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Marsden, Beth – History of Education, 2023
This paper examines how government approaches to education were contested by Aboriginal communities in the late 1930s, through organised political actions designed in part to ensure access to the same standard of education and schooling available to non-Aboriginal people. It explores some of the ways that Aboriginal campaigns for education were…
Descriptors: Educational History, Indigenous Populations, Public Schools, Foreign Countries
Trayle Kulshan – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act improved access to postsecondary education for disabled students, yet they are still marginalized and leave university at rates 17% higher than nondisabled students (Lombardi & Lalor, 2017). The specific problem is that disabled students face compounding barriers to success, including oppressive…
Descriptors: Civil Rights Legislation, Disabilities, Federal Legislation, Students with Disabilities
Kyle David Farris – ProQuest LLC, 2023
European colonization of vast portions of the world has left its mark long after the point when most societies were supposedly freed. The coloniality of power has ensured the continuing dominance of Eurocentric ideologies in the form of racism, sexism, and the marginalization of Black and Indigenous knowledge production. In this dissertation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Land Settlement, Doctoral Students, Graduates
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Mary Bratsch-Hines; Danielle Pico; Theresa Loch; Karen Osarenkhoe; Ronald Viafore; Matt Faiello; Paige Pullen – Professional Development in Education, 2023
High-quality early childhood education (ECE) can improve children's educational trajectories. However, the ECE field globally faces challenges that compromise its quality, with COVID-19 childcare closures further intensifying complexities. One solution to improve ECE working conditions is to use a distributed leadership framework to create…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Participative Decision Making, Power Structure, Leadership
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Senel Çitak; Selda Kanbur; Mustafa Alperen Kursuncu – International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies, 2023
A healthy family climate, including parents' attitudes towards their children and the quality of sibling relationships, is essential for child resilience. One of the domains where parental attitudes are determinative is the children's academic life. In an unhealthy family climate, for instance, parental pressure for academic success may cause…
Descriptors: Sibling Relationship, Family Environment, Resilience (Psychology), Parenting Styles
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Gail Prasad; Esther Bettney Heidt – Language Awareness, 2023
Classrooms across the United States today often include students from multiple different cultural and linguistic backgrounds. The teaching force, by contrast, has remained predominantly White and Anglophone with little experience learning additional languages (Athanases & Wong, 2018; Deroo & Ponzio, 2023; Pettit, 2011). When teachers…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education, Student Diversity, Bilingual Students
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Brandon D. Mitchell – Critical Education, 2023
Learning loss due to the pandemic has become a significant global concern. The purpose of this paper is to understand the newspaper coverage of the COVID-19 learning loss. Critical discourse analysis is utilized to analyze (N = 38) newspaper articles. Results include: constructions of youth identities, racialized constructions of youth identities,…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Newspapers, Achievement Gains
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Juan F. Carrillo; Noah Karvelis – Critical Education, 2023
Historically "Red States" in the United States offer an example of the complex intersections of public education, race, conservative politics, language, and power/resistance which teachers live and work amongst. This article considers these intersections by focusing on the experiences and reflections of a former red state teacher and…
Descriptors: Geographic Location, Urban Schools, Political Influences, Teacher Attitudes
Anthony Hall – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The gaps in education in America continue to march on at staggering rates. Gaps in academic achievement, college acceptance, standardized test scores, and access to resources continue to marginalize Black students in the United States compared to their white counterparts. Pittsburgh, PA, with the second-largest school district in Pennsylvania and…
Descriptors: African American Students, Achievement Gap, Access to Education, School Districts
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Rey Hady – Curriculum Inquiry, 2023
To reclaim Indigenous epistemologies and Indigenous ways of producing knowledge (e.g., Shahjahan, 2005b; Smith, 2013), I use a series of vignettes, short biographical reflections, photographic narratives, poetry, journal entries, and memoir to explore what curriculum as embodied lived experiences (e.g., Au et al., 2016; Gonzales, 2015; He, 2003)…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Curriculum, Indigenous Knowledge, Global Approach
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Golsan, Kathryn B.; Rudick, C. Kyle – Journal of Communication Pedagogy, 2018
Critical Communication Pedagogy (CCP) signals a critical approach to Communication and Instruction scholarship. Critical signals a recognition that social reality is inherently political and encourages individuals to work with/in communities to identify, intervene into, and change oppressive systems. Communication and Instruction scholarship…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Communication (Thought Transfer), Educational Research, Identification (Psychology)
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Bradford, Henry; Guzmán, Alexander; Restrepo, José Manuel; Trujillo, María-Andrea – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2018
How should the governance system in a non-membership non-profit organization be designed? This organizational form has no shareholders; instead, donors provide funds. Thus, at the organizational level, the board of directors could have all the power. Under this legal form, who controls the board? If too powerful, boards could misuse resources or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Colleges, Governance, Power Structure
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Rodríguez-Dorans, Edgar – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2018
Reflexivity is a multimodal research feature that relies on the researcher's subjectivity and self-awareness. This paper discusses uses of reflexivity when carrying out qualitative in-depth interviews on sexual topics. Through extracts of a challenging interview, where the challenge comes in the form of sexualised provocation from one man to…
Descriptors: Reflection, Interviews, Sexuality, Ethics
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Macleod, Gale; Fyfe, Ian; Nicol, Robbie; Sangster, Pauline; Obeng, Harriet – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2018
Although the behaviour of young people is often a focus for concern, most young people do as they are asked. This paper presents findings from a qualitative study across four educational settings that set out to explore reasons for this compliance. Forty-four young people (aged 12--21) participated in interactive focus groups and 21 practitioners…
Descriptors: Compliance (Psychology), Interpersonal Relationship, Adults, Adolescents
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MacDougall, Don; Irwin, Rita L.; Boulton, Adrienne; LeBlanc, Natalie; May, Heidi – Studies in Arts-Based Educational Research, 2018
Don MacDougall's death was a rupture in our community of artist scholar educators. After all, how can we imagine our death? Heidegger (1953/2010) argues that death is 'eminent immanence' (pp. 241-251). For Derrida (1993), it is an aporia as it is something un/imaginable as a living being. Attached to Don's research at the time of his death brought…
Descriptors: Creative Activities, Research, Death, Memory
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