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Daniel Weston – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2025
This article explores how candidates discuss cultural topics that overlap with their sociocultural background during the Cambridge undergraduate admissions interviews, an academic gatekeeping encounter. On the one hand, discussion of this kind can be a source of epistemic authority for these candidates. On the other hand, such an affordance does…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Admission, Interviews, Sociocultural Patterns
Liu, Yali; Buckingham, Louisa – Field Methods, 2023
To date, research on elite interviews has primarily focused on political or business settings in European and Anglo-American contexts. In this study, we examine the procedures involved in conducting elite interviews in academic settings, drawing on fieldwork with 53 senior scholars at 10 universities across five regions of northern China. We…
Descriptors: Interviews, Interpersonal Relationship, Research Methodology, College Faculty
Rona Tamiko Halualani – Communication Teacher, 2025
This essay highlights a critical assessment approach for intercultural communication courses that engages in a "doing--undoing" practice for instructors, with the aim of "doing" culture as learned through society and traditional intercultural communication instruction with the limited, romanticized, and settler colonial…
Descriptors: Intercultural Communication, Teaching Methods, Cultural Awareness, Colonialism
Tyler, Tee R.; Franklin, Ashley E. – Journal of Social Work Education, 2021
This article presents the results of two pilot studies focused on examining social work students' ability to interview two clients at once to provide evidence supporting the use of new dyadic subscales. Students participated in a simulation scenario with either a parent and bisexual child or a parent and transgender child. Licensed social workers…
Descriptors: Social Work, Caseworkers, Interviews, Parents
Nancy Mack – Composition Forum, 2023
The bias against personal experience manifests in writing courses as privileging the citation of scholars, fearing emotional writing, and equating argumentation with democratic ideals. To value the lives and knowledges of marginalized students, the curricular goals, assignments, and activities for writing courses needs to be reconsidered.…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Disadvantaged, Culturally Relevant Education, Personal Narratives
Reyna Rivarola, Alonso R.; López, Gerardo R. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2021
In this essay, Gerardo R. López, a non-undocumented immigrant scholar, who has done extensive research with undocumented immigrant communities, has a conversation with Alonso R. Reyna Rivarola, an undocumented immigrant scholar with Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), who writes and researches issues of how undocumented immigrant…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, Educational Experience, Researchers, Research Problems
Schembri, Natalie; Jahic Jašic, Alma – Research Ethics, 2022
Interview-based research in multilingual situations can present researchers with specific ethical challenges relating to language-based power play, data handling and presentation. Studies indicate favouring the L1 (first language) as an interviewing language may produce better quality data, but external pressures can favour English as the dominant…
Descriptors: Ethics, Native Language, Interviews, English (Second Language)
Morelock, John R.; Lester, Marlena McGlothlin; Klopfer, Michelle D.; Jardon, Alex M.; Mullins, Ricky D.; Nicholas, Erika L.; Alfaydi, Ahmed S. – College Teaching, 2017
Co-teaching has historically been used in K-12 education to provide students with disabilities access to general curriculum; therefore, much of the co-teaching literature has focused on the K-12 population. Research on collegiate co-teaching has been more limited and largely focused on the advantages and disadvantages of co-teaching, omitting…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Qualitative Research, Team Teaching, Interviews
Hill, Joanne; Philpot, Rod; Walton-Fisette, Jennifer L.; Sutherland, Sue; Flemons, Michelle; Ovens, Alan; Phillips, Sharon; Flory, Sara B. – Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 2018
Background: Physical education (PE) and physical education teacher education (PETE) have a substantial literature base that advocates for students to develop a critical consciousness, appreciate multiple perspectives, and engage in actions to enhance social justice [Tinning, R. 2016. "Transformative Pedagogies and Physical Education." In…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Sociocultural Patterns, Physical Education, Physical Education Teachers
Settles, Isis H.; Brassel, Sheila T.; Montgomery, Georgina M.; Elliott, Kevin C.; Soranno, Patricia A.; Cheruvelil, Kendra Spence – Innovative Higher Education, 2018
As scientific teams in academia have become increasingly large, interdisciplinary, and diverse, more attention has been paid to honorary authorship (i.e., giving authorship to those not making a significant contribution). Our study examined whether honorary authorship occurs because of the desire to include all or many team members. Interviews…
Descriptors: Authors, Faculty Publishing, Interviews, Interdisciplinary Approach
Scott, John; Nichols, T. Philip – Research in Education, 2017
Recently, the possibilities for leveraging "big data" in research and pedagogy have given rise to the growing field of "learning analytics" in online education. While much of this work has focused on quantitative metrics, some have called for critical perspectives that interrogate such data as an interplay between technical…
Descriptors: Learning, Data Analysis, Electronic Learning, Online Courses
Williams, Gwendolyn M.; Case, Rod E.; Reinhart, Erik D. – International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 2018
This article describes a narrative study exploring the challenges that international teaching assistants (ITAs) encounter when using humor in North American university classrooms. Twenty participants were recruited from twelve teaching fields. Each ITA participated in two interviews and a videotaped teaching observation. The participants talked…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Humor, Higher Education, Interviews
Gearin, Christopher A. – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2017
This study investigates how new presidents of higher education institutions struggle to understand their organisations, paying special attention to campus resistance, and how new presidents manage institutional dynamics and expectations. A qualitative study using a phenomenological approach is conducted with 11 single-campus presidents of…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Novices, Administrator Attitudes, Qualitative Research
Mutereko, Sybert – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2018
Using Foucault's power concepts of the panopticon and governmentality as analytic and heuristic tools, this study reveals insights into how accreditation creates power networks in the quality assurance of higher education graduates in South Africa. The study draws on 11 in-depth interviews with academics from the Faculty of Engineering at a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Engineering Education, Accreditation (Institutions), Power Structure
Fejes, Andreas – European Educational Research Journal, 2016
In this paper, drawing on the work of Michel Foucault, I argue that academics are enmeshed in power relations in which confession operates, both "on" and "through" academics. Drawing on Foucault's genealogy of confession, I illustrate how academics are not only invited to reflect on performance, faults, temptations and desires…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Higher Education, Governance, College Faculty