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Lowe, Kevin; Harrison, Neil; Tennent, Christine; Guenther, John; Vass, Greg; Moodie, Nikki – Australian Educational Researcher, 2019
School systems and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders have long acknowledged the levels of social, cultural and epistemic conflict that has historically existed between teachers and schools, and Aboriginal students, families and their local communities. This relationship is both symptomatic and causal of the broader and highly complex field of…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Pacific Islanders, Educational Environment, Cultural Differences
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Harrison, Neil; Waller, Richard – British Educational Research Journal, 2018
Raising the proportion of young people from disadvantaged backgrounds progressing to higher education has been a key policy objective for successive governments in the UK since the late 1990s. Often this has been conceptualised as a problem with their 'aspirations,' with the solution being seen as the provision of 'aspiration-raising' activities…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Access to Education, Academic Aspiration, Educational Attainment
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Harrison, Neil; McCaig, Colin – British Educational Research Journal, 2017
This paper engages with the continuing emphasis given to evidence-based policy and "what works" approaches in educational research, highlighting some of the continuing epistemological challenges from a post-positivist perspective. To illustrate these, it uses the case of bursaries awarded by universities to improve outcomes for students…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Case Studies, Intervention, Correlation
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Harrison, Neil; McCaig, Colin – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2015
One form of ecological fallacy is found in the dictum that "you are where you live"--otherwise expressed in the idea that you can infer significant information about an individual or their family from the prevailing conditions around their home. One expression of this within higher education in the UK has been the use (and, arguably,…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Neighborhoods, Disadvantaged, Foreign Countries
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Waller, Richard; Harrison, Neil; Hatt, Sue; Chudry, Farooq – Journal of Education and Work, 2014
This paper reports findings from a study of 49 young first-year UK undergraduates who had undergone one or two weeks of work experience at school between the ages of 14 and 16. Previous studies focusing on the whole school cohort suggested that the nature of work experience placements was strongly predicted by class. In particular, middle class…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Freshmen, Work Experience Programs, Social Differences