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Showing 1 to 15 of 43 results Save | Export
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Michelle Spiegel; Leah R. Clark; Thurston Domina; Vitaly Radsky; Paul Y. Yoo; Andrew Penner – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2025
Many educational policies hinge on the valid measurement of student economic disadvantage at the school level. Measures based on free and reduced-price lunch enrollment are used widely. However, recent research raises questions about their reliability, particularly following the introduction of universal free lunch in certain schools and…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Schools, Economically Disadvantaged, Lunch Programs, Poverty
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Marbella Uriostegui; Taylor Lay; Amanda L. Roy; Samantha Villasanta – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2025
The goal of this research is to document and contextualize sources of happiness for Black and Latinx youth living in economically disenfranchised, Chicago neighborhoods. We examined youth's open-ended responses to the question, "What makes you happiest in life?" The sample consists of 409 Black (73%) and Latinx (27%) youth (54% female;…
Descriptors: African Americans, Latin Americans, Adolescents, Economically Disadvantaged
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Dan Zhou – Science Insights Education Frontiers, 2025
Poverty alleviation through education is counted as a critical move in China's campaign against poverty, aiming to elevate the education levels of the underprivileged population, halt the intergenerational transmission of poverty, and assist social equity and economic development. This article is a review of the evolution of China's policies on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poverty Areas, Economically Disadvantaged, Low Income Students
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Victoria Lindblad; Rolf L. Lund; Pernille Skou Gaardsted; Line Elise Møller Hansen; Fie Falk Lauritzen; Dorte Melgaard – Journal of Adolescence, 2025
Introduction: Youth aged 15-29 who are not engaged in education, employment, or training (NEET) represent a critical concern within the European Union (EU). Aim: This review aims to ascertain whether existing studies address the impact of living in either rural or urban settings, or in specific types of neighborhoods, on the likelihood of young…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Youth, Young Adults, Place of Residence
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Nathan Patrick Burns; David Young; Andrea Sherriff; Peter Black; Al Blackshaw; Louise Kelly – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
Knowing the academic outcomes of students who received contextual offers to higher education is important in understanding whether or not Scotland's Widening Access efforts have been successful in delivering impact to those from socio-economically deprived backgrounds. This study showed that once controlling for academic cohort, sex, ethnicity and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outcomes of Education, Higher Education, Access to Education
Kevin Latham; Katherine Woolf; Asta Medisauskaite; Shaun Boustani – Sutton Trust, 2025
Medicine has long been recognised as one of the most difficult and competitive professions to access, particularly for those from the lowest socio-economic backgrounds. As the Government looks to train more doctors through the "NHS Long Term Workforce Plan," the report "Unequal Treatment?" looks at access to medical school…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Disadvantaged Youth, Access to Education, Medical Education
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Morten Greaves; Dympna Devine; Gabriela Martinez-Sainz; Barbara Moore; Mags Crean; Natalie Barrow; Seaneen Sloan; Jennifer Symonds; Olga Ioannidou – Curriculum Journal, 2025
This phenomenological research draws upon Pinar's concept of "currere" to frame the lived experiences of Cian, a young boy in an economically disadvantaged primary school in Ireland. By adapting Pinar's 4-stages of currere research (regressive, progressive, analytic and synthetic), we explore Cian's personal and academic lived…
Descriptors: Low Income Students, Socioeconomic Status, Males, Elementary School Students
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Tyrone C. Cheng; Celia C. Lo – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2025
Background: Many children in the United States are victims of bullying; many of the victimized retaliate, aggressively bullying those who have bullied them. Objective: Applying the multiple disadvantage model, this U.S.-based secondary study of data describing bullied children's own perpetration of bullying examined this behavior's relationship to…
Descriptors: Risk, Bullying, Victims, Child Behavior
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Lili Zhang – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2025
Group awareness tools have garnered significant interest within the realm of computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL), as they foster collaborative learning behaviors. However, in the context of a CSCL environment devoid of rich technologies, supporting group awareness is challenging. Contextualized in a teacher professional development…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Computer Assisted Instruction, College Students, Foreign Countries
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Sarah Ruth Morris; Sarah Clark McKenzie – Educational Forum, 2025
Freshman grades relate to academic outcomes, yet limited research explores which students face the highest risk of course failure. With logit analysis using a five-year Arkansas dataset (n = 164,688), we find that economically disadvantaged ninth-grade students are more likely to fail a course than their more privileged peers. This disparity…
Descriptors: High School Freshmen, Grade 9, Grades (Scholastic), Failure
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Fabio Galli – International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, 2025
Literature inclusion and exclusion (E/I) criteria are a fundamental selection methodology in different applications. Mainly, the E/I criteria are identified and chosen with respect to the question for which the manuscript itself is produced, thus allowing the selection of the literature. This procedure is not always related to the economic…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Open Educational Resources, Criteria, Economic Factors
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Kevin Wai Ho Yung; Scarlet Poon – European Journal of Education, 2025
Well-being development in young people's formative years is crucial for their transition to adulthood. While research on well-being in formal education contexts is expanding, little attention has been paid to out-of-school educational settings, particularly supplementary tutoring for disadvantaged students. Adopting Sirgy's concept of positive…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Economically Disadvantaged, Adolescents, Well Being
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Robin Clausen – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
Direct certification has been described by policymakers and academics as a tool which may replace National School Lunch Program (NSLP) eligibility data (Douglas Geverdt, National Center for Education Statistics, personal communication, August 28, 2023). It suggests a policy future in which we change the metric of how we identify disadvantage. On…
Descriptors: Eligibility, Lunch Programs, Educational Policy, Identification
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Xavier Bonal; Sheila González Motos – European Educational Research Journal, 2025
The spatial, institutional and social configurations of school supply and demand are crucial aspects in understanding the various mechanisms of production and reproduction of socio-spatial inequalities in education. The same policy instruments may have different effects depending on the characteristics of local education markets and the dynamics…
Descriptors: School Segregation, School Desegregation, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries
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Zhan Shu; Shenli Peng; Zhihua Li – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2025
This study explored the association between cumulative ecological risk and academic achievement among adolescents from economically disadvantaged families and the mediating role of coping style and moderating effect of grit on this relationship. We recruited a sample of 509 students from economically disadvantaged families (classified as below the…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Adolescents, Academic Achievement, Ecological Factors
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