historical dimensions of "Bildung" by first focusing on the German linguist and philosopher Wilhelm von Humboldt and his theory of "Bildung." The article then addresses the transformation of Humboldt's neo-humanistic ideal into a governmentrun institutionalized "Bildung"…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Neoliberalism, Ideology, Global Approach
Sass, Katharina – European Educational Research Journal, 2015
The historical origins and development of comprehensive schooling have seldom been analyzed systematically and comparatively. However, there is a rich comparative and historically grounded literature on the development of welfare states, which focuses on many relevant policies, but ignores the education system. In particular, the power resources…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Educational Change, Welfare Services
Allender, Tim; O'Donoghue, Tom – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2014
This article explores the connections between official contemporary identity formation and colonial pasts. Using the case studies of India and Ireland the article explores how different traditions of theorisation are powerful in these formations. India and Ireland were two colonial domains that had many linkages outside the ambit of the British.…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Foreign Countries, Foreign Policy, Stereotypes