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Netz, Nicolai; Grüttner, Michael – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2021
Studying abroad can positively influence students' personality development, transversal skills, and labour market outcomes. At the same time, students from a high social origin are more likely to study abroad than students from a low social origin. Against this background, recent research has suggested that international student mobility (ISM) may…
Descriptors: Study Abroad, Income, Outcomes of Education, Student Mobility
Paterson, Lindsay – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
The relationship between students' entry to higher education and the history or status of the secondary school which they attended is examined using school leavers' surveys in Scotland stretching from the early 1950s to the late 1990s. The surveys are unique in the length of this period, their details of the higher-education institutions and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational History, Institutional Characteristics, Foreign Countries
Hwang, NaYoung; Domina, Thurston – Education Finance and Policy, 2021
To evaluate the net effects of classroom disciplinary practices, policy makers and educators must understand not only their effects on disciplined students but also their effects on non-disciplined peers. In this study, we estimate the link between peer suspensions and non-suspended students' learning trajectories in a California school district…
Descriptors: Suspension, Academic Achievement, Predictor Variables, Discipline Policy
Ormiston, Heather E.; Guttman-Lapin, Danielle; Shriberg, David – Communique, 2021
This article is part of a year-long series facilitated by the National Association of School Psychologists (NASP) Social Justice Committee (SJC) highlighting the impact of health disparities on youth through a social justice lens for school psychologists. Historical and systemic racism and instructional inequities contribute to mental health…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Mental Health, School Psychologists, School Psychology
Hasebe, Yuki – Critical Questions in Education, 2021
Christian-secular moral dualism, the idea that Christians and secular people hold different moral values, is prevalent in our social views and moral education. This belief, however, does not correspond with the findings of current studies on people's moral perceptions. This article presents an empirically defined welfare/harm-based morality that…
Descriptors: Moral Development, Moral Values, Christianity, Beliefs
Collier, Daniel A.; McMullen, Isabel; Hershbein, Brad J. – W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 2021
The COVID-19 pandemic greatly reduced the college enrollment rate for students during the Fall 2020 semester. National data show that although enrollment of new students declined overall, it varied substantially by institution type and student characteristics. What national data do "not" reveal is how certain communities with already…
Descriptors: Enrollment, Educational Change, Paying for College, College Bound Students
Nandi Rebeccah Cele Sims – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Miami, Florida has the highest percentage of foreign-born residents in any large US metropolis and is characterized by Caribbean culture and economic practice in a way that is unseen in many other US cities. Haitian immigrants have been flowing rapidly into historically African American communities since the 1970s. Adults who grew up in these…
Descriptors: Race, Ethnicity, Language Variation, African Americans
Aitor Gómez-González; Juana Maria Tierno-García; Sandra Girbés-Peco – Educational Review, 2024
In Europe, Roma and immigrant students continue to experience great inequities, as they face the probabilities of educational failure, segregation, and early school leaving. Previous research has shed light on the multiple factors that perpetuate this situation. However, the role played by family involvement and family educational expectations…
Descriptors: Minority Groups, Ethnic Groups, Foreign Countries, Family Programs
Sujata Noronha; Beena Choksi – Contemporary Education Dialogue, 2024
The structural inequalities perpetuated by the caste system are a grave challenge to creating a just society. The education system pays short shrift to this topic and caste discrimination is spoken about without holding caste privilege accountable. Historically, social justice is a core mission of libraries. This project worked closely with a…
Descriptors: Social Class, Barriers, Advantaged, Social Attitudes
Anna Mountford-Zimdars; Julia Gaulter; Neil Harrison – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
This original study followed up ten beneficiaries of a UK charity-led programme that supported disadvantaged students in applying to elite US universities. First interviewed in 2015 during their early university days in the United States, in our 2019 follow-up all participants had graduated. Six remained in the United States and four had returned…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, Disadvantaged, College Applicants, Selective Admission
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
Andy Pulman; Lee-Ann Fenge; Patricia Mazarura; Neil Sanis – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2024
The UK has been experiencing an extended cost-of-living crisis since 2021 and students attending universities have struggled with the impacts of rising prices. This article reports on findings from a study to explore local recruitment and retention issues in adult social care from the perspective of different populations of interest in the South…
Descriptors: Costs, Quality of Life, Student Attitudes, Social Work
Susan L. Robertson – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
In this paper, I argue a new politics of ordinal differentiation and its instruments for governing education aims to make invisible a 'low intensity civil war' against the labouring classes. It does this through the elevation and ubiquity of actuarial and quantitative measures aimed at producing a new form of differentiated belonging: that of…
Descriptors: Social Differences, Politics of Education, Citizenship, Personal Autonomy
Lyn Tett – Australian Journal of Adult Learning, 2024
Data from two research projects with adult literacies practitioners based in Scotland are used to illustrate how policies underpinned by ideologies based on Human Capital Theory (HCT) lead to a narrow conceptualisation of the purpose of literacies education. It is argued that HCT ideology permeates international and national policies and thus…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Human Capital, Employment Potential, Adult Literacy
Selina McCoy; Delma Byrne – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
This paper assesses the role of shadow education (SE), i.e., organised learning activities outside formal schooling, in the lives of secondary school students of different social backgrounds and in different school settings, in a high-stakes context. It draws on multilevel analysis of longitudinal Growing Up in Ireland data, alongside narratives…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Tutoring, Private Education, Supplementary Education