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Anne Berg; Johanna Ringarp – History of Education, 2024
This article seeks to introduce a new historical explanation as to why left-wing working-class women engaged in liberal, middle-class organisations during the first wave of feminism. The article specifically deals with middle-class associations and clubs that had educational purposes. Instead of focusing on the larger explanatory scheme of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Educational History, Working Class
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Killen, Andrew; Holligan, Chris – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2022
Children's treatment in the school environment has barely changed over many decades. Norms of obedience, discipline and control persist to define their 'place' in hierarchies of schooling. This is in direct contrast with freedoms they enjoy outside of school from, for example, their use of information communication technology, use of time and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Urban Schools, Elementary Schools, Democratic Values
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Bertrand, Melanie; Freelon, Rhoda; Rogers, John – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2018
School principals, contending with competing characterizations of parents in education policy and society, may view parents in a number of ways. Two common understandings portray parents as authentic partners or, in contrast, simply supporters of the school's agenda. This paper explores these characterizations by considering the possible link…
Descriptors: Principals, Elementary Schools, Social Attitudes, Parents
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Jaeger, Elizabeth L. – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2017
The neoliberal agenda promotes education as a route toward success in university and career. However, a neoliberal economy requires large numbers of workers willing to accept low-paying, dead-end jobs. The students most likely to take these jobs are those who have struggled with literacy and so schools must, in Bourdieu's terms, re/produce,…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Classroom Techniques, Educational Policy, Literacy