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Kalervo N. Gulson; Sam Sellar – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
The growing use of artificial intelligence in education extends and intensifies technologies of governing, including datafication, performativity and accountability. In this article, we outline how the use of AI and data science has the disruptive potential to create new norms in education policy and governance. We report on an ethnographic…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Educational Policy, Governance, Evidence
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Deirdre Butler; Margaret Leahy; Amina Charania; Peiris Meda Gedara; Therese Keane; Thérèse Laferrière; Kohei Nakamura; Hiroshi Ueda; Stefania Bocconi – Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 2024
To make sense of the changes provoked by the COVID-19 pandemic and its immediate aftermath, this paper critically examines digital education policy responses in the context of the 'new realities' faced by schooling. Based on seven case studies contributed by authors from Australia, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Canada, Sri Lanka, two key questions…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Policy
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Ellen Bees – Critical Education, 2024
This paper uses critical policy analysis to investigate how the concept of equity has been co-opted to promote a neoliberal agenda in education reforms in Manitoba. Early provincial reform documents contained a narrow definition of equity focused primarily on closing achievement gaps between Indigenous and non-Indigenous students. These reform…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Neoliberalism, Educational Policy
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Wu, Hantian; Zheng, Jie – Journal of Studies in International Education, 2023
Mainland China's domestic academic literature on foreign issues can be regarded as a reference for its policymaking since the early stages of the "Reform and Opening Up". This investigation constructs a multi-theoretical framework for examining and interpreting mainland China's domestic academic narrative surrounding higher education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Educational Change, Higher Education
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Kristy Timmons; Emma Bozek; Elizabeth Sharp – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2024
Based on emerging literature on the important role of self-regulation in supporting learning, policy makers have made efforts to include self-regulation skills in practice and policy documents worldwide. Despite these efforts, there is limited understanding of what self-regulation is and how best to support these skills in the day-to-day life of…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Child Development, Self Control, Metacognition
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Shannon Dawn Maree Moore; Ee-Seul Yoon; Melanie D. Janzen – Critical Education, 2024
For decades, there has been a well-coordinated effort to unmake public education in Canada and around the globe. Neoliberal reformers have undermined public education through increased privatization, marketization, and managerialism. Government austerity measures have shaped policy that falsely necessitates, validates, and legitimizes the…
Descriptors: Public Education, Neoliberalism, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
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Beyhan Farhadi; Sue Winton – Educational Policy, 2024
Our critical historiography of e-learning policy in Ontario, Canada, traces the policy's trajectory through three settlements (2006-2022) and shows how successive governments have mobilized neoliberal discourses of personalization, access, and choice to justify new arrangements with private actors, within a broader sociopolitical context that…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries, Historiography
van der Hijden, Peter; Martin, Michaela – UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning, 2023
Several concurrent trends are increasing the likelihood that short courses, microcredentials, and flexible learning pathways will become a regular and even dominant feature of education and training globally. This policy paper reflects on these trends with special reference to the post-secondary education sector, and explores ways to organize…
Descriptors: Program Length, Microcredentials, Guided Pathways, Educational Policy
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Melanie Janzen; Rebeca Heringer – Canadian Journal of Education, 2023
Neo-liberal reforms in education have been sweeping the globe, undermining education as a public good, and diminishing its contributions to democratic life. Using post-structural perspectives, this article provides a critical discourse analysis of a proposed legislative bill in the province of Manitoba, Canada, as it relates to the construction of…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Educational Policy, Equal Education, Educational Change
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Elizabeth A. Roumell; Florin D. Salajan – Commission for International Adult Education, 2023
Lifelong Learning (LLL) has become a pliable term in educational discourse running the risk of meaning both everything and nothing, making it necessary to look at how the notion of LLL has been taken up in different contexts, especially within the context of policy development. Because of the inconsistent ways LLL has been peppered throughout…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Lifelong Learning, Adult Education, Educational Policy
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Steve Sider; Mel Ainscow; Suzanne Carrington; Carolyn Shields; Sofia Mavropoulou; Smita Nepal; Kiara Daw – Exceptionality Education International, 2024
We provide a high-level overview of inclusive education developments in England, Australia, the United States, and Canada, the countries within which much of our research has been completed. For each country, we discuss the work that we have each done within that context, key policy initiatives, and identified levers of system change. Despite…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Inclusion, Regular and Special Education Relationship, Cultural Differences
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David Mandzuk; Kurt Clausen; Shirley Van Nuland – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2024
Initial teacher education (ITE) has changed dramatically over the past 50 years but some of the same issues persist in Canada and around the world. This article begins with an overview of how teacher education has evolved in Canada with a particular emphasis on the past 50 years. It recounts the gradual rise of professionalisation as teacher…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Teacher Education, Teacher Certification
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Whitney M. Hegseth – American Journal of Education, 2024
Purpose: In the wake of interlocking pandemics, educational systems are resetting in important ways, pursuing aims that are not exclusively instructional (e.g., social justice, well-being). As systems (re)build, they may vary in how they manage their institutional and policy environments, which may or may not be reorienting toward these same…
Descriptors: Educational Change, COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Objectives
Peterson, Amelia – Center for Universal Education at The Brookings Institution, 2023
This case describes an ongoing system reform effort to transform the learning experiences of young people in British Columbia through changes to curriculum and graduation requirements. Over the past decade, the province of British Columbia has undergone substantial reform to its central curriculum and assessment framework. Interlinked with this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Change Strategies
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Glen A. Jones – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
The objective of this paper is to contribute to our understanding of 'crisis' in higher education through the analysis of a unique series of events involving a decisive change in the relationship between a university and the state. A descriptive case study approach is used to investigate the crisis in governance at Athabasca University, an open…
Descriptors: Crisis Management, Open Universities, Foreign Countries, Educational Change
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