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Showing 1 to 15 of 39 results Save | Export
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Georgette Humbert – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2024
This essay considers what happens in the English classroom when teaching the same lesson to two classes considered to be of different levels of 'ability'. It explores what happens during a discussion about the fate of Eva Smith in "An Inspector Calls" when students' reading of a text diverges. I consider what teachers do when students'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, Secondary School Students, English Literature
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Boylan, Mark – Professional Development in Education, 2021
Evaluations of professional development programmes often seek to represent definitive outcomes, with phenomena posited as discrete, bounded and independent entities, and researchers positioned as external actors. An alternative is to understand the complexity of these relationships as entanglements by applying Baradian concepts. The value of this…
Descriptors: Program Evaluation, Faculty Development, Educational Innovation, Mathematics Teachers
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Clarke, Doug – Australian Primary Mathematics Classroom, 2021
This article focuses on the unintended consequences of within-class ability grouping on primary students of mathematics. I review relevant research, including promising approaches to teaching in mixed ability settings. I then outline four ways in which these groupings are typically structured, discussing some of the issues that arise with each of…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Mathematics Education, Elementary School Students, Class Organization
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Neumann, Eszter – Journal of Education Policy, 2021
With the rise of accountability policies since the early nineties, the daily operation of English schools has profoundly changed. Through the in-depth analysis of ability grouping practices in one English secondary school, this paper aims to explore how the accountability shift and datafication impacted the practice of student grouping and…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Secondary School Students, Accountability, Educational Change
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Jackson, Colin; Povey, Hilary – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2019
This article is about Pete's story. It is a story about introducing all-attainment teaching in a secondary school mathematics department and about espousing and enacting a pedagogy and set of practices to enable learning mathematics without limits.
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Secondary School Mathematics, Mathematics Achievement, Mathematics Instruction
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Coupland, Liam – Primary Science, 2019
The author, a reception/year 1 teacher at Maesycwmmer Primary School in South Wales, considers the holistic learning experience and his reflections on grouping and its impact. He says if primary science practitioners want science to be open and available to all, they need to think about how they make the subject accessible and subsequently…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Individualized Instruction, Elementary School Science, Elementary School Teachers
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Hargreaves, Eleanore – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2019
This article addresses how an educational purpose of social efficiency, such as the one we have in England, affects each child's school Life-history and the process through which children thereby come to identify themselves. The author considers whether schools could engage in practices that decrease pupils' resignation to a system that controls…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Self Concept, Mathematics Achievement, Writing Tests
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Okatch, Dorothy – Childhood Education, 2021
Young people in East and Southern Africa need greater access to reliable information about health and education in order to make informed decisions on health matters--focusing on HIV and teenage pregnancy--and to increase basic education outcomes. Young 1ove organization, established in March 2014 in Gaborone, Botswana, is a grassroots, youth-led,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Health Education, Health Promotion, Peer Teaching
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Boaler, Jo – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2013
Recent scientific evidence demonstrates both the incredible potential of the brain to grow and change and the powerful impact of growth mindset messages upon students' attainment. Schooling practices, however, particularly in England, are based upon notions of fixed ability thinking which limits students' attainment and increases inequality. This…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Ability, Mathematics Achievement, Child Development
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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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Buzzard, Tom – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2013
Anybody who has studied education over the past forty years is aware that secondary education in England is the subject of continuous and continuing debate. Everyone has been to school and therefore everyone lays claim to some expertise--the lot of teachers is never easy. But it is a contention of this article that teachers are at least partly…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Intelligence, Teacher Role
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Keogh, Brenda; Naylor, Stuart – Primary Science, 2013
Teachers learn a lot about learning and teaching from dialogue with each other. Association for Science Education (ASE) meetings and other science conferences are ideal ways of coming into contact with other professionals to engage in dialogue. One special dimension of that contact is encountering overseas colleagues. Authors Brenda Keogh and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, International Cooperation, Foreign Countries
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Hallam, Susan – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2012
There has been research on grouping pupils by ability for most of the twentieth century since Whipple carried out a study of the effects of special class placement on a group of high aptitude 5th and 6th graders in the USA in 1919. Since then hundreds of studies have been undertaken and there have been many literature reviews and syntheses of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Ability Grouping, Grade 6, Foreign Countries
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Croxford, Linda – Education Inquiry, 2010
Equity and efficiency are the twin goals of European education policymakers, but there are tensions between these goals. This article illustrates these tensions within the school system of Scotland, drawing on two recent research projects: 'Fabricating Quality in European Education' (FABQ) and the Applied Educational Research Scheme (AERS) study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Efficiency, Educational Quality
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Ong, Chye Hin; Dimmock, Clive – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2013
This article describes a grounded theory constructed from a study of Singapore neighbourhood secondary school principals' engagement of their lowest stream, the Normal Technical students, in their schools. This substantive theory is labelled the "theory of selective engagement". It implies that how principals engage their lowest streamed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grounded Theory, Academic Ability, Low Achievement
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