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Maree Martinussen; Dianne Mulcahy – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
Past decades have seen increased emphasis on graduate employability as a driver of higher education policy. In the Australian context, employability discourses in the public domain have become inflected with anti-intellectual sentiment, serving to reproduce the perception that the humanities and social sciences are of less value to graduates'…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Employment Potential, Social Class, Working Class
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Sharon Kishik; Justine Grønbaek Pors – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
A rich literature has argued that so-called aspiration-raising policies tend to individualize structural conditions and thereby reproduce forms of inequality through young people's aspirations. This paper explores how aspiration-raising policy discourses are lived in ways that both accentuate but that might also contest their terms. Drawing on…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Foreign Countries, Student Experience, Rural Areas
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Leyton, Daniel – Journal of Education Policy, 2022
Drawing on the notions of neoliberal governmentality, regime of subjectification, as well as on the ordoliberal conception of social policy, self and class, I analyse how neoliberalism is entrenched in the formation of the affirmative action policy in higher education in Chile. Based on a fieldwork focused on the two main affirmative action…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Working Class, Affirmative Action, Educational Administration
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Crawford, Claire E. – Journal of Education Policy, 2019
This paper challenges the notion that quantitative data -- as a numeric truth -- exist independent of a nation's political and racial landscape. Utilising large-scale national attainment data, the analysis challenges the belief that 'White working class' children in England, especially boys, are 'the new oppressed' -- as a former equality adviser…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Whites, Working Class
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Gillborn, Sarah; Rickett, Bridgette; Muskett, Tom; Woolhouse, Maxine – Journal of Education Policy, 2020
Recent 'obesity' preventions focus heavily on children, widely regarded as the future of society. The National Child Measurement Programme (NCMP) is a flagship government programme in England that annually measures the Body Mass Index (BMI) of children in Reception (aged 4-5) and Year 6 (aged 10-11) in order to identify 'at risk' children and…
Descriptors: Obesity, Policy Analysis, Public Health, Body Composition
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Passy, Rowena; Ovenden-Hope, Tanya – Journal of Education Policy, 2020
This paper is a response to an earlier article in the "Journal of Education Policy," which calls for 'new ideas and constructive principles and practices for the provision of socially-just education'. We first discuss how an economistic approach to education entrenches socioeconomic disadvantage and argue that, in the light of evidence…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Administration, Disadvantaged Environment, Community Characteristics
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Gabay-Egozi, Limor – Journal of Education Policy, 2016
Using open-ended, semi-structured interviews, this study pulls together insights on social class and geography to explore how parents choose schools differently for their children in a unique Israeli setting. Querying parents' feelings and perceptions about themselves and others in their immediate and distant locality offers an opportunity to…
Descriptors: School Choice, Moral Values, Social Class, Geography
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Perry, Laura B.; Southwell, Leonie – Journal of Education Policy, 2014
This study examines how access to academic curriculum differs between secondary schools in Australia, a country whose education system is marked by high levels of choice, privatisation and competition. Equitable access to academic curriculum is important for both individual students and their families as well as the larger society. Previous…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Foreign Countries, Secondary School Curriculum, Equal Education
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Read, Jane – Journal of Education Policy, 2015
This article explores policy development for under-fives and its implementation in nursery schools in the first two decades of the twentieth century and draws parallels with current policy initiatives such as Sure Start and the "Troubled Families" programme. It interrogates how discourse on British racial health shaped policy and…
Descriptors: Nursery Schools, Welfare Services, Public Policy, Rhetoric
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Lupton, Ruth; Hempel-Jorgensen, Amelia – Journal of Education Policy, 2012
This paper starts from the propositions that (a) pedagogy is central to the achievement of socially just education and (b) there are existing pedagogical approaches that can contribute to more socially just outcomes. Given the ostensible commitments of the current English Government to reducing educational inequality and to the importance of…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Outcomes of Education, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
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Braun, Annette; Vincent, Carol; Ball, Stephen J. – Journal of Education Policy, 2008
This paper explores the ways in which working class mothers negotiate mothering and paid work. Drawing on interviews with 70 families with pre-school children, we examine how caring and working responsibilities are conceptualised and presented in mothers' narratives. Mothers showed a high degree of commitment to paid work and, in contrast to…
Descriptors: Working Class, Middle Class, Mothers, Family Work Relationship
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Archer, Louise; Yamashita, Hiromi – Journal of Education Policy, 2003
Uses data collected from London school to explore processes through which inner-city, working-class students leave school at the age of 16. Draws attention to issues of identity and inequality. Highlights the ways in which the young people viewed themselves as "not good enough" and "knew their limits" in relation to…
Descriptors: Compulsory Education, Dropouts, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education
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Dom, Leen; Verhoeven, Jef C. – Journal of Education Policy, 2006
This paper explores the relationship between parents and schools. Over the last 30 years the importance attached to parents' views on education has increased significantly throughout the Western world. Policy-makers encourage parental participation and involvement through the creation of councils in which parents have a say. In Flanders in Belgium…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parent School Relationship, School Law, Politics of Education
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Lucey, Helen; Reay, Diane – Journal of Education Policy, 2002
Examines ways in which current United Kingdom school-choice policies interact with parental pressures on their children to achieve excellence and how these pressures affect the emotional health of their middle- and working-class children as they make the transition from primary to secondary school. Finds serious emotional consequences (exam…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Anxiety, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
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Whitty, Geoff – Journal of Education Policy, 2001
Concerned about working-class failure, argues that recent (British) government policies have insufficiently considered sociological studies on how social class affects educational success or failure. Social-inclusion policies must address forms of middle-class self-exclusion from mainstream public education as well as working-class social…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Educational Sociology, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
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