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Eckert, Erica – Journal of Student Affairs Research and Practice, 2023
On May 4, 1970, four students were killed and nine were wounded when National Guardsmen opened fire on anti-war protestors at Kent State University. This case study explores the tragedy and the experiences of student affairs professionals at KSU leading up to and after the shootings. Although the field of crisis management did not exist in 1970,…
Descriptors: Educational History, Crisis Management, Student Personnel Services, State Universities
Richmann, Christopher J.; Fogleman, Alex – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) is a new discipline, with seeds sown by educational theorists of the early twentieth century and blossoming in the 1990s. As an inherently interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary field focusing on higher education, SoTL interrogates a range of subjects, encompasses a variety of genres, and uses a…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Scholarship, Instruction, Learning
Ellinghaus, Katherine; Judd, Barry – History of Education, 2023
This paper argues that Aboriginal children's engagement with education in the central Australian region of the Northern Territory in the mid-twentieth century can be understood as strategic engagements with formal western education systems and assimilation policies. It addresses a methodological problem stemming from a project that focuses on the…
Descriptors: Protestants, Educational History, Indigenous Populations, Multiracial Persons
Michael Barbour; Derek Wenmoth – Journal of Open, Flexible and Distance Learning, 2023
This invited article provides a comprehensive overview of the history and development of distance learning in Aotearoa New Zealand's school sector over the past century. It begins with a discussion of creating a common language to describe distance learning. The article then transitions to its main focus on the history of distance…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Distance Education, Educational History, Rural Population
Sadeghi, Ramin – Research Ethics, 2019
Almost all researchers are familiar with the concept of plagiarism these days. However, many scholars allege that plagiarism and its ethical ramifications are new western concepts that have not existed in scientific and literary history. In their opinion, using the ideas of others was allowed liberally in past academic and literary communities. I…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Ethics, Definitions, Publications
Fangfang Cai – Journal of Advanced Academics, 2025
Teachers' perceptions are important in identifying and serving gifted children. However, little attention is given to gifted education in the early years in China. This study aimed to investigate teachers' perceptions of young gifted children (aged 3-6), exploring teachers' understandings, feelings, practices, and perceived challenges. Qualitative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Academically Gifted, Young Children
Stephanie Aguilar-Smith; Erin Doran – Educational Policy, 2024
Understanding the development of major educational policies is essential, especially federal policies integral to Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs)--one of the fastest-growing types of postsecondary institutions in the United States, which collectively serve over two-thirds of Latina/o/x-identified college students. Accordingly, in this…
Descriptors: Minority Serving Institutions, Hispanic American Students, Educational Policy, State Policy
María Eugenia Chaoul – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
The transition to the use of paper in public elementary schools in Mexico was not easy. At the end of the nineteenth century, the use of slates had been questioned due to the health risk they represented since students often erased their writing with saliva and the material with which the slates were made did not always meet the necessary…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Elementary Schools, Foreign Countries, Educational History
Daria Hejwosz-Gromkowska; Dobrochna Hildebrandt-Wypych – British Journal of Religious Education, 2024
This paper analyses the Solidarity movement narratives, focusing on church representatives, religious issues, and symbols in the Polish history textbooks for upper secondary schools between 1991 and 2018. The analysed textbooks prove to reinforce Poland's national and religious identities, with John Paul II and the priest Popieluszko being the…
Descriptors: Religious Factors, History Instruction, Textbooks, Content Analysis
May Amiel; Miri Yemini; Amit Rechavi – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
We investigate the sub-networks involved in education policy in Israel in recent years, using Mixed Methods Social Networks Analysis - drawn from combined analysis of qualitative and quantitative data. Our objective was to comprehensively explore the Israeli education policy network to deliver an understanding of its structure, actors, and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Social Networks, Governance
Hunter Knight – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
How do assumptions about where children naturally belong reinforce colonial productions of the human? This paper presents research from a study examining how North American Waldorf educators navigated the colonial legacies of common-sense understandings of childhood. I focus on the ideas about childhood that emerge in a belief that Waldorf…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Educators, Teaching Methods, North Americans
Kyle Kohler – Technology in Language Teaching & Learning, 2024
ChatGPT, a generative AI program developed by OpenAI, has raised serious questions about the future of education since its launch in November 2022. This paper argues that ChatGPT has the potential to redefine existing educational theories and the role of teachers in language education. Specifically, the paper examines ChatGPT's impact on language…
Descriptors: Technology Uses in Education, Natural Language Processing, Educational Change, Language Teachers
Lina Spjut; Fredrik Olsson Spjut – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
Sweden's first Elementary School Act of 1842 stated that every parish was obliged to organise and fund schools to be offered to all children in the parish. Many parishes were poor and had a difficult time funding schools. In some parishes, local industries, such as ironworks, organised, funded, and managed schools for their workers. Even though…
Descriptors: Religious Schools, Educational History, Elementary Schools, School Organization
Bara Mbengue; Maguette Diame; Benjamin D. Scherrer – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
This article works toward conceptualizing frictions between colonial education and non-Western traditions of African education in the modern African state. Signaling manifestations of educational friction or disequilibrium, we apply the concept of haunting to uncover ways the legacy of colonial education is reproduced through Western modernity as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Postcolonialism, African Culture, Emotional Response
James Waghorne – History of Education Review, 2024
Purpose: The article examines the differences in the reception of international and Indigenous students to understand the challenges faced by the first students who identified as Indigenous, and to improve understanding of the 1950s, a pivotal decade in the development of university culture. Design/methodology/approach: Drawing on archival sources…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Universities, Indigenous Populations