Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 3 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 8 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 12 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 26 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Mintz, Jerry | 2 |
Potter, John | 2 |
Readhead, Zoe | 2 |
Beard, Laura J. | 1 |
Benveniste, Tessa | 1 |
Boden, Rebecca | 1 |
Bullock, Janis | 1 |
Caldwell, Oliver J. | 1 |
Carleton, Sean | 1 |
Chisholm, Susan | 1 |
Cohen, Rosetta Marantz | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Reports - Descriptive | 57 |
Journal Articles | 42 |
Opinion Papers | 8 |
Speeches/Meeting Papers | 5 |
Historical Materials | 4 |
Books | 3 |
Collected Works - Proceedings | 1 |
Information Analyses | 1 |
Reports - General | 1 |
Tests/Questionnaires | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Practitioners | 2 |
Researchers | 2 |
Teachers | 2 |
Policymakers | 1 |
Location
Canada | 11 |
United Kingdom (England) | 7 |
Australia | 4 |
China | 3 |
Denmark | 3 |
Israel | 3 |
Germany | 2 |
Japan | 2 |
Kenya | 2 |
Netherlands | 2 |
South Africa | 2 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
James Leibold; Tenzin Dorjee – Comparative Education, 2024
Like other colonial state structures, the education system in China aims to manufacture regime loyalty and cultural conformity among its 125 million minority nationalities. The Party-state's lessons in 'being Chinese' begin by nullifying traditional languages, cultures and lifestyles, which are deemed primitive and uncouth, and then remould…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Colonialism, Nationalism, Indigenous Populations
Jennifer Hanson-Peterson – Childhood Education, 2024
Positive Education equips students with the skills and mindset to lead fulfilling lives, navigate challenges, and contribute positively to society. Geelong Grammar School (GGS), the largest co-educational boarding school in Australia, is dedicated to fostering student wellbeing through Positive Education. With four campuses and a vibrant community…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Secondary Education, Private Schools, Boarding Schools
M. Wade Mahon – Palgrave Macmillan, 2024
This book documents an informal system of education that emerged in Ireland between the late 1750s and the end of the century, a system that operated largely without funding or direction by church or state. In a society as divided as eighteenth-century Ireland, it is remarkable that such a system could succeed, paving the way for the more formal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Informal Education, Educational Change, Educational Finance
Tavares, Hannah M. – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2022
The focus on colonial power and domination tend to muffle the emotional complexities, ambiguous attachments, and cultural paradoxes of persons who become wards of colonial educational systems. Drawing on feminist thought, film philosophy, and postcolonial cultural theories, Hannah M. Tavares provides a reading of Amanda Kernell's film Sami Blood.…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Films, Postcolonialism, Indigenous Populations
James, Malcolm; Boden, Rebecca; Kenway, Jane – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
The sociological literature on elite private schooling is frequently informed by Bourdieu's signature concepts of cultural, social and symbolic capital. Yet, his insistence that economic capital is the 'root' of these other capitals is often overlooked or downplayed. This paper addresses this lacuna. While it gestures to Bourdieu's other capitals,…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Advantaged, Accounting, Taxes
Svonni, Charlotta – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
This comparative curricular study examines the educational functions of the Swedish Sámi nomad school curricula before and after a central school reform in the 1960s. Due to the reform, the nomad school, a boarding school system for the Indigenous Sámi people in Sweden, was formed to bring about systemic changes in the education of Sámi children,…
Descriptors: Minority Groups, Boarding Schools, Educational History, Animal Husbandry
Carleton, Sean – History of Education, 2021
This article reveals that, contrary to common knowledge, schooling for Indigenous and non-Indigenous children in British Columbia -- Canada's westernmost province -- was not strictly segregated in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Officially, government policy stipulated that Indigenous children should attend separate day and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Indigenous Populations, Educational Policy
Jennifer Wallace; Jennifer Feldman – Cultural Studies and Transdisciplinarity in Education, 2022
This chapter details two key aspects of the scholarship students' accounts of their experiences in the elite school context. Firstly, the chapter discusses the required adjustments the students felt that they needed to make to fit in by drawing on Bourdieu's concepts of developing a "practical sense" for the "game" of elite…
Descriptors: Scholarships, Working Class, Educational Experience, Boarding Schools
Topij-Stempinska, Beata – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2019
The Scientific and Educational Department of the Jesuit Fathers in Khyriv (Zaklad Naukowo-Wychowawczy OO. Jezuitów w Chyrowie) existed for 53 years (1886-1939). Over 6,000 students studied in this elite male school. The alumni of the secondary school belonged to the elite of Polish society. There were among them people from different walks of…
Descriptors: Educational History, Catholic Schools, Males, Selective Admission
Namatende-Sakwa, Lydia – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2018
Informed largely by Affect theory (2004), this paper takes up "reflexivities of discomfort" to reflexively engage with my affective struggles as a Christian, heterosexual, mother, educator, undertaking a study on homosexuality, which is a thorny issue in Uganda. It a methodological prologue, reflecting my thoughts and struggles before I…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Homosexuality, Foreign Countries, Christianity
Cohen, Rosetta Marantz; Mule, Lucy – InSight: A Journal of Scholarly Teaching, 2019
This article describes a co-taught course that mobilized a Design Thinking approach in the service of creating a prototype for an actual girls' boarding school in Kenya. The goal of the class was to allow students to engage collaboratively with faculty, with their peers, and with experts "on the ground" to develop the various parts of…
Descriptors: Design, Thinking Skills, Teaching Methods, Higher Education
McCoy, Meredith – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
Middle school social studies lessons about American Indian people often leave the impression that Indians are part of a historical past that has little to do with America's present. Too often, lessons include information about Indian "extinction" due to diseases and warfare without discussing the ongoing resilience of American Indian…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Social Studies, American Indian History, Public Policy
Hillman, Nicholas – Higher Education Review, 2014
In England, as in many other countries, selective universities have been under pressure to show there are no financial barriers for high-potential students from less-advantaged backgrounds. For much of the twentieth century, there was a similarly lively debate about how to open up Britain's prestigious independent boarding schools to a wider…
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, Admission (School), College Admission, Selective Admission
Benveniste, Tessa; Guenther, John; Dawson, Drew; Rainbird, Sophia – Australian Association for Research in Education, 2014
Despite numerous reviews, strategies and programs, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students still have lower academic achievement levels than non-Indigenous Australian students (as measured by NAPLAN). Educational research suggests that parental involvement in their children's education significantly contributes to improved academic, social,…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Parents, Boarding Schools, Organizational Communication
Langer-Buchwald, Judit – Online Submission, 2010
Arthur Sutherland Neill is one of the most debated personalities among the representatives of the classic reform pedagogy, due to his pedagogical concept and its practical realization, and his Summerhill School, equally. He is often mentioned during public debates, where mostly the "three S"--"sex, swearing and smoking", are…
Descriptors: German, Hungarian, Educational Change, Foreign Countries