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Keren Charge; Linette du Toit; Danielle du Plessis; Tabea Köstlin; Julia Wagner; Renata Eccles; Jeannie van der Linde; Maria du Toit – South African Journal of Childhood Education, 2025
Background: Two hundred and fifty million children under five in low- and middle-income countries are at risk of not achieving their developmental potential. High-quality milestone guides can help mitigate these risks but are often not contextually appropriate for countries like South Africa, because of unavailable resources and its…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Development, Developmental Stages, Guides
Jenan Jondy; Mary ZumBrunnen – Metropolitan Universities, 2025
Inequities continue to weaken Michigan's capacity to respond quickly and effectively to crises, both natural and human-made. Minority and low-income populations, already disadvantaged, suffer the burden of the inequitable social, environmental, and economic injustices that have culminated in previously unacknowledged levels. Since 2011, the…
Descriptors: State Universities, Economic Development, Community Development, School Community Relationship
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Naisan Yazdani – Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 2025
Students in Timor-Leste face low educational outcomes due to sociopolitical factors rooted in the nation's colonial history. This study evaluates the academic impact of a low-resource afterschool supplementary tutoring program designed to address learning gaps and improve school outcomes across rural and urban settings. Using instructional design…
Descriptors: After School Programs, Tutoring, Foreign Countries, Program Effectiveness
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Fatma Zehra Ünlü Kaynakçi; Gökçen Aydin; S. Burcu Özgülük Üçok – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
University entrance exams in Türkiye often generate significant test anxiety among high school students. This study investigates the effectiveness of a psychoeducational intervention based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) in reducing test anxiety among 10th-grade students. Employing a mixed-methods sequential explanatory design, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Test Anxiety, Psychoeducational Methods, High School Students
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Lili Zhang – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2025
Group awareness tools have garnered significant interest within the realm of computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL), as they foster collaborative learning behaviors. However, in the context of a CSCL environment devoid of rich technologies, supporting group awareness is challenging. Contextualized in a teacher professional development…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Computer Assisted Instruction, College Students, Foreign Countries
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Sarah Ruth Morris; Sarah Clark McKenzie – Educational Forum, 2025
Freshman grades relate to academic outcomes, yet limited research explores which students face the highest risk of course failure. With logit analysis using a five-year Arkansas dataset (n = 164,688), we find that economically disadvantaged ninth-grade students are more likely to fail a course than their more privileged peers. This disparity…
Descriptors: High School Freshmen, Grade 9, Grades (Scholastic), Failure
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Fabio Galli – International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, 2025
Literature inclusion and exclusion (E/I) criteria are a fundamental selection methodology in different applications. Mainly, the E/I criteria are identified and chosen with respect to the question for which the manuscript itself is produced, thus allowing the selection of the literature. This procedure is not always related to the economic…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Open Educational Resources, Criteria, Economic Factors
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Kevin Wai Ho Yung; Scarlet Poon – European Journal of Education, 2025
Well-being development in young people's formative years is crucial for their transition to adulthood. While research on well-being in formal education contexts is expanding, little attention has been paid to out-of-school educational settings, particularly supplementary tutoring for disadvantaged students. Adopting Sirgy's concept of positive…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Economically Disadvantaged, Adolescents, Well Being
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Erin K. O'Loughlin; Mounia Naja; Robert J. Wellman; Katerina Maximova; Jennifer L. O'Loughlin – Journal of School Health, 2025
Background: Availability and quality of nutrition-related health-promoting interventions (N-HPIs) vary across primary schools. We examined whether school contextual factors (e.g., socioeconomic deprivation) were associated with N-HPI availability in Quebec, Canada, and whether available N-HPIs incorporated evidence-based implementation…
Descriptors: Nutrition, Nutrition Instruction, Health Promotion, Intervention
Josh Cowen – American Educator, 2025
Much of the author's career as a researcher, writer, and teacher has been built on the idea that evidence should inform public policy. What works, why, and for whom? As a young scholar, the author joined large research projects concerning the extraordinarily controversial issue of school vouchers: programs that use tax dollars to fund private…
Descriptors: Educational Vouchers, Privatization, Program Effectiveness, Evidence
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J. G. Maree – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2025
This article reports on how longitudinal counselling for career construction clarified and promoted the sense of calling of a black woman. Purposive sampling was used to select a woman wanting to promote her sense of calling to make a difference in the lives of vulnerable people. A longitudinal, eight-year, explanatory, and intrinsic case study…
Descriptors: Blacks, Females, Career Development, Career Counseling
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Robin Clausen – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
Direct certification has been described by policymakers and academics as a tool which may replace National School Lunch Program (NSLP) eligibility data (Douglas Geverdt, National Center for Education Statistics, personal communication, August 28, 2023). It suggests a policy future in which we change the metric of how we identify disadvantage. On…
Descriptors: Eligibility, Lunch Programs, Educational Policy, Identification
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Lucy C. Sorensen; Andrea M. Headley; Stephen B. Holt – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2025
Involvement with the juvenile justice system carries immense consequences both to detained youth and to society more broadly. Extant research on the "school-to-prison pipeline" has often focused on school disciplinary practices such as suspension with less attention on understanding the impact of school referrals to the juvenile justice…
Descriptors: Juvenile Justice, Referral, Student Behavior, Behavior Problems
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Jukka M. Leppänen; Juha Pyykkö; Denise Evans; Lezanie Coetzee; Günther Fink; Aisha K. Yousafzai; David H. Hamer; Doug Parkerson; Peter C. Rockers – Developmental Science, 2025
Studies in low-resource settings suggest that multiple aspects of early childhood development are sensitive to the relative poverty of a child's environment. We examined whether direct, quantitative measures of early developing cognitive functions show a similar association with relative poverty. Eye movement latencies were recorded in children at…
Descriptors: Children, Child Development, Eye Movements, Poverty
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Sara Movahedazarhouligh; Chelsea Warr – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2025
Early childhood (EC) education is increasingly becoming an inclusive environment where children with and without disabilities can learn and participate in shared daily activities and routines. Parental advocacy and engagement are pivotal factors in enhancing the quality of inclusion for children with special needs, meeting their unique…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Students with Disabilities, Child Advocacy, Inclusion
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