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John Ehrich; Stuart Woodcock – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
Peggy McIntosh's ("White privilege and male privilege: A personal account of coming to see correspondences through work in women's studies," Working Paper 189, Wellesley Center for Research on Women, 1988) list of 50 racial privileges, which purportedly benefit persons of white skin colour, has had enormous impact on social science…
Descriptors: Whites, Advantaged, Psychometrics, Evaluation
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Claire E. Charles; George Variyan; Lucinda McKnight – Australian Educational Researcher, 2024
Scholars in critical masculinities studies argue that we need men involved and engaged in gender equity movements for gender justice to be realised. Yet we need to know more about how different groups of men are understanding gender equity and what the barriers might be. Amidst significant media interest in elite private boys' schooling and its…
Descriptors: Males, Sex Fairness, Private Schools, Foreign Countries
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Young-Ferris, Anna; Voola, Ranjit – Journal of Management Education, 2023
We explore privilege and its systemic intertwining with management education curricula. We take the view that "privilege as power and control" is intimately bound up with shareholder primacy as a foundation of mainstream management education (Lund Dean & Forray, 2021). In an attempt to tackle this, we provide a single case study of…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Curriculum, Power Structure, Advantaged
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Jacqueline Z. Wilson; Clement Chihota; Genée Marks – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2023
The teaching of white privilege in Australian tertiary settings is beset by a number of obstacles arising especially from resistance, disbelief and outright obstructionism in white students, and occasionally colleagues. The article summarises the historical and societal context regarding race relations, racism and white hegemony in Australia, then…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Teaching Methods, Racism
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Sarah Loch – Australian Educational Researcher, 2024
School-based research centres are growing in number and have potential to amplify school students' voices in research through activities within the school. This paper explores how one research centre in an independent school in Australia, in a financially and socially privileged context, is using tertiary-type structures (namely, an ethics…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Research and Development Centers, Private Schools, Advantaged
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Rozitis, Stef – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2022
Under neoliberalism, parents as consumers are expected to provide their children with opportunities to get ahead. Governments defend elite schools on the grounds that 'diversity' and 'choice' are in the public interest but not everybody has an equal opportunity to choose. School websites act to promote specific images of schools with opportunities…
Descriptors: Males, Advantaged, Social Class, Masculinity
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May, Josephine – History of Education Review, 2023
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the clubs and club memberships of 491 elite women in three eastern Australian states in the 1930s. It is the second part of a descriptive analysis of these women's biographical sketches in Who's Who-type collections, now out of copyright, published in Australia in the 1930s: Victoria (1934), New…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Advantaged, Females, Clubs
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Cameron Meiklejohn; Stewart Riddle; Andrew Hickey – Higher Education Research and Development, 2024
This paper reflects on the recounts of a group of 'old boys' about their transition from elite schools to university. Analysis of semi-structured interview data reveals that this transition was not always straightforward. Although educational background has traditionally determined access to, and progress through, university, this paper details…
Descriptors: Transitional Programs, Males, Undergraduate Study, College Choice
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Mulcahy, Dianne; Martinussen, Maree – Critical Studies in Education, 2023
This article explores the role of affect in addressing the advantage conventionally accorded to high socio-economic status (SES) in higher education (HE) and how this advantage plays out for students from low SES backgrounds. Positioned as the 'other' to an assumed norm, the capacities of these students can be considered the 'wrong' capacities,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Socioeconomic Status, Low Income Students
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Lena Wintermantel; Christine Grove; Stella Laletas – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 2025
Therapy dogs can improve the social and mental health outcomes for children and adolescents. School-based interventions that address social and emotional learning (SEL) can promote children's overall wellbeing and educational outcomes. This study used a qualitative approach to explore children's perceptions of a 12-week therapy dog-assisted SEL…
Descriptors: Animals, Therapy, Social Emotional Learning, Intervention
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Watson, Steven; Barnes, Naomi – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2022
In this paper, we consider educational populism on social media in England and Australia. In both contexts, academics are positioned as a key constituent of an unjust elite with previously voiceless teachers (UK) and students (Australia) framed as the 'just people'. While populism often speaks to nations and nationalism, as 'the people' against an…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Cross Cultural Studies, Nationalism, Advantaged
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Jackson, Jen – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
Early childhood educators with higher qualifications are more likely to demonstrate quality in their practice; but few studies have explored the underlying factors that contribute to this relationship. Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu's theory, this article proposes that the relationship arises from social, as well as educational, inequality. Educators…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Educational Policy, Teacher Qualifications, Teacher Effectiveness
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Tomaszewski, Wojtek; Perales, Francisco; Xiang, Ning; Kubler, Matthias – Research in Higher Education, 2021
Research consistently shows that higher-education participation has positive impacts on individual outcomes. However, few studies explicitly consider differences in these impacts by socio-economic background (SEB), and those which do fail to examine graduate trajectories over the long run, non-labor outcomes and relative returns. We address these…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Background, Advantaged, Disadvantaged, Outcomes of Education
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Howard, Steven J.; Cook, Caylee J.; Everts, Lizl; Melhuish, Edward; Scerif, Gaia; Norris, Shane; Twine, Rhian; Kahn, Kathleen; Draper, Catherine E. – Developmental Science, 2020
The widely and internationally replicated socioeconomic status (SES) gradient of executive function (EF) implies that intervention approaches may do well to extrapolate conditions and practices from contexts that generate better child outcomes (in this case, higher SES circumstances) and translate these to contexts with comparatively poorer…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Executive Function, Socioeconomic Status, Intervention
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Nicky Dulfer; Merryn Dawborn-Gundlach – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2024
The International Baccalaureate (IB) is a market leader in international education however, research suggests that it predominantly serves elite populations (Bunnell, T., M. Donnelly, H. Lauder, and S. Whewall. 2020. "International Mindedness as a Platform for Class Solidarity." "Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Advanced Placement Programs, Advantaged, Marketing
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