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Cottle, Michelle – Ethnography and Education, 2022
This article demonstrates how Bourdieu's field theory can be used to systematise ethnographic insights, establishing and validating connections between the micro-level of participants' experiences and macro-level contexts, whilst complementing and facilitating the reflexivity that has long been part of ethnographic traditions. Combining an…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Neoliberalism, Social Capital, Political Attitudes
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Williams, Krystal L.; Coles, Justin A.; Reynolds, Patrick – Journal of Negro Education, 2020
Historically, education research and practice has failed to accentuate the factors that promote Black student success and, instead, produced deficit-centered narratives that focused on Black students' academic underachievement and challenges. These dominant narratives have negatively influenced Black students' experiences and there is a need for…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Postsecondary Education, African American Students
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Schulz, Samantha; Baak, Melanie; Stahl, Garth; Adams, Ben – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
Schools worldwide are increasingly enmeshed in discourses of securitisation. Efforts to prevent or counter violent extremism (P/CVE) are a manifestation of this. P/CVE in education takes various forms; the pilot explored here is considered super-soft in that no mention was made of violent extremism. Attention was given to schools' capacities to…
Descriptors: Violence, Prevention, Antisocial Behavior, Ideology
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Vorhaus, John – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2014
The "accordion effect" is an effect of language which allows us to describe one and the same thing more or less narrowly. Social capital has been conceived in terms of our access to institutional resources, but also in terms that extend to the levels of trust and related resources found in the social networks we are embedded in. The…
Descriptors: Social Capital, Social Networks, Educational Philosophy, Social Attitudes
OECD Publishing (NJ3), 2013
"Education Indicators in Focus" is a recurring series of briefs that highlight specific indicators in "OECD's Education at a Glance" that are of particular interest to policy makers and practitioners. They provide a detailed look into current issues in pre-primary, primary and secondary education, higher education, and adult…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Benefits, Demography, Expectation
Njeng'ere, David – UNESCO International Bureau of Education, 2014
Curriculum planning emphasizes that education should serve to enable society to achieve its needs and aspirations. One such need in Kenya, which has remained largely elusive, is national cohesion and integration. Research has revealed that education contributes to the development of social capital by increasing individual propensity to trust and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Foreign Countries, Role of Education, Social Values
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Fitzgerald, Hayley – International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 2012
This article explores non-disabled young people's understandings of Paralympic athletes and the disability sports they play. The article examines how society has come to know disability by discussing medical and social model views of disability. The conceptual tools offered by Pierre Bourdieu are utilised as a means of understanding the nature and…
Descriptors: Focus Groups, Athletes, Physical Disabilities, Young Adults
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Andrews, Rhys – Rural Sociology, 2011
Religious communities are important sources of bridging and bonding social capital that have varying implications for perceptions of social cohesion in rural areas. In particular, as well as cultivating cohesiveness more broadly, the bridging social capital associated within mainline religious communities may represent an especially important…
Descriptors: Protestants, Social Integration, Rural Areas, Foreign Countries
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Neuenschwander, Bryn – E-Learning, 2008
The open-ended, informal, and socially negotiated nature of role-playing games creates a distinct learning challenge for newcomers to the hobby. The explicit rules of the game provide only an incomplete framework for structuring the actions of players, and the expectations and mores of a given group will add other, unspoken rules that discourage…
Descriptors: Cues, Games, Role Playing, Acculturation
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Wolf, Patrick J. – Education Next, 2007
Many supporters of school choice argue that neighborhood assignment to public schools results not in diversity, but in the opposite: schools that are less likely to contain a diverse mix of students and that are more internally segregated along racial lines than are schools of choice. In recent years, a number of empirical studies of the effects…
Descriptors: Social Capital, Private Schools, Patriotism, Magnet Schools
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Allard, Andrea C. – Theory and Research in Education, 2005
This article considers Bourdieu's concepts of "social capital" and "social fields", comparing and contrasting his use of these concepts with that of James Coleman and Robert Putnam. It examines how Bourdieu's ideas offer a different way of understanding the lives of economically disadvantaged young women designated as "at…
Descriptors: Females, Economically Disadvantaged, Foreign Countries, Social Capital
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Thomson, Rob; Langley, John – Journal of Community Psychology, 2004
Many victims of physical assaults do not report the assault to the police. In this study we examine whom these victims talked to and how satisfied they were with the help they received. A sample of 374 participants of the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study (DMHDS) who had been assaulted in the preceding 12 months, were asked…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Victims of Crime, Emotional Experience, Physical Health