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Showing 1,126 to 1,140 of 4,012 results Save | Export
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Okay, Aysegül; Balçikanli, Cem – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2021
Despite their experience, teachers continuously need to develop themselves professionally as the recency of the knowledge they acquire in teacher education programmes wears off in time -- which means they need to be autonomous enough take responsibility for their own professional learning. This study, therefore, defines 'teachers' professional…
Descriptors: Professional Autonomy, Test Construction, Test Validity, Questionnaires
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Saylik, Ahmet; Sahin, Çigdem Çelik – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2021
This research aims to examine the relationship between school principals' paternalist leadership behaviours and teacher autonomy. The research is a descriptive study in which causal comparison and correlational method are used together. 292 teachers were determined by using disproportionate sampling method. In this research, the Paternalist…
Descriptors: Principals, Leadership Styles, Administrator Behavior, Professional Autonomy
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Gear, Rebekah Charlotte; Sood, Krishan Kumar – Education Sciences, 2021
The term "middle leader" in the context of English education has evolved into an overarching title to describe a leadership position for practitioners who have school wide responsibilities in addition to their classroom duties. Such responsibilities can consist of pastoral leadership; curriculum leadership; leadership of additional…
Descriptors: Middle Management, Leaders, Educational Change, Change Strategies
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Powell, Sean Robert – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2021
In this paper, I critique the ideology of competition in school music using the philosophy of Herbert Marcuse, including his concepts of the performance principle and "The Great Refusal," which he saw as defining aspects of what he termed a one-dimensional society. Under a one-dimensional neoliberal educational regime, as can be found in…
Descriptors: Music Education, Criticism, Ideology, Competition
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Lee, Sun Young – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
Teacher agency is often depicted in terms of autonomy, empowerment, and participation. This article examines how those democratic visions of teacher agency are (re)constructed during the post-World War Two period when social scientists were eager to find organized procedural reasons. To explain this, I historicize the shifted teachers' role from a…
Descriptors: Teacher Empowerment, Teacher Role, Educational History, Cybernetics
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Smith, Alan; Seal, Mike – Education Sciences, 2021
This review explores how critical pedagogy, often cited by educators of informal educators as a key influence, actually informs teaching of informal educators in higher education and assesses its potential to do so. It explores the background to critical pedagogy, its principles, aims and approaches and examines its worldwide influence on the…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Teaching Methods, Neoliberalism, Informal Education
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Göloglu Demir, Cennet; Kizilhan, Pinar – Psycho-Educational Research Reviews, 2021
The aim of the present study was to reveal the relationship between teachers' commitment to the curriculum and teacher autonomy. The study was conducted during the fall term of the 2020-2021 academic year by means of google forms administered to 956 students on social platforms. The data collection instruments utilized in the study were the…
Descriptors: Professional Autonomy, Correlation, Teacher Behavior, Curriculum
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Ruef, Jennifer – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2021
What does it mean to be "good-at-math," and how is it determined? Cobb et al. (2009) defined the normative identity of mathematics classrooms as the obligations that students must meet to be considered good-at-math. Obligations are negotiated between teachers and students through series of bids. Normative identities reveal distributions…
Descriptors: Mathematics Skills, Behavior Standards, Social Behavior, Mathematics Teachers
Kari McGowan – ProQuest LLC, 2021
The purpose of this qualitative phenomenological study was to examine factors that lead to teacher attrition and the role agency plays in it. For the purposes of this study, agency refers to teachers' capacity to make choices, take principles action, and enact change. A total of 20 former teachers were interviewed to discuss their lived…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Teacher Persistence, Professional Autonomy, Decision Making
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Andrew Bills; Nigel Howard; Michael Bell – Journal of Educational Leadership, Policy and Practice, 2021
This paper employs critical policy historiography of South Australian public education as a contextual backdrop that speaks to a hermeneutic phenomenological study of the lived experiences of two former public-school principals, who describe how their ongoing social justice schooling agendas in public education met with considerable departmental…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Education, Principals, Social Justice
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Liyanage, Indika; Walker, Tony – Educational Research for Policy and Practice, 2023
Teachers receive increasing attention as change agents within education reform policy discourses positioning their professionalism, identity, and agency as critical to implementation of reforms. However, identities either claimed by teachers or assigned by reform policies involve serious (re)negotiations on the part of teachers as they make…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Curriculum Development, Professional Identity
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Alhawsawi, Hajeej; Alhawsawi, Sajjadllah; Sadeck, Osman – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2023
The lasting effects of COVID-19 on education are not yet fully understood. However, many studies have reported on how educationalists and students have responded to the transition from the traditional classrooms to an emergency remote learning and teaching. Prominent researchers in the field strongly argue that teachers' contexts exert a critical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Fayda-Kinik, F. Sehkar; Cetin, Munevver – Higher Education Quarterly, 2023
Prior research has had a limited approach to identifying organisational factors related to knowledge management (KM) practices of higher education institutions (HEIs), the centre for knowledge creation. This qualitative study explored such factors affecting KM capabilities from the perspectives of 30 full-time academics in public universities, and…
Descriptors: Knowledge Management, Organizational Culture, Decision Making, Higher Education
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Suci Nugrah Amalia; Radina Anggun Nurisma; Utami Widiati; Lastika Ary Prihandoko – TESL-EJ, 2023
English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) students' willingness to communicate (WTC) is required both in face-to-face (F2F) and online learning. While literature had extensively explored students' WTC factors in F2F learning, studies on students' WTC factors in online learning were still limited. Hence, this exploratory factor analysis (EFA) study aimed…
Descriptors: Professional Autonomy, Language Teachers, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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Jamie Shaffer – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2023
This article examines the formation and impact of a supportive networking community of practice (CoP) for women faculty and staff at a university in the southeastern U.S. Barriers to success for women in higher education, both during and after the COVID-19 pandemic, are discussed. The framework of systems convening and the ways in which the CoP…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Barriers, Females
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