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Watley, George – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2015
Compulsory education experiences are not commonly thought to shape future consumer behaviour, except for defining social and cultural differentiation. This article will illustrate how Caribbeans in Northamptonshire, England used compulsory education, even by antithesis, to thwart institutional and social views of Caribbean inferiority through…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Consumer Economics, Compulsory Education, Latin Americans
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Stebleton, Michael J.; Aleixo, Marina B. – Journal of The First-Year Experience & Students in Transition, 2016
A growing number of college-age Blacks in the United States are Black African immigrants. Using a constructivist grounded theory approach, the researchers interviewed 12 undergraduate Black African immigrant college students attending a predominately White institution (PWI) about their experiences and perceptions of belonging. Findings suggest…
Descriptors: African American Students, Immigrants, Blacks, Undergraduate Students
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Smith, Kelley Alison; Harrison, Abigail – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2013
This study investigated the attitudes of 43 teachers and school administrators towards sex education, young people's sexuality and their communities in 19 secondary schools in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, and how these attitudes affect school-based HIV prevention and sex education. In interviews, teachers expressed judgemental attitudes…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Administrator Attitudes, Sexuality
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Bhopal, Kalwant – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2009
This article will examine Asian women's views on the practice of dowries in the UK. The research is based on 20 in-depth interviews with Asian women studying for a Social Sciences degree in a "new" (post-1992) university in the southeast of England. All of the interviews were tape-recorded and the data transcribed. The data was analysed…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Asians, Higher Education, Feminism
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Robinson-Wood, Tracy Lynn – Journal of Ethnographic & Qualitative Research, 2010
Twenty-eight biological and adoptive White mothers of non-White children were interviewed in New Zealand and in the United States. Through a thematic analysis of transcribed interviews and interview notes, 7 primary themes emerged (a) looking like a family means looking alike and looking White, (b) mothering as vulnerability, (c) teen girls'…
Descriptors: Mothers, Racial Identification, Cultural Pluralism, Foreign Countries
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Bhana, Deevia – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2008
This paper explores the salience of sport in the lives of eight-year-old and nine-year-old South African primary school boys. Drawing on ethnographic and interview data, I argue that young boys' developing relationship with sport is inscribed within particular gendered, raced and classed discourses in South Africa. Throughout the paper I show…
Descriptors: Young Children, Foreign Countries, Males, Ethnography
Nelson, Bardin H.; And Others – 1968
The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship of socioeconomic variables and selected attitudinal factors to the levels of living of rural families in low income counties in the South. A total of 1,474 white and Negro families from 7 Southern States (Alabama, Kentucy, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas) were…
Descriptors: Blacks, Educational Background, Family Attitudes, Interviews
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Orser, W. Edward – International Journal of Oral History, 1984
Studied is a Baltimore, MD, neighborhood where the racial composition altered drastically over a period of 20 years. How Whites who lived through it interpreted that change is described. Why people saw, and now remember, aspects of change and not aspects of continuity are also examined. (RM)
Descriptors: Blacks, Interviews, Mobility, Neighborhood Integration
Bradburn, Norman M.; And Others – 1970
An estimated 36 million Americans--or 19 percent of the population--lived in racially integrated neighborhoods in the spring of 1967. Yet, the number of Negroes living in such neighborhoods tended to be small in comparison with the number of whites. The research operations for this study, which began in the autumn of 1966, were divided into three…
Descriptors: Blacks, Community Surveys, Comparative Analysis, Family (Sociological Unit)
Helfgot, Joseph; Morris, Daniel – 1974
This study analyzes the day care-related perceptions of a group of low-income women who voluntarily enrolled their children in group day care in order to obtain or maintain employment, and explores the employment experiences of these women. Face-to-face unstructured interviews were conducted by trained black or Hispanic interviewers with 157 New…
Descriptors: Blacks, Child Welfare, Day Care, Economic Factors
HALVORSEN, MARCIA L. – 1967
IN THIS REPORT DATA DESCRIBING THE SOCIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF RESIDENTS OF "VINE CITY," A NEGRO SLUM IN ATLANTA, GEORGIA, ARE STATISTICALLY SUMMARIZED AND ANALYZED. ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-SIX PERSONS, MOSTLY WOMEN, REPRESENTING 11 PERCENT OF "VINE CITY'S" FAMILY POPULATION, WERE INTERVIEWED BY STUDENTS AT A NEARBY COLLEGE. THE…
Descriptors: Activities, Behavior Patterns, Blacks, Citizen Participation