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Gentry, Marcia – Gifted Education International, 2022
This essay offers six reasons why the field of gifted education should retire the terms giftedness and gifted. Additionally, in the historical context of longstanding, severe, and pervasive racial and income inequities in the field of gifted education, the term Master's Discourse is introduced and defined in this call to change terminology. Among…
Descriptors: Gifted Education, Gifted, Equal Education, Low Income
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Emily M. Janke; Melissa Quan; Isabelle Jenkins; John Saltmarsh – Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning, 2023
Choosing how to recognize community-engaged scholarship in promotion and tenure policies so that it is assessed accurately and fairly remains a relatively new and ongoing challenge for institutions of higher education. This case study examines how one US research university integrated text to recognize community-engaged scholarship across all…
Descriptors: School Community Relationship, Scholarship, Academic Language, Educational Policy
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Harris, Jessica C.; Patton, Lori D. – Journal of Higher Education, 2019
Grounded in Black feminist and critical race theories, legal scholar KimberlĂ© Crenshaw introduced the term "intersectionality" to the academy in 1989 to demonstrate how U.S. structures, such as the legal system, and discourses of resistance, such as feminism and anti-racism, often frame identities as isolated and mutually exclusive,…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Feminism, Critical Theory, Higher Education
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Child, Simon; Johnson, Martin; Mehta, Sanjana; Charles, Annabel – English in Education, 2015
There has been a long-standing debate about how 'English' can be defined. Educational policy changes have typically been driven by differing representations of the subject, and have ranged from broad 'aesthetic' definitions to more narrow 'functional' views. The present study aims to analyse areas of consensus and contention in stakeholders'…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Definitions, English, Language Attitudes
Spalding, Audrey – Mackinac Center for Public Policy, 2014
This study focuses on Public Act 103 of 2011, which made teacher evaluation, layoff policies and teacher placement prohibited subjects of bargaining, among other things. After surveying 200 Michigan school district collective bargaining agreements, this study finds that as many as 60 percent of districts could have collective bargaining agreements…
Descriptors: Unions, Contracts, Educational Change, Barriers
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Soutter, Anne K.; O'Steen, Billy; Gilmore, Alison – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
This study examines the usage and contexts of "wellbeing" in New Zealand's curriculum, a formal statement of education policy enacted by a democratically elected government. The analysis is guided by a current model of student wellbeing rooted in seven, interdependent domains: "Having," "Being," "Relating,"…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Foreign Countries, Content Analysis
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Alvarez, Laura – Bilingual Research Journal, 2012
Efforts to improve educational outcomes for English learners often focus on "academic language," but unfortunately the field lacks a clear, agreed-upon definition of the concept. This article reports on a design research study that focused on students' engagement in one academic practice over several months: reading and discussing…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Educational Objectives, Outcomes of Education, Second Language Learning
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Arjun, P. – South African Journal of Higher Education, 1998
The new curriculum for South Africa's schools is used to examine the use of the terms "paradigm" and "paradigm shift" in education. It is argued that, in this case, the scientific characteristics of the terms are being violated: that no macro-paradigm shift has occurred as a result of the introduction of outcomes-based…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Definitions, Educational Change