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Showing 1 to 15 of 19 results Save | Export
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Luke Billingham; Fern Gillon – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
School exclusion reduction in Scotland--and especially in the city of Glasgow--has received substantial media and policy attention in recent years. In London in particular, multiple governmental agencies have explicitly expressed a desire to replicate the exclusion reduction which recently occurred in Glasgow, often citing the connection between…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Expulsion, Barriers, Incidence
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Sindiswa S. Zondo; Vusi S. Mncube – South African Journal of Education, 2024
In the majority of South African schools, maintaining discipline remains a challenge -- a situation which commands the attention of departmental officials both locally and internationally. When negative disciplinary approaches were prohibited in schools in this country, positive disciplinary measures were recommended in the form of a code of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethics, Discipline, Student Behavior
Nicola Bradfield – Universities UK, 2024
How should universities handle cases of student misconduct? While universities cannot make decisions about whether a criminal offence has been committed, they can judge whether there has been a breach of their own code of conduct. This guidance, building on a UUK and Pinsent Mason publication from 2016, sets out principles and practical case…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Student Behavior, Behavior Problems
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Vítor Ricci Costa; Carla Luguetti; Mauricio dos Santos Oliveira; Maria Claudia Pinheiro; Myrian Nunomura – Sport, Education and Society, 2024
The gymnastics' environment has been criticised for producing uncompromising coaching practices, emotional disorders, harassment and abuse. Furthermore, the challenges faced by the young gymnasts can be acute when they live in gymnastics boarding schools, where many aspects of their lives are controlled. Drawing upon a Foucauldian lens, this study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Athletics, Student Athletes, Boarding Schools
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Vijaya Dharan; Nicole Mincher – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2024
Schools in New Zealand (NZ) have a range of disciplinary options when dealing with challenging behaviours, one of which is excluding students by way of stand-downs, suspensions, exclusions or expulsions. Following marginal downward trend from 2006 to 2015, the numbers of stand-downs and suspensions have been on the rise again since 2016 despite…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High School Students, Antisocial Behavior, Student Behavior
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Olivier Leclerc – Research Evaluation, 2025
Detecting and punishing violations of research integrity requires first having to prove them. However, establishing proof of research misconduct presents a number of challenges. Firstly, it has to be conducted in a variety of contexts, including before research integrity officers, university disciplinary committees, civil courts, criminal courts,…
Descriptors: Cheating, Research, Identification, Integrity
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Barry Down; Anna Sullivan; Neil Tippett; Bruce Johnson; Jamie Manolev; Janean Robinson – Critical Studies in Education, 2024
This article reports on a critical policy analysis of discourses related to school exclusions. The management of problematic student behaviour is one of the intractable problems facing education systems today. Despite being ineffective, school suspensions and exclusions are commonly used in many countries as a discipline strategy to manage student…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Policy Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Discipline Policy
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Lesley Eblie Trudel; Wayne Davies – Exceptionality Education International, 2024
This qualitative study delves into the perspectives of school leaders in a Canadian province, exploring their views on student suspensions and alternative approaches to school discipline. Amid a provincial advocacy organization's call for a review and reduction of suspensions in that jurisdiction, the study captures both constructive and critical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Principals, Assistant Principals, Discipline Policy
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Li Zhao; Junjie Peng; Xinchen Yang; Weihao Yan; Shiqi Ke; Kanza Batool; Yaxin Li; Kang Lee – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
Academic cheating is a pervasive problem in many universities globally. The present double-blind randomized controlled field experiment tested whether reminding university students about academic dishonesty sanction policies would reduce their cheating in an actual exam. Students were assigned to either a Sanction Reminder or a No Reminder…
Descriptors: Cheating, Ethics, Discipline Problems, Discipline Policy
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Rudzani Israel Lumadi – South African Journal of Education, 2024
In the study reported on I investigated how empowering school management teams through a revised learners' code of conduct can improve school discipline management. Using a quantitative research methodology with an exploratory design, data were gathered from 127 respondents across 50 selected schools in the Vhembe district of the Limpopo province,…
Descriptors: School Administration, Administrative Organization, Empowerment, School Policy
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Beatriz Antonieta Moya; Sarah Elaine Eaton – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2024
New technologies could facilitate new ways of cheating. This emerging scenario places academic integrity policy in higher education institutions as critical. Academic integrity scholars have designed conceptual frameworks to analyze academic integrity policy. The body of the literature on academic integrity policy analysis includes studies…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Integrity, Ethics
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Rebecca Hibbin – Pastoral Care in Education, 2024
This paper provides an exploration of a non-hierarchical model of discipline observed in one Secondary School in the North-East of England, that employed the whole-school use of Restorative Practice enhanced by vertically structured Coaching Groups. This model supported a school community characterised by working restoratively with others to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Schools, Discipline Policy, Discipline
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Juno Tourne; Jochen Devlieghere; Rudi Roose; Lieve Bradt – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2024
This article highlights the inequality in the Flemish education system, which disproportionately affects youngsters with low socioeconomic status. This inequality is attributed to the human capital approach characterising current educational policies, putting emphasis on educational outcomes. This results in education that homogenises and limits…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Policy, Discipline Policy, Inclusion
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Joseph Wu; Wing-Hong Chui; Anthony Yau; Ming-Tak Hue – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2024
All public-funded Hong Kong universities have explicit practices to promote integrity and prevent students' academic dishonesty. Using the Behaviour Change Wheel as a conceptual framework, three common practices were analysed in the present study, namely, enforcement of policies to penalize dishonest acts, use of plagiarism detection software, and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Undergraduate Students, Ethics
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Marco Rüth; Maria Jansen; Kai Kaspar – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2024
Background: Online exams have become a more common form of assessment at universities due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, cheating behaviour in online exams is widespread and threatens exam validity as well as student learning and well-being. Objective: To better understand the role of university students' needs, conceptions and reasons…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Computer Assisted Testing, Cheating
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