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Tomlinson, Carol Ann – Educational Leadership, 2023
Differentiated instruction has always been about providing every learner full opportunity to grow as much as possible academically, intellectually, and socially. A key principle of differentiation is "teaching up" (Tomlinson, 2021, 2022; Tomlinson & Javius, 2012). Teaching up is of particular importance at this moment in education…
Descriptors: Individualized Instruction, Teaching Methods, Equal Education, Educational Quality
Downey, Douglas B. – University of Chicago Press, 2021
Most of us assume that public schools in America are unequal--that the quality of the education varies with the location of the school and that as a result, children learn more in the schools that serve mostly rich, white kids than in the schools serving mostly poor, black kids. But it turns out that this common assumption is misplaced. As Douglas…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Misconceptions, Public Schools, Educational Quality
Harrison, Louis, Jr.; Azzarito, Laura; Hodge, Samuel – Quest, 2021
The current state of research in kinesiology scholarship is largely void of empirical research that counters deficit thinking from a social justice perspective. The purpose of this paper is to interrogate the social justice agenda in kinesiology, and to suggest directions for the future of social justice research in our fields. First, we offer…
Descriptors: Kinesiology, Social Justice, Research, Social Bias
Sorensen, Clark W. – History of Education, 2023
Educational grievances made educational democratisation an important issue in the 1980s and 1990s during South Korea's democratic consolidation. Educational democratisers sought to address these through greater freedom and autonomy for teachers, students and parents combined with teacher unionisation. Some of the excesses of the highly…
Descriptors: Democracy, Social Change, Foreign Countries, Educational Change
Martin, Jane – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2019
England's premier league of public schools, educating less than three thousand boys, started life in medieval times as charity schools for the poor. Closely tied to the Church, they found favour as institutions of social mobility. By the turn of the eighteenth century, vandalism and violence were endemic in many; misrule and abuses so common that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Schools, Public Schools, Public Education
Mendonca, Ana Lucia – Educational Considerations, 2020
Brazilian education has specific cultural and regional traits that infuse the school settings and vast inequalities that go beyond cultural and socioeconomic levels. All that contributed to creating two different school settings: the private and the public. The purpose of this article is to understand from a historical perspective how policies and…
Descriptors: Cultural Traits, Social Differences, Equal Education, Private Schools
Gutiérrez, Enrique Javier Díez – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2021
The process of teaching and learning is not merely a question of transmitting a received cultural legacy but also of its transformation. Education is inseparable from life and from any socio-political model we wish to build and defend. This implies the impossibility of separating education from politics. Hence we must attempt to provide future…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Social Change, Political Influences, Political Attitudes
Forsey, Martin – Comparative Education, 2020
Portraying a localised educational system as part of broader global flows of policy ideas and practices emanating from multiple sources -- an eduscape-- the paper focuses on family practices shaped by global policy flows and the return impact of families on the translation of these policies into local school formations. Under scrutiny are the…
Descriptors: Social Change, Educational Policy, School Choice, Competition
Boucher, Eddie – Journal of Global Education and Research, 2020
India and the United States are the largest democracies in the world, and since the 1990s, both countries have implemented neoliberal economic reforms into most of their social institutions-- including their education systems. Even though both countries have long-established commitments to public education as a means for socio-economic…
Descriptors: Democracy, Neoliberalism, School Choice, Privatization
Machaisa, Pertunia R.; Mulaudzi, Lindiwe – Africa Education Review, 2019
This article reports on research that investigated integration challenges in multicultural schools. The inquiry followed a qualitative approach, using interviews, focus groups and open-ended questionnaires. The understanding of the integration of multicultural challenges in schools was done through the lens of critical race theory (CRT).…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Cultural Pluralism, Racial Integration, Foreign Countries
San Miguel, Guadalupe, Jr. – Association of Mexican American Educators Journal, 2022
During the past several decades, historians have investigated various aspects of the Chicano movement. In most of these studies, the important role that moderate liberal activists have played in promoting significant social change during the same period has been slighted. By moderate liberal activists, I mean those who depended on the federal…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Educational Policy, Policy Formation, Civil Rights
Lipman, Pauline – Democracy & Education, 2018
This response discusses the complexity of racial segregation in U.S. cities today and an emerging education movement for equity and racial justice. Racial segregation has been and continues to be a potent, and contested, strategy of containment, subordination, and exploitation, but African Americans have also, out of necessity, turned racial…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, African Americans, Racial Bias, Community Schools
Noboa-Ríos, Abdín – Peter Lang Publishing Group, 2020
The year 2011 marked the first time in U.S. history where more "nonwhite" babies were born than "white" babies. Academic year 2014-15 marked the first year that K-12 public school enrollment became predominantly nonwhite. Among the five largest school districts, Latinos represent the predominant group. It's all about a stemming…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Elementary Secondary Education, Hispanic American Students, School Districts
Rosen, Sonia M. – American Educational Research Journal, 2019
Neoliberal market logic positions youth as either commodities produced and marketed by private institutions or consumers for whose business those institutions are competing, a paradigm that narrows pathways for youth participation in civic and political institutions by restricting youth agency to participation in markets. However, youth organizing…
Descriptors: Citizen Participation, Neoliberalism, Social Action, Organizations (Groups)
Saltman, Kenneth J. – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2015
This commentary suggests that a countermovement for educational and social justice must learn from the dominant global neo-liberal movement and its successes in creating institutions and knowledge-making processes and networks. Local struggles for educational justice are important, but they need to be linked to a broader educational justice…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Social Justice, Global Approach, Networks