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Richardson, Elaine – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2020
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to mine Black mothers' stories to highlight the critical literacy work they do for themselves and their daughters, to change stereotypic views of them, and to illuminate how they negotiate intersectional structures such as gender, sexuality, race and class practice, to sustain and uplift them.…
Descriptors: African Americans, Mothers, Critical Literacy, Stereotypes
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Lee, Crystal Chen; Schoonover, Nina R. – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2020
Purpose: This paper aims to explore how currently underserved young adults engaged in a community-based organization (CBO), Bull City YouthBuild, wrote and published a book together, and how this work impacted them and their communities. Through a critical literacy framework, the research asked: How do students in a community-based writing project…
Descriptors: Community Organizations, Youth, Personal Narratives, Books
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Memon, Amina; Connolly, Deborah; Brewin, Chris R.; Meyer, Thomas; Seidel, Julia; Anderson, Shelbie; Rijkeboer, Marleen; Arntz, Arnoud – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Adults with posttraumatic stress disorder from childhood trauma (ch-PTSD) described their 'worst' traumatic event (a single or repeated event) pre-post treatment for PTSD during an international clinical trial. The memory reports were coded for specificity ("Episodic" vs. "General") and level of detail. Repeated event (RE)…
Descriptors: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Trauma, Memory, Adults
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Poole, Adam – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2021
This paper is a reflective account of using narrative inquiry and relational ethics as part of doctoral research that explored the lived experiences and identity construction of international school teachers in Shanghai, China. Specifically, it illustrates how narrative inquiry informed the whole research process by focusing on three aspects of…
Descriptors: Teaching Experience, International Schools, Foreign Countries, Personal Narratives
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Anand, Neha; Bachmann, Abbey – IAFOR Journal of Education, 2021
Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the entire system of education around the world is living each day under rapid experimentation to grapple with unforeseen challenges. The event of the COVID-19 pandemic has not only impacted a student's track of learning but also disrupted the everyday functioning of schools. In the case of the United…
Descriptors: Teaching Conditions, Blended Learning, Educational Environment, COVID-19
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Sihan Zhou; Nathan Thomas – Language and Education, 2025
English-medium instruction (EMI) has burgeoned alongside two decades of L2 self-regulated learning research. In both areas, listening remains under-researched, longitudinal designs are under-employed, and in-depth studies are necessary to unpack learner development. In a context believed to initiate self-regulated learning, the current study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Loewenthal, John; Alexander, Patrick; Butt, Graham – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2019
This article presents ethnographic research on the aspirations of graduates from a private university in New York City, some of whom move to Los Angeles. Findings depict financial and family pressures exerting a governing force upon the graduates' futures, often beyond their control. Focusing on the narratives of four individuals, we introduce the…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Aspiration, Expectation, Advantaged
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Wen Xu; Adam Poole – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
Whilst the extant literature on the publish-or-perish culture in the West is plentiful, there remains surprisingly little scholarship exploring the ways managerialist policies have become integral to local identities, work and life in Chinese universities. We address this gap by taking China's endeavour to become first in the global higher…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Writing for Publication, Publish or Perish Issue, Universities
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Jihea Maddamsetti; Rui Yuan – Research Papers in Education, 2024
This study examines how primary-level preservice teachers (PSTs) in an online asynchronous course (co-)constructed and (re)negotiated their professional identities through the use of metaphors in online asynchronous courses in the U.S. By using metaphors and narrating their lived experiences in relation to their chosen metaphors, participants…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Self Concept, Personal Narratives
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Binh Ta; Cuong Hoang; Hang Khong; Trang Dang – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
Despite limited opportunities for tenured academic positions, the number of PhD graduates in Social Sciences has steadily risen in countries with developed research systems. The current literature predominantly portrays PhD graduates as victims, either of the higher education system or of their own optimism in pursuing an academic career. This…
Descriptors: Graduates, Doctoral Programs, Career Development, Social Sciences
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Kimberly Wolbers; Hannah Dostal; Leala Holcomb; Kelsey Spurgin – Grantee Submission, 2024
Writing is an essential element of literacy development, and language plays a central role in the composing process, including developing, organizing, and refining ideas. Language and writing are interconnected, making it paramount for educators to attend to the development of deaf students' language skills. In this quasi-experimental study, we…
Descriptors: Deafness, Students with Disabilities, Expressive Language, Language Skills
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Reid, Felicity; Davidson, Janis – Student Success, 2022
This article discusses a study that started from the premise that we can better support our students when we know who they are. The study used narrative analysis to explore reasons for success for undergraduate business students in a New Zealand university. Drawing on the work of Bourdieu and the concept of learning careers (Bloomer &…
Descriptors: Success, Learning Experience, Undergraduate Students, Business Administration Education
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Rivers, Ishwanzya D.; Patton, Lori D.; Farmer-Hinton, Raquel L.; Lewis, Joi D. – Urban Education, 2022
East St. Louis educators provide critical counter-narratives to Jonathan Kozol's depiction of teaching and learning in East St. Louis, Illinois in "Savage Inequalities." Teachers, educators, and administrators provide a complex view of urban schooling beyond deficiency, inadequacy, and despair. Findings highlight educators' voices as…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Personal Narratives, Educational Practices, Teacher Attitudes
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Zaino, Karen; Caraballo, Limarys; Bigelow, Topher; Coleman, Michelle; Inderjeit, Ameila; Wright, Nyree – Peabody Journal of Education, 2022
This paper, coauthored by a graduate student, a professor of education, and four early-career teachers, extends recent scholarly efforts to understand how teachers develop activist identities and how teacher education might support this development. Four researcher-participants, practicing teachers, composed narratives that trace their journeys as…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Professional Identity, Activism, Reflective Teaching
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Giesler, Mark A. – Journal of Social Work Education, 2022
Similar to discussions in social work education classrooms facilitated by Intergroup Dialogue (IGD), the Human Library (HL) is an opportunity for students to engage in personal one-on-one dialogue about prejudice, discrimination, and oppression. To date, no study has been conducted of the use of the HL in social work education. A qualitative case…
Descriptors: Social Work, College Programs, Personal Narratives, Dialogs (Language)
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