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Griffiths, Morwenna – Educational Theory, 2006
In this essay, Morwenna Griffiths considers the effect of feminization on the practices of education. She outlines a feminist theory of practice that draws critically on theories of embodiment, diversity, and structures of power to show that any practice is properly seen as fluid, leaky, and viscous. Examining different and competing…
Descriptors: Females, Teaching (Occupation), Educational Practices, Gender Issues
Taylor, Denny – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2005
Educational anthropologists have helped create symbolic spaces in which conversations can take place about children's lives, language, literacy, and learning. In the "New Word Order" children have no histories, no identities. Culture doesn't count. Home languages are considered interference. As the curriculum is narrowed by the use of…
Descriptors: Word Order, Educational Anthropology, Curriculum Development, Politics of Education
Grover, Sonja – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 2004
This article discusses the need for authentic social research with children given the fact that increasingly such research is being relied on to inform social policy which profoundly affects the lives of children. Authentic research is operationalized in this article as that research which gives power and voice to child research participants and…
Descriptors: Ethics, Research Methodology, Research Needs, Children
Arce, Josephine – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 2004
This study examines how socially conscious bilingual Latino educators, specifically prepared to teach underserved children, resist multiple layers of hegemonic structures. The participants are five beginning Spanish bilingual teachers who teach in urban and semi-rural elementary schools. The study explores how their resistance unfolds as they…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Research Design, Elementary Schools, Bilingual Teachers
Godfrey,Shane – Industry and Higher Education, 2005
This article deals with the power wielded by the primary industry partners in knowledge-intensive networks in the new materials development technology field. Industry partners have a disproportionate influence on the structure and functioning of networks. The power can be explicit or invisible and is mediated and reshaped by factors such as the…
Descriptors: Industry, School Business Relationship, Power Structure, Technological Advancement
Li, Jianghong – Rural Sociology, 2005
This study extends the literature by identifying two new dimensions of rural women?s status (husband?s housework sharing and women?s exposure to the larger world, in addition to power and autonomy) based on rich information from a representative sample of 1.062 childbearing women in rural Yunnan, China. It utilizes linear structural relations…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Housework, Socioeconomic Status, Females
Glenwright, Phil – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2005
This article first reviews important issues of language, power, and testing. It then examines in critical fashion a particular instance of the use of language testing by the Hong Kong government, namely, the Language Proficiency Assessment for Teachers (LPAT). Treating the LPAT developments as a form of narrative rather than debate, it presents…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Usage, Educational Practices, Testing
Skelton, Christine – Gender and Education, 2005
This article considers the tensions and struggles that exist between men and women and between women and women in the academic workplace. The research reported here is a small-scale case study of 22 academic women from two generations who were interviewed about their career experiences. The theoretical framework is materialist feminism and draws…
Descriptors: Females, Women Faculty, Higher Education, Gender Issues
Walker, Allan – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2004
This article aims to contribute to an understanding of principalship in Hong Kong through probing the formation and preservation of the deep leadership structures that shape its practice. Deep structures are formed partly through a dynamic relationship between constitution and culture which forms bounded "codes" of understanding, conduct…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Principals, Educational History, School Administration
Neff, Kristin D.; Suizzo, Marie-Anne – Cognitive Development, 2006
This study investigated possible cultural differences in the association of power, authentic self-expression, and well-being within romantic relationships. Participants (N = 314) included European American students from a central Texas university and Mexican American students from a border university. Results indicated that power inequality was…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Cultural Differences, Well Being, Intimacy
Hoffmann, Elizabeth A. – Teaching Sociology, 2006
Sociologists have documented how important place is in people's lives. C. Wright Mills (1959) argued that people must understand that they do not exist in a vacuum, but that their values, beliefs, and behaviors are influenced by the particular time and place in which they themselves exist. The development of this "sociological…
Descriptors: Geographic Location, Role, Self Concept, Quality of Life
Searby, Linda; Tripses, Jenny – Journal of Women in Educational Leadership, 2006
Women often perceive a disadvantage over similarly qualified males in professional advancement because they are not part of the "old boys' network." Based upon the assumption that women and minorities struggle to gain access into educational administration positions due to lack of professional networks and mentors, this phenomenological…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Social Networks, Males, Social Status
Bjork, Christopher – International Review of Education, 2004
Indonesia has seen several recent attempts to devolve control over the curriculum to the local level. Rather than catalogue all of the problems encountered in the course of their implementation, the present contribution focuses on a single reform, the Local Content Curriculum (LCC). Analysis of local responses to this reform provides insights into…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Administrative Organization, School Culture, Professional Autonomy
Berkhout, Susara J. – International Review of Education, 2005
Comparing the dynamics of centralisation/decentralisation in Belgium and South Africa has the advantage of revealing discrepancies between the public or official rationale for the (re) distribution of power and the probable or eventual effect of this (re)distribution on educational processes and learning outcomes. It can be seen that local…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Administrative Organization, Educational Administration, Empowerment
Kolbert, Jered B.; Crothers, Laura M. – Journal of School Violence, 2003
The phenomenon of childhood bullying is conceptualized from an evolutionary psychological perspective. In this manuscript, the research literature is examined regarding the role of the relationship between aggression, testosterone, and social status in the development and maintenance of dominance hierarchies, which involve a reciprocal…
Descriptors: Social Status, Bullying, Children, Psychology

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