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Showing 1 to 15 of 32 results Save | Export
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Nava Ben Artzey; Mowafaq Qadach – Gifted and Talented International, 2024
Scholars have paid little attention to the strategies used by parents of gifted children who learn in mixed-abilities classroom when interacting with their teachers. In this research we studied how parents of gifted children in mixed-ability classrooms position themselves with their children's teachers in conflicted situations. By using multiple…
Descriptors: Parents, Parent Attitudes, Academically Gifted, Children
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Bäckström, Pontus – Educational Review, 2023
In the educational literature on peer effects, attention has been brought to the fact that the mechanisms creating peer effects are still to a large extent hidden in obscurity. The hypothesis in the study reported in this article was that the Frame Factor Theory (FFT) can be used to reveal such mechanisms. Using data from the Swedish TIMSS 2015 (N…
Descriptors: Peer Influence, Peer Relationship, Outcomes of Education, Factor Analysis
Pedersen, Blaine; Makel, Matthew C.; Rambo-Hernandez, Karen E.; Peters, Scott J.; Plucker, Jonathan – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2023
School-based learning experiences are often designed with the "typical" student in mind. However, this may not be an optimal approach, given the variability of prior learning that exists in most classrooms. We investigated the variance in achievement within U.S. fourth- and eighth-grade mathematics classrooms using Trends in…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Achievement, Benchmarking, Prior Learning
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Parker, Phil; Dicke, Theresa; Guo, Jiesi; Basarkod, Geetanjali; Marsh, Herb – Educational Researcher, 2021
Understanding how children's broader context influences their development is critical if we are to develop policies that help them flourish. Combining sociological, economic, and psychological literature, we argue that ability stratification--the degree to which children of similar levels of ability are schooled together--influences a child's…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Self Concept, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries
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Strello, Andrés; Strietholt, Rolf; Steinmann, Isa; Siepmann, Charlotte – Educational Assessment, Evaluation and Accountability, 2021
Research to date on the effects of between-school tracking on inequalities in achievement and on performance has been inconclusive. A possible explanation is that different studies used different data, focused on different domains, and employed different measures of inequality. To address this issue, we used all accumulated data collected in the…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Ability Grouping, Equal Education, Outcome Measures
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Ladwig, James G.; McPherson, Amy – Curriculum Inquiry, 2017
"Ability" is one of the most common concepts underpinning education. Generally, "ability" is central to notions of a meritocratic society. More specifically, schools are allocated the right to define, categorise and label students according to their ability. While there has been ample discussion of the role of ability in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academic Ability, Teacher Attitudes, Elementary Secondary Education
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Jackson, Lewis; Fitzpatrick, Heather; Alazemi, Bedoor; Rude, Harvey – Journal of International Special Needs Education, 2018
Kauffman, Felder, Ahrbeck, Badar, and Schneiders (this issue) call for a more temperate approach to inclusion, arguing against its use in educating "all" students with disabilities. We argue in response that the issue should not be framed as "inclusion versus non-inclusion," asserting that our field would benefit by examining…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Access to Education, Special Schools, Global Approach
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Zhang, Wei; Bray, Mark – Oxford Review of Education, 2018
The global expansion of mass schooling has greatly increased opportunities for low-income families, and governments have devoted much effort to equalising access and quality in education systems. Alongside regular schooling, the so-called shadow education system of private supplementary tutoring has grown rapidly across the world. The fact that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Tutoring, Socioeconomic Influences, Equal Education
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Creese, Brian; Isaacs, Tina – Curriculum Journal, 2016
Although England was not included in the International Instructional Systems Study because it was not a high-performing jurisdiction by the Study's definition, contributors largely were England-based. Analysing the Study's nine overall aspects of instructional systems, this paper finds that England is out of step with many of the high-performing…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, International Education, Instructional Systems, National Curriculum
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Clarke, Matthew – Critical Studies in Education, 2014
Ability grouping in schools and classrooms constitutes something of a policy hiatus in the Australian context, in contrast to the conspicuous visibility of equity and quality as explicit policy goals. This article examines what I am calling the dialectics -- i.e. moments of negation that allow for creation -- and dilemmas inhering in the complex…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ability Grouping, Equal Education, Educational Quality
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Atomatofa, Rachel; Okoye, Nnamdi; Igwebuike, Thomas – Universal Journal of Educational Research, 2016
The nature of classroom learning environments created by teachers had been considered very important for learning to take place effectively. This study investigated the effect of creating constructivist and transmissive learning environments on achievements of science students of different ability levels. 243 students formed the entire study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Environment, Cognitive Ability, Science Achievement
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Francis, Becky; Archer, Louise; Hodgen, Jeremy; Pepper, David; Taylor, Becky; Travers, Mary-Claire – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2017
Grouping students by "ability" is a topic of long-standing contention in English education policy, research and practice. While policy-makers have frequently advocated the practice as reflecting educational "standards", research has consistently failed to find significant benefits of "ability" grouping; and indeed has…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Educational Policy, Ability Grouping, Standards
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Wrigley, Terry – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2013
This article draws on European approaches to differentiation that do not entail fatalistic determinism. It describes two challenging initiatives in Denmark, where democratic learning and learning for democracy are enshrined in law. Other examples come from Germany, from the Bielefeld laboratory school and a sixth form college, where planning for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ability Grouping, Individualized Instruction, Student Projects
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Hamnett, Chris; Butler, Tim – Comparative Education, 2013
In this paper we examine the role which distance, in a variety of forms, can play in the reproduction, intensification or reduction of educational inequality in different types of school systems in different countries. This is a very broad issue, and in the paper we examine the ways in which distance to school has emerged as an important factor in…
Descriptors: Student Placement, School Choice, Parent Participation, Proximity
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Hamilton, Lorna; O'Hara, Paul – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2011
Debate around the use of ability grouping in schools, resonates across national boundaries as concerns rise around the possible negative impact on young people, particularly those in already disadvantaged groups. In this paper, a survey focussing on primary schools in Scotland established the extent to which some form of ability grouping has…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Disadvantaged, Ability Grouping, Inclusion
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