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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Nazar Khalid; Jere Behrman; Emily Hannum; Amrit Thapa – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2024
Floods cause extensive damage in high-income countries, including the United States, but problems are more severe in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) that lack preventative and mitigating infrastructure. Marginalized children's education in LMICs might be particularly vulnerable. Using the Indian Human Development Survey, we investigate…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Student Characteristics, Foreign Countries, Natural Disasters
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Khanal, Sudeep; Charles, Claire – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2022
Sociologists of education have shown that schooling tends to favour the most powerful groups and that even well-intentioned researchers can run the risk of perpetuating some of the very power structures we seek to critique. In this paper we explore how a male, Brahmin researcher from Nepal (the highest caste group in Nepalese society) attempted to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Class, Power Structure, Educational Experience
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Rachel Louise Stenhouse; Nicola Ingram – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2024
In this article we make an argument for the importance of embodied cultural capital in the generation of class advantage through private school students' access to Oxbridge. Private schools in England continue to reproduce advantage (Variyan 2019), however, establishing exactly how students are advantaged through private schooling is not…
Descriptors: Cultural Capital, Advantaged, Social Class, Private Schools
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Schmidt, Teressa – Power and Education, 2020
Internationally, vocational education and training (VET) is intended to fulfil important economic and social objectives. There is, however, a concerning discourse relating to funding, esteem, reputation and quality, and questions have been raised about whether social mobility aspirations of the sector's students are achieved or achievable. This…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Social Bias, Neoliberalism, Foreign Countries
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Yoon, Ee-Seul; Grima, Victoria; DeWiele, Corinne E. Barrett; Skelton, Lucas – Comparative Education, 2022
This study assesses the extent to which public high schools become more or less socially mixed after families are allowed to choose schools outside their designated catchment areas in a mid-sized Canadian city. We draw on settler-colonial theory, critical human geography, and critical social theory while applying a critical mapping of school…
Descriptors: School Choice, School Segregation, School Resegregation, Public Schools
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Yue Ma; Xinwu Zhang; Cody Abbey; Derek Hu; Oliver Lee; Weiting Hung; Chiayuan Chang; Chyi-In Wu; Dimitris Friesen; Scott Rozelle – Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2024
The objective of the current study is to examine the impact of an in-school computer-assisted learning (CAL) intervention on the math achievement of rural students in Taiwan, including a marginalized subgroup of rural students called Xinzhumin, and the factors associated with this impact. In order to achieve this, we conducted a cluster randomized…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries, Rural Youth
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Tett, Lyn; Macleod, Gale – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2020
Engaging parents and children in family learning generates collaborative partnerships and can increase children's attainment, but headteachers' (HTs) views affect the nature of these Home-School Partnership (HSPs). This study into family-learning programmes (FLPs) in socio-economically disadvantaged areas in one Scottish city investigates what…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Parent School Relationship, Economically Disadvantaged, Foreign Countries
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Wallace, Derron; Karangwa, Evariste; Bayisenge, Jeannette – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2019
This paper explores how economically disadvantaged girls with disabilities resist masculine domination at Rwanda's largest inclusive school, Busengare Secondary. Based on 16 in-depth interviews and 3 focus group interviews with Rwandan girls with disabilities, this study draws on critical feminist perspectives to examine the subjectivities of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economically Disadvantaged, Females, Disabilities
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Kadan, Sameer; Bekerman, Zvi; Roer-Strier, Dorit – Intercultural Education, 2019
The helping professions in general and social work in particular pose particular challenges and opportunities for national minority group members. This article adds to the present knowledge in the literature concerning the interaction between career choice in the welfare professions and minority status, by looking at the voices of Palestinian…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Career Choice, Arabs, Minority Groups
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Tett, Lyn – Journal of Transformative Education, 2019
This article draws on the theories of Mezirow, Foucault, and Holland and colleagues to investigate how students were positioned in relation to their own experiences, what opportunities they had to overcome their negative positioning in relation to the power structures that inform the worlds in which they move, and how their changed practices…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Literacy Education, Self Concept, Learning Experience
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Mikander, Pia – Journal of Social Science Education, 2016
In an unequal world, education about global inequality can be seen as a controversial but necessary topic for social science to deal with. Even though the world no longer consists of colonies and colonial powers, many aspects of the global economy follow the same patterns as during colonial times, with widening gaps between the world's richest and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Global Approach, Foreign Policy, Citizenship Education
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Courtney, Steven J. – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2016
In this paper, I draw on a study of school leaders' experiences of inspection to argue that repeated changes to school inspection policy in England constitute a post-panoptic regime. Thinking with and against Foucault, I elaborate post-panopticism, here characterised by: subjects' visibility; "fuzzy" norms; the exposure of subjects'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Inspection, Accountability, Educational Change
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Dua Jabr; Sorel Cahan – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2014
Schooling is now considered the major factor underlying the development of cognitive abilities. However, most studies on the effect of schooling on cognitive development have been conducted in free and generally supportive western environments. The possible variability of schooling effects between educational systems differing in the quality of…
Descriptors: Refugees, Foreign Countries, Political Power, Power Structure
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Gillborn, David – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2013
Drawing on Critical Race Theory (CRT) and illustrating with examples from the English system, the paper addresses the hidden racist dimension to contemporary education reforms and argues that this is a predictable and recurrent theme at times of economic crisis. Derrick Bell's concept of "interest-convergence" argues that moments of…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, African American Children, Whites
Kim, Hyung Ryeol – ProQuest LLC, 2013
By utilizing the data from 2009 International Civic and Citizenship Education Study (ICCS), this dissertation examines the extent to which countries vary in the pattern and magnitude of the discrepancy in civic outcomes among adolescents from differing family backgrounds. Among the many family background characteristics that may shape adolescents'…
Descriptors: Civics, Citizenship Education, Comparative Education, Foreign Countries
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