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Sarah Boodt – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2024
Global education policy discourse is based on an unshakable belief that more and improved skills will promote economic prosperity, global competitiveness and social inclusion. In England, the Further Education and Skills sector (FES) has emerged as the vehicle to deliver these skills. However, the portrayal of FES as focusing primarily on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Global Approach, Educational Policy, Skills
Thandi Gamedze; Greg Ruiters – Power and Education, 2024
There is a robust debate about innovative ways to improve educational outcomes and governance in public schools located in the poorest townships in South Africa. This article looks at one recent innovation, a new model for providing basic education called 'collaboration schools', based on the British academy schools. We seek to understand what…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Private Financial Support
Sally Welsh – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2024
This small-scale research project explores policy and staff perspectives which affect student parents in higher education at an English further education college. Drawing on Nancy Fraser's work on the welfare state and the social organisation of care work, the paper examines approaches to a marginalised student group. Qualitative data were…
Descriptors: Sex Fairness, Adult Education, Disadvantaged, Power Structure
Yunzheng Zheng; Jianping Shen; Patricia Reeves – Journal of Educational Administration, 2024
Purpose: In this manuscript, we aimed to (1) illustrate the differences in school-university partnership under the school reform and renewal models and (2) describe the practice of and learning about school-university partnership by reflecting on the three large, federally funded projects, all conducted under the school renewal model.…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Universities, Partnerships in Education, Archives
Mabel Dzigbordzi – BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, 2024
This article discusses the different ways in which some groups of educators are marginalized within the Canadian education system. The author draws on existing literature to examine how intersectionality in complex identities causes severe marginalization for Internationally Educated Teachers (IETs), especially female IETs. The author found ten…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Power Structure, Disadvantaged, Educational Background
Manoj Kumar – Contemporary Education Dialogue, 2024
In the immediate aftermath of Indian Independence in 1947, there was a palpable attempt to replace English with Hindi and other Indian languages to unleash the processes of decolonisation. English was castigated as the language of the British Empire and was seen to be the basis of power and privilege for a handful of English-educated elites. A new…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Official Languages, Indians, Indo European Languages
Alesondra Christmas Stapleton; Jazelynn Goudy; Davianna Griffin – Dance Education in Practice, 2024
Dance educators, as the face of dance education, are responsible for teaching and promoting dance equitably regardless of whose body executes the movement. Sizeism and racism have often been the unspoken standards used by dancers and educators to judge the development and proficiency of professional and aspiring dancers. Although seeing these as…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Racism, Body Weight, Social Discrimination
Gudrun Nyunt; Rachel Pridgen; Isaiah Thomas – Journal of College Student Development, 2024
The field of student affairs has seen an exodus of staff members over the past few years. Employee attrition, however, is not a new problem in student affairs. This grounded theory study aimed to understand why student affairs professionals leave the field. Based on interviews with student affairs professionals who left the field between March…
Descriptors: Student Personnel Workers, Labor Turnover, Professional Personnel, Employee Attitudes
Darren Cogavin – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
This article considers how neoliberalism has created a reductionist view of lifelong learning in the UK focused on upskilling workers for the labour market. This critical policy analysis uses Marx's theory of labour-power, as conceptualised by Glenn Rikowski, to examine the Skills and Post-16 Education Act, 2022 and to identify its ideological…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Politics of Education, Neoliberalism, Lifelong Learning
Simon Sjölund; Jannika Lindvall – Journal of Educational Change, 2024
Research-practice partnerships (RPPs) are emerging as a promising approach for educational change by closing the gap between educational research and practice. However, these partnerships face several challenges, such as addressing cultural differences as well as relationship-building in a historically unbalanced relationship between researchers…
Descriptors: Research and Development, Theory Practice Relationship, Educational Research, Preschools
Marie A. Vander Kloet; Anne E. Wagner – Higher Education Research and Development, 2024
Universities, both in Canada and throughout the global North, are predicated on empiricist and positivist understandings of knowledge and knowledge production which are communicated and strengthened through research practices and protocols. Drawn from a larger study exploring research leadership among accomplished academic staff, this paper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Females, College Faculty
Congcong Xing; Guanglun Michael Mu; Deborah Henderson – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
With English hegemony sustained in 'multicultural' Anglophone universities, non-English speaking research students often develop diverse strategies to improve their English. While such strategies demonstrate a form of resilience, the symbolic power of English remains intact. To grapple with this paradox, we draw on the work of Pierre Bourdieu to…
Descriptors: Monolingualism, Universities, Sociology, Resilience (Psychology)
Kahl, David H., Jr. – Communication Teacher, 2019
This activity elucidates a critical and pragmatic means by which students and instructors can examine the practice of labor exploitation by neoliberal corporations. By employing critical communication pedagogy (CCP), instructors and students can learn about the ways that corporations actively steal wages from their employees and communicatively…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Employees, Corporations, Cultural Influences
Nicholas, Graeme; Foote, Jeff; Kainz, Kirsten; Midgley, Gerald; Prager, Katrin; Zubriggen, Cristina – Evidence & Policy: A Journal of Research, Debate and Practice, 2019
The language of co-creation has become popular with policy makers, researchers and consultants wanting to support evidence-based change. However, there is little agreement about what features a research or consultancy project must have for peers to recognise the project as co-creative, and therefore for it to contribute to the growing body of…
Descriptors: Research and Development, Theory Practice Relationship, Heuristics, Motivation
Reid, Amy; Abraczinskas, Michelle; Scott, Victoria; Stanzler, Morgen; Parry, Gareth; Scaccia, Jonathan; Wandersman, Abe; Ramaswamy, Rohit – Health Education & Behavior, 2019
Spreading Community Accelerators Through Learning and Evaluation (SCALE) was a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation-funded initiative from 2015 to 2017 to build capability of 24 community coalitions to advance health, well-being, and equity. The SCALE theory of change had three components: develop leadership capability, build relationships within and…
Descriptors: Public Health, Well Being, Community Programs, Community Cooperation

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