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Takashi Yamashita; Donnette Narine; Wonmai Punksungka; Jenna W. Kramer; Rita Karam; Phyllis A. Cummins – Grantee Submission, 2023
Volunteering, STEM education and occupation, and information-processing skills such as literacy, numeracy, and digital problem-solving skills are important indicators of a nation's well-being as they represent civic engagement, economic development, and the human capital of the population. Although these critical social indicators have been…
Descriptors: Volunteers, STEM Education, Information Skills, Cognitive Processes
F. T. Victor; C. C. Zuofa – Commission for International Adult Education, 2023
The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic revealed several inadequacies among Nigerian adults which include poor digital skills and survival techniques for adaptability in crisis. It was observed in the outbreak of the pandemic that most Nigerians lacked digital skills that was required for survival during the lockdown plus poor survival and coping…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adult Education, COVID-19, Pandemics
Bea Simpson; Mary Goretti Nakabugo; Ricardo Sabates – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 2024
Early childhood education (ECE) is a key investment for improving learning and future outcomes. Yet, in the context of Uganda, it is not compulsory or free, which means that provision tends to be private, and hence there is limited access for children from disadvantaged families, particularly refugees. This article examines the level of access to,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Refugees, Children
Sue Grey; Paul Morris – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2024
Creativity has fascinated scholars for generations, and its identification as one of the key 'twenty-first century skills' necessary for economic growth has led to renewed interest. This creates two challenges for the OECD: its flagship Programme of International Student Assessment (PISA) does not directly measure creativity. Secondly, the…
Descriptors: Creativity, 21st Century Skills, Human Capital, International Assessment
Parul Gupta; Kanupriya Misra Bakhru; Amit Shankar – International Journal of Learning and Change, 2024
This study explores the factors that affect the accumulation of employee emotional capital and the subsequent returns generated in an organisation. It uses qualitative research methods based on interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) to collect data which enables an in-depth investigation of the lived experience of the participants. This…
Descriptors: Job Performance, Employee Attitudes, Work Attitudes, Emotional Response
Balázs Égert; Christine de la Maisonneuve; David Turner – Education Economics, 2024
This paper develops a new measure of human capital, calculated as a cohort-weighted average of the quality of education (PISA scores) and the quantity of education (mean years of schooling). Contrary to the existing studies, the relative weights of quality and quantity are estimated (and not calibrated). The quality of education is estimated to be…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Outcomes of Education, Educational Quality, Macroeconomics
'You Have to Work Ten Times Harder': First-in-Family Students, Employability and Capital Development
Hazel McCafferty; Michael Tomlinson; Sarah Kirby – Journal of Education and Work, 2024
Since the 1990s, UK government policy has sought to increase access to higher education, with a plan to improve social mobility. However, enhancing the employability prospects for all has proven difficult to achieve through widening participation alone. This research explores this paradox, via the experiences of first-in-family undergraduates as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, First Generation College Students, Social Mobility, Employment Potential
Fatma Köybasi Semin – Open Education Studies, 2024
Although education is mostly the duty of educators, it is an important field that concerns all segments of society. Studies and regulations on education on a global scale have gained momentum in terms of increasing both quality and quantity. Which issues related to education are considered important and which problems are focused on can be a guide…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Social Sciences, Social Science Research, Citation Indexes
Amy Beth Wagner – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The problem addressed in this study was the high attrition rates of teachers in elementary school districts and the unknown role of human, social, structural, and psychological capital determinants needed to retain teachers. The purpose of this qualitative descriptive case study was to describe the experiences of veteran K-6 teachers in the South…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Elementary School Teachers, Suburban Schools, Role Theory
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
Muhammad Mujtaba Asad; Abdul Basit; Prathamesh Churi; Norah Almusharraf – Education & Training, 2024
Purpose: Inspired by the neoclassical economic theory and endogenous growth theories, where former studies suggest that the economic growth of a country can be observed through the combination of three factors. Those three factors include capital, the number of labour forces (human capital) and technology. This research was initiated to study the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Socioeconomic Status, Sustainability, Lifelong Learning
Pablo Toro-Blanco – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
Against the backdrop of the Educational Reform in Chile since 1965, this article sheds light on the convergence of educational language based upon the economic notion of developmentalism, the idea of human capital and the expansion of school guidance (orientación) in Chilean education. Through analysing right-wing press and discourses from…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational History, Political Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes
Kual Ayai – ProQuest LLC, 2024
There are considerable challenges experienced by female South Sudanese refugees to access post-secondary education in the United States. Although these challenges are many, but little was known about their experiences to access and enroll into US post-secondary education. There has been a significant lack of research on how South Sudanese female…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Refugees, Females, Access to Education
Sheila R. Vaidya; Casey E. Hanna – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2024
Teachers help shape the future of our world and impact school effectiveness and improvement. School effectiveness is most important because education is transformative and central to economic development and social change, called for in this year's AERA theme. Retaining talented teachers is pivotal to cultivating tomorrow's leaders and innovators.…
Descriptors: Secondary School Teachers, Teacher Persistence, Teacher Effectiveness, School Effectiveness
Oyigbo, Dorida Nneka; Ngwu, Patrick N. C.; Nwachukwu, Ruphina U. – International Review of Education, 2021
In the field of education, the "non-formal education approach" to fostering human proficiency in a wide range of skills is credited with having engendered the broadening of educational practice beyond formal schooling through the emergence of methods and techniques of basic education, administrative training and management science. In…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nonformal Education, Economic Progress, Public Agencies