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Vicky Rheya – Education 3-13, 2024
This paper troubles the narrative around childhood as a 'timeless zone' (James and Prout 2015), which is particularly evident in the performative culture of education. Conversational-style interviews -- and in some cases, re-interviews -- were conducted with four UK Mums during their time of COVID-19 home-schooling. Subsequent interpretive…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Home Schooling, Mothers, Parent Attitudes
Nathan Fretwell; John Barker – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2025
This article presents findings from a qualitative study exploring parents' struggles over their children's education. Drawing on affective practice theory (Wetherell 2012) and feminist care ethics (Fisher and Tronto 1990), we offer insights into the affective practices of care driving parents' educational activism. We detail how parents' activism…
Descriptors: Parents, Parent Participation, Caring, Activism
Tang, Anne L. L.; Tung, Vincent Wing Sun; Walker-Gleaves, Caroline; Rattray, Julie – Quality in Higher Education, 2023
This study aimed to examine university students' perceptions of teacher care overall and in the three constructs of pedagogical care, holistic care and relational care, to consider their inclusion in quality enhancement models. Quantitative research using self-administrated online survey was conducted with undergraduates in Hong Kong, Macau,…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Teacher Student Relationship, Caring
Stern, Julian; Kohn, Eli – Oxford Review of Education, 2023
The contrast between student-centred and knowledge-centred teaching is explored through a qualitative case study exploration of the pedagogies (Bruner's 'folk pedagogies') of six teachers of Jewish studies. These teachers, based in orthodox Jewish schools in the UK and Australia, discussed their roles as teachers in the context of their…
Descriptors: Student Centered Learning, Judaism, Religious Education, Teaching Methods
Sellars, Maura; Imig, Scott – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2023
Schools reflect society and societies reflect the schooling of their citizens. Amidst the COVID Pandemic, the failures of many nations to respond effectively and in an equitable manner have been on display for the world. The authors highlight the failure of neoliberal educational policies to create compassionate societies and propose a radical…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Educational Policy, Failure, Educational Change
Bell, Karen – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2022
How to increase student satisfaction is a question that Higher Education institutes have become increasingly focussed on. While previous research indicates a number of factors can contribute to student satisfaction, teaching has been found to be of high importance. This study interviewed students and staff in a UK university that had achieved high…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Satisfaction, Foreign Countries, Teacher Student Relationship
Clare Holdsworth – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
Making autoethnography outlines a method for combining the practices of making (sewing and crochet) and interpretive writing to capture the relationality of the self and materials. I discuss how I have developed my fascination with making as a conduit for working through the challenges of writing autoethnography and the personal vulnerabilities…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Personal Narratives, Handicrafts, Ecological Factors
Laura Moore; Sarah Foley; Fionnuala Larkin – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
Available research suggests autistic mothers experience greater dissatisfaction with maternity care compared to non-autistic mothers. Limited research exists exploring autistic mothers' experiences of maternity care, and no research to date has considered maternity care professionals' experiences of delivering care to autistic mothers. This…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Mothers, Birth, Barriers
McMahon, Esther; Milligan, Lizzi O. – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2023
Research ethics in international and comparative education (ICE) highlights the diverse challenges that ICE researchers face in enacting ethical practice. In particular, the significant gaps between ethics presented in Western ethical guidelines and international fieldwork. Through analysis of existing guidelines and questionnaire responses from…
Descriptors: Ethics, Guidelines, International Education, Comparative Education
Bates, Claire – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2021
Background: Adopting a vegetarian diet is becoming increasingly popular within the UK, for reasons such as perceived health benefits and concerns over animal welfare. The study explores attitudes towards vegetarianism/veganism among adults with learning disabilities. Materials and Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with eight…
Descriptors: Eating Habits, Animals, Adults, Intellectual Disability
Tristan Middleton – International Journal of Nurture in Education, 2021
This explorative study analysed a selection of school OFSTED reports to answer the research question, 'how are nurture and nurture group practice represented in OFSTED reports?' This study sampled secondary school OFSTED reports over a period of one year and analysed the reports for reference to nurturing and nurture group practice. Findings…
Descriptors: Secondary Schools, Caring, Reports, Educational Practices
Moulin-Stozek, Daniel; Kurian, Nomisha; Nikolova, Afrodita – Oxford Review of Education, 2022
One response to the coronavirus pandemic has been for educators, public health experts and politicians to emphasise the importance of empathy, compassion, care, or similar human qualities in tackling the crisis. We explore these claims philosophically in regard to education. What moral attributes are relevant to a crisis such as a pandemic? How…
Descriptors: Ethics, Pandemics, COVID-19, Crisis Management
Elizabeth Chapman Hoult; Mel Gibson – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
Children who are currently, or were previously, 'looked after' by the state, are educationally disadvantaged, with exclusion rates historically higher than in other groups in the UK. A conventional way of thinking about these children is that they have been affected by trauma and attachment issues in their early years, and that they import their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educationally Disadvantaged, Children, Foster Care
Neil Harrison; Simon Benham-Clarke – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
There has been increasing interest in understanding the higher education experiences of students who spent time 'in care' as children, who tend to have to overcome strong barriers to educational success. Care-experienced students often thrive in higher education, although little is currently known about those who build on this success to pursue…
Descriptors: Career Pathways, Caring, Higher Education, Bias
Katharina Sophie Vogt; John Stephenson; Paul Norman – Journal of American College Health, 2023
Objective: Self-affirmation theory proposes that defensive processing prevents people from accepting health-risk messages, which may explain university students' dismissal of risk-information about binge drinking. SA-interventions may encourage non-biased processing of such information through impacting on interpersonal feelings and self-esteem.…
Descriptors: Alcohol Abuse, Risk Management, Student Attitudes, Intervention