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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
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Elizabeth Wood; Helen Hedges – Curriculum Journal, 2025
In early childhood education (ECE), global policy discourses influence national policy frameworks for curriculum, pedagogy and assessment practices. Although aspects of these discourses travel across national boundaries via policy borrowing, we argue that consideration is needed of the cultural-historical evolution of country-level systems, their…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Curriculum, Foreign Policy, Foreign Countries
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Adjogatse, Kafui; Miedema, Esther – Whiteness and Education, 2022
Scrutinising disproportionate media and political attention provided to the ills of the 'white working-class', this article examines the framing of their apparent underachievement in education policy and discourse in early post-Brexit vote England. In a political context dominated by anti-immigration and nationalist rhetoric, this article aims to…
Descriptors: Working Class, Whites, Underachievement, Foreign Policy
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Gandolfi, Haira Emanuela – Curriculum Journal, 2021
Recent 'decolonising the curriculum' movements have called for Higher Education to rethink how it engages with diversity and colonialism in its lectures and syllabi. But what can these ideas mean for science subjects in secondary schools? Grounded on a decolonial perspective around the Science and Technology Studies (STS) field, this paper…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, National Curriculum
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Laing, Anna F. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2021
Student-led movements have called for the decolonization of the Higher Education (HE) system in the UK, as well as elsewhere. Much of the onus within British geography has been on decolonizing geographical knowledges, recognizing the role of the discipline in the colonial project. This paper expands on these literatures by examining how work on…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Geography Instruction, Universities, Foreign Countries
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Elonga Mboyo, Jean Pierre – Research in Educational Administration & Leadership, 2021
This research compares the accounts of two experienced urban primary headteachers based in Kinshasa (Democratic Republic of the Congo-DRC) with two others based in Sheffield/Doncaster (England), in order to make sense of their leadership pathways, challenges and approaches. Engaging these school leaders through leadership conversations within a…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Urban Schools, Elementary School Teachers, Leadership Styles
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Shain, Farzana; Yildiz, Ümit Kemal; Poku, Veronica; Gokay, Bulent – Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
Amid the rising calls for a 'decolonised curriculum', scholars and activists have outlined what needs to be done to 'decolonise the university'. Yet in practice, those involved in decolonising work often face considerable backlash and institutional resistance. Drawing on empirical research with students and staff across nine universities in…
Descriptors: Strategic Planning, Higher Education, Foreign Policy, Activism
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Odugu, Desmond Ikenna – History of Education Quarterly, 2016
Mainstream historiography often turns to Europe's era of empire building to explain the expansion of Western formal education in Africa. Popular accounts suggest that in Africa (1) colonial involvement in education was late and short lived, spanning the early decades of the twentieth century, (2) missionaries were largely responsible for early…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Historiography, Educational History, Foreign Policy
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Piri, Mohammad – International Education Studies, 2016
Since the beginning of 19th century, England for political reasons tried to make relations with Iran. Englishmen besides political tricks tried to establish their trace in Iran society by cultural permeation. European religious commissions who proceeded in different parts of the world since 19th century, though apparently had religious…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Foreign Policy, Cultural Influences
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Thondhlana, Juliet; Abdulrahman, Hadiza; Chiyevo Garwe, Evelyn; McGrath, Simon – Journal of Studies in International Education, 2021
Looking through the history of higher education in Zimbabwe, we argue that the concept of internationalization of higher education is not new to Zimbabwe. Understandings, manifestations, and processes of the phenomenon over time are examined to reveal the nuances of the internationalization process in its current mode of occurrence, in an attempt…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Postcolonialism, Educational History, International Education
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Pashby, Karen; da Costa, Marta; Sund, Louise – Journal of Social Science Education, 2020
Purpose: This paper considers the relevance of critical and decolonial approaches to global education in northern Europe through theoretical and empirical research. Methodology: We present a case for an approach that engages the modern/colonial dynamic (Mignolo, 2000; Andreotti, 2014) and pluriversality (Mignolo & Walsh, 2018). We conducted a…
Descriptors: Global Education, Teacher Workshops, Teacher Attitudes, Faculty Development
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Ahmed, A. Kayum – Journal of Comparative and International Higher Education, 2017
In 2015, a student at the University of Cape Town in South Africa, took a bucket of feces and threw it against a bronze statue of Cecil John Rhodes located on the university's campus (Nyamnjoh 2016). Rhodes, who was recognized as a British imperialist and racist, became a symbolic focal point for #RhodesMustFall (RMF) - a radical student movement…
Descriptors: Historic Sites, Activism, Student Attitudes, College Students
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Ní Bhroiméil, Úna – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2015
Alfred Mosely, a wealthy South African diamond mine owner and British industrialist, financed an Educational Commission that travelled to the United States during the winter of 1903. Its purpose was to ascertain how far education in the United States was responsible for the country's industrial progress, and its report was published in England in…
Descriptors: Masculinity, Reports, Gender Differences, Race
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Tubbs, Nigel – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2014
There is a new myth of the heterogeneous that is reducing the concept of humanity to a sinful enlightenment. In this article I investigate the contribution that a renewed understanding of liberal arts education might offer for the idea of a humanist education and for the concept of humanity; and this at a time when not only the concept of humanity…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Humanities, Liberal Arts, Freedom
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Kantawala, Ami – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2012
Historical inquiry in art education forms the basis of any research undertaken in the field. It is on this path that we discover ignored moments and personalities and clarify challenging ideas, thus approaching history from multiple perspectives. This historical study attempts to reframe the past of colonial Indian art education within the broader…
Descriptors: Art Education, Educational History, Foreign Countries, Foreign Policy
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Rao, Parimala V. – Contemporary Education Dialogue, 2013
The encounter between the pre-colonial education system in India, dominated by poor teachers and students, and the British education system, which defended and perpetuated the "English class system", created a complex and problematic relationship. This article explores this problematic relationship between poverty and education in the…
Descriptors: Nationalism, Poverty, Indians, Foreign Countries
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