NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 4,261 to 4,275 of 15,535 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Seidel, Sebastian; Bettinger, Patrick; Budke, Alexandra – Education Sciences, 2020
In Germany, 93% of young people between the ages of 10 and 18 play video games daily. Political geography, in particular popular geopolitics, have found that video games can help to establish and develop people's understanding of geopolitics. Consequently, this affects geography education, providing both challenges and opportunities for teaching.…
Descriptors: Video Games, Human Geography, Geography Instruction, Barriers
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Han, Shuangmiao – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2020
China has adopted policy experimentation (PE) as a means of introducing and testing innovative policy options for reforms in higher education (HE). This paper explores how PE plays out in the HE sector, involving state actors and university actors in a dynamic interactive process and bringing about institutional changes. This paper proposes a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Educational Innovation, Educational Change
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Zeichner, Ken – Action in Teacher Education, 2020
This paper discusses the concept of democratic professionalism and argues that it offers a way to frame teacher education so that it can contribute to more productively managing long standing tensions between public schools, minoritized communities, and teacher preparation programs, and to more closely realizing the democratic potential of public…
Descriptors: Professionalism, Democratic Values, Indigenous Knowledge, Power Structure
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Schenkel, Kathleen; Calabrese Barton, Angela – Science Education, 2020
Promoting critical science agency (CSA) may be one way to promote educational justice. CSA is using science with other powerful forms of knowledge to address issues of injustice. However, the process of enacting CSA is always embedded within a sociopolitical context, which positions some students with more power than others. Drawing upon a social…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Ethnography
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Li, Jia – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2020
Transnational migrant students have been found to experience marginalization in educational contexts around the world. This critical sociolinguistic ethnography explores the incorporation and learning outcomes of an as yet under-researched group: transnational migrant students from Myanmar in a border high school in China. This context is unique…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Ethnography
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Wu, Jinting – Harvard Educational Review, 2020
In this research article, Jinting Wu examines the lived experiences of mothers raising and educating children with disabilities in contemporary China. In the national project of cultivating "quality" citizens, and in the individual pursuit of successful child-rearing, mothers of special children in China are viewed as deficient for…
Descriptors: Mothers, Child Rearing, Foreign Countries, Disabilities
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Czank, James Mathew – Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 2020
Radical humanities programs in Canada offer non-traditional adult students an entry-level university educational experience. The programs purport to better the lives of the students through university-level education. This report was spurred on by the claim that such programs are emancipatory and offer radical societal change. Working from an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Humanities, Higher Education, Nontraditional Students
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Jarratt, Lindsay – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2020
The refugee has become part of the scholarly discourse of schooling, largely centring considerations of psychological trauma that refugee children may have experienced. However, the role that schools play in creating, replicating, or transforming a national discourse of refugees--and by extension, (inter)national identity and citizenship--at the…
Descriptors: Refugees, Trauma, Secondary School Students, School Role
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Danielle Aldawood – International Journal of Human Rights Education, 2020
While the project of decolonization within higher education has become important in recent years (Kester et al., 2019), human rights and peace education specifically have undergone critique (Coysh, 2014; Al-Daraweesh and Snauwaert, 2013; Barreto, 2013; Zembylas, 2018; Williams, 2017; Cruz and Fontan, 2014). This critique has focused on the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Civil Rights, Peace, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Mai Abu Moghli – International Journal of Human Rights Education, 2020
This article provides a critical view of Human Rights Education (HRE) within a context of colonial occupation and an authoritarian national ruling structure. It explores the reasons behind the introduction of HRE in Palestinian Authority (PA) schools in the Occupied West Bank and investigates how teachers and students make meaning of and implement…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Teaching Methods, Power Structure, Educational Change
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Lee, Young Ju – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2022
By illustrating how eight Korean English language learners came to understand embedded assumptions from traditional fairy tales and retell the tales through a critical literacy framed English literacy workshop, this qualitative study argues that fairy tales as English reading texts can effectively cultivate English learners' critical stance and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Fairy Tales
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Khanolainen, Daria; Nesterova, Yulia; Semenova, Elena – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2022
Despite being a multicultural country throughout its history, the Russian Federation has long struggled to embrace its diversity. As a result, the country's many cultural, religious, and ethnic minority groups have been going through waves of assimilationist policies and practices. Assimilation into the Russian society enforced through formal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Acculturation, Cultural Maintenance
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Salehjee, Saima; Watts, D. M. – International Journal of Science Education, 2022
This paper studies intersectional multiplicity by encompassing the ways individuals shape relationships between social structures and their science identity. We discuss the science lives of two sixteen-year-old British South-Asian Muslim women studying in a single-sex independent school in London, both of whom aspire to science careers. Adapting…
Descriptors: Females, Adolescents, Muslims, Private Schools
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Finn, Mairéad; Mihut, Georgiana; Darmody, Merike – Journal of Studies in International Education, 2022
Internationalization of higher education has increased the diversity of the student body at higher education institutions. There is evidence that the experiences of international students vary according to their region of origin, but trends on a larger scale remain underexamined. Drawing on Eurostudent VI data from the Republic of Ireland, this…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, International Education, Higher Education, Student Diversity
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Shaheen, Musbah; Mayhew, Matthew J.; Rockenbach, Alyssa N. – Journal of College Student Development, 2022
This paper focuses on how undergraduate students on five public university campuses perceived and reacted to religious coercion. We identified three sources of coercion: (a) public proselytizers, (b) peers, and (c) academic faculty whose expression of beliefs was perceived as implicitly coercive by students who often connected religious beliefs to…
Descriptors: Religion, Undergraduate Students, Public Colleges, College Faculty
Pages: 1  |  ...  |  281  |  282  |  283  |  284  |  285  |  286  |  287  |  288  |  289  |  ...  |  1036