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Anne Schippling; Pedro Abrantes – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2024
Taking the example of educational biographies of alumni of an IB World School in the Lisbon region, the article aims to explore the potential of the concept of transnational educational spaces for biographical research. We focus on the biographical stage of transition to higher education as a crucial phase of students' biographies where we can…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Biographies, International Education, Higher Education
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Hamann, Julian; Kaltenbrunner, Wolfgang – Research Evaluation, 2022
Curricula vitae (CVs) are a crucial device for the evaluation of academic personae and biographies. They play a key role in the competitive assessments that underpin the reproduction of the academic workforce. Drawing on 80 CVs which have been part of candidates' applications for vacant professorships, our article provides a longitudinal study of…
Descriptors: Resumes (Personal), Biographies, Foreign Countries, Humanities
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Stephen McKinney – Journal of Religious Education, 2024
The assassination of Ignacio Ellacuría and seven others at the Universidad Centroamericana José Simeon Cañas (UCA) in San Salvador in 1989 has had a deep and profound impact on the world-wide Jesuit community and the Catholic Church. His philosophy and theology of liberation have been carefully studied, as has his vision and operation of the UCA…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Religious Colleges, Universities, Catholics
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Marloes Hoencamp; John Exalto; Abraham de Muynck; Doret de Ruyter – History of Education, 2024
Martinus Jan Langeveld (1905-1989) was a key figure in Dutch academic educational studies after the Second World War. This article investigates the origins and sources of Langeveld's theory by examining his prior publications and the main references in conjunction with the intellectual movements of his time. This research shows, first, that…
Descriptors: Educational History, Self Determination, Educational Theories, Educational Philosophy
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Kaukko, Mervi – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
Refugee students may come to schools with fragmented educational histories and other exile-related stressors, but many also settle fast, enjoy school and live rather ordinary childhoods. These more positive stories are not told because they get overridden by well-meaning but counterproductive stories of victimhood. This article presents a…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Refugees, Children, Foreign Countries
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Jones, Alison – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
How did Eruera Pare Hongi--who had an impact on New Zealand's pre-Treaty constitutional and literacy history--come to get his name? Eruera Pare is a transliteration of Edward Parry, a famous Arctic explorer, also known as Admiral Sir William Edward Parry. Why would a young Ngai Tawake man from Waimate, in the north of New Zealand, take the name of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Biographies, Naming, Literacy
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José Cossa – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2023
Anchored on Mondlane's biological mother's advice that he ought to 'go to school in order to understand the witchcraft of the white man, thus being able to fight against him' and on the argument that what he learned as a child informed his learning as an adolescent and as an adult, this study developed a profile of Eduardo Mondlane as a lifelong…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Scholarship, Biographies, Adult Educators
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Sigal Achituv – Journal of Jewish Education, 2024
Malka Haas (1920-2021) was a key pioneer in the founding of Israeli kibbutz kindergartens, and she profoundly influenced both the curriculum and practice of early childhood education (ECE) for the entire country. The article reviews Haas's biography, her professional development, and the main principles in her educational approach: "the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Kindergarten, Biographies
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Cheryl J. Craig; Maria Assuncao Flores; Lily Orland-Barak – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2023
In 2020, Miriam Ben-Peretz, the Israel Scholar of 2006 and a member of the U.S. National Academy (in addition to being a recipient of Israel's EMET Prize for Research in Education and an American Educational Research Association Fellow) passed away. Ben-Peretz, whose life patterned Israel's contested history (including its wars), was equally well…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scholarship, Biographies, Educational Researchers
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Claudi, Alessio – Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 2021
Often in the past, historians tended to study and write mainly about key figures, such as rulers or very famous people. However, in recent decades, historians have started to focus on local figures who had a role in their community. This paper narrates the life of one of those characters, an interesting individual who led a varied and interesting…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Biographies, Educational History, Educational Theories
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Thomson, Rachel; Owens, Rachael; Redman, Peter; Webb, Rebecca – Child Care in Practice, 2023
What do we do with emotion in biographical research: is it an end in itself, a symptom to be explained, a thread to be pulled? This paper presents an experiment in methodology within a field of biographical methods that involved revisiting a single qualitative interview after the elapse of thirty years. The interview with 22 year old Stacey was…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Psychological Patterns, Qualitative Research, Interviews
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Pedro dos Santos; Bong-gi Sohn – TESL Canada Journal, 2023
This study examines the trajectories of two plurilingual, racialized academic writing faculty, presenting how we brought our Southern onto-epistemologies to curriculum, teaching, and assessment. Although plurilingualism has become a significant dimension of Canadian higher education, monolingual norms that emphasize native-like competence continue…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Writing Teachers, Multilingualism
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Dorathea Julia Lamprecht; Caroline van Niekerk – Journal of Historical Research in Music Education, 2024
The Tygerberg Children's Choir (TCC) is rooted in South Africa's Afrikaner culture. Its transition to a multicultural children's choir, within a drastically changed political dispensation, furnished a rich subject for a historiographic choir identity investigation. From its establishment in 1972 until 2019, Hendrik D. Loock was the conductor.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Singing, Children, History
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Lilley, Rozanna; Lawson, Wenn; Hall, Gabrielle; Mahony, Joanne; Clapham, Hayley; Heyworth, Melanie; Arnold, Samuel; Trollor, Julian; Yudell, Michael; Pellicano, Elizabeth – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2023
In this paper, we report on a participatory oral history study documenting the lives of late-diagnosed autistic adults in Australia. We interviewed 26 autistic adults about their life history and the impact of late diagnosis. All were diagnosed after the age of 35, growing up in an era when autism was not well known. Using reflexive thematic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Oral History, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Adults
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Scott, Lisa; Watfern, Chloe – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2021
Background: Over 10 years ago, Lisa Scott first began making art at a studio in Sydney that supports people with intellectual disability to realise their creative ambitions. In this article, we consider what it has meant for Lisa to become an artist and, in the process, share the story of other big changes in her life. Methods: During…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Artists, Intellectual Disability, Biographies
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