Publication Date
In 2025 | 122 |
Since 2024 | 685 |
Descriptor
Disadvantaged | 685 |
Foreign Countries | 308 |
Power Structure | 177 |
Equal Education | 165 |
Barriers | 132 |
Student Attitudes | 105 |
Inclusion | 91 |
Access to Education | 86 |
Teacher Attitudes | 78 |
Educational Policy | 77 |
COVID-19 | 76 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Alina Martinez | 3 |
Diana McCallum | 3 |
Elizabeth Mugo | 3 |
Glenda McGregor | 3 |
Tiffany Waits | 3 |
Agnes Kukulska-Hulme | 2 |
Alejandra Miranda | 2 |
Amrit Thapa | 2 |
Anastasia Liasidou | 2 |
Charlie Wall | 2 |
Chuanmei Dong | 2 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Location
Australia | 30 |
China | 23 |
United Kingdom (England) | 23 |
United Kingdom | 20 |
Canada | 19 |
South Africa | 18 |
California | 14 |
India | 14 |
Germany | 12 |
Texas | 12 |
Spain | 10 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Nazar Khalid; Jere Behrman; Emily Hannum; Amrit Thapa – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2024
Floods cause extensive damage in high-income countries, including the United States, but problems are more severe in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) that lack preventative and mitigating infrastructure. Marginalized children's education in LMICs might be particularly vulnerable. Using the Indian Human Development Survey, we investigate…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Student Characteristics, Foreign Countries, Natural Disasters
Carmen Elena Jijón de la Torre – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
This article presents the artistic process employed by a group of young women in an academic setting at the Central University of Ecuador, as they wrote four documentary plays. These students, belonging to the first generation to have access to a dramaturgy class in a public university in the country, utilized an innovative to develop their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Females, Drama
Nathan Patrick Burns; David Young; Andrea Sherriff; Peter Black; Al Blackshaw; Louise Kelly – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
Knowing the academic outcomes of students who received contextual offers to higher education is important in understanding whether or not Scotland's Widening Access efforts have been successful in delivering impact to those from socio-economically deprived backgrounds. This study showed that once controlling for academic cohort, sex, ethnicity and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outcomes of Education, Higher Education, Access to Education
Don Zoellner – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
Describing various demographic characteristics of disadvantaged students, the programs they study and their employment outcomes is a significant area of research interest in the vocational education and training (VET) sector. This article offers a preliminary exploration of how groups are problematised and the consequent influence on VET research…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Disadvantaged, Vocational Education, Publications
Julie Poissant; Stephanie Langheit; France Capuano; Christa Japel; François Poulin – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2024
Preschool is a particularly opportune time to introduce measures that promote parental school-based involvement, as this is when the initial contact with the school is made. In Québec, a French-speaking province in Canada, voluntary school-based preschools for 4-year-olds have been offered to families in disadvantaged neighbourhoods. A component…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Education, Preschool Teachers, Parent Attitudes
Denise Jones; Zaida Pearson; Deanna C. E. Sinex; Jeremiah Nash; Aiwen Chen; Dennis F. Jones – Afterschool Matters, 2024
The current study explores the efforts of one summer youth employment program to provide students with meaningful work experiences and the participants' perceptions of the meaningfulness of their work and its effect on their future orientation. Most of the students in the study were under the age of 18. The Youth Enrichment Services (YES) Summer…
Descriptors: Summer Programs, Economically Disadvantaged, Disadvantaged, Student Empowerment
Pan, Chao; Zhao, Menghan – Psychology in the Schools, 2024
This present study aimed to explore the relationship between upward social comparison, relative deprivation, belief in a just world, and delay discounting by surveying 614 college students. The results showed the following: (1) upward social comparison could significantly and negatively predict individuals' delay discounting; and (2) belief in a…
Descriptors: Social Differences, College Students, Social Status, Beliefs
Sabet, Navid – Education and Urban Society, 2024
This article examines the potential contribution of social enterprise to the "wicked" problem of creativity and literacy in a performative schooling environment, drawing on an ethnographic study of Ciento, a social enterprise organization that works with under-resourced young people, families, and communities in Melbourne, Australia. In…
Descriptors: Creativity, Literacy, Foreign Countries, Social Change
Mazhar Bal – Journal on Educational Psychology, 2024
The aim of this study is to examine the precautions and policies of the Ministry of National Education (MoNE) in the preearthquake period for disadvantaged groups that may be affected by earthquakes. One out of five students in Turkey was affected by the February 6, 2023, earthquake in the country. In terms of the education system, the earthquake…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Seismology, Natural Disasters, Disadvantaged
J. C. Hall – American Educator, 2025
In the face of systemic neglect of low-income urban neighborhoods, Hip Hop was much more than entertainment: it was a countercultural revolution embodied as a way of life bound to community action and social change. Hip Hop represents resilience, resistance, and redemption for those living on the margins; to this day, it is an art form for the…
Descriptors: Trauma Informed Approach, Trauma, Music, Mental Health
Jessi Pham; Tiffany Perry-Wilson; Kevlyn Holmes; Grace Schroeder; Ana Reyes; Michelle Pollok – Professional Counselor, 2025
Decolonial research helps us move away from extractive research methodologies that maintain the "wounded subject position" and legitimize oppressive practices. Additionally, decolonial research challenges dominant Eurocentric paradigms that have historically shaped the counseling profession. Thus, we offer this article to demonstrate an…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Research Methodology, Power Structure, Disadvantaged
Audrey Amrein-Beardsley; Zarrina T. Azizova; Norman P. Gibbs; Chukwu Ikegwuonu; Jeongeun Kim; Deborah Michele La Torre; Matthew R. Lavery; Margarita Pivovarova; Yi Zheng – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2025
In response to a call for research on using the SATs and ACTs for U.S.-based college and university admissions, researchers systematically interrogated the literature surrounding both tests, using a framework for validity evidence built upon the "Standards of Educational and Psychological Testing" and Kane's contemporary view of…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Test Validity, Psychometrics, Decision Making
Project Tomorrow, 2025
Project Tomorrow's Speak Up® Research reports have advocated for a broader definition of the digital divide to include access challenges at home and the obstacles K-12 students face in gaining access to high quality digital tools and resources to support classroom learning. Project Tomorrow, in collaboration with Spectrum Business, is creating a…
Descriptors: Access to Computers, Disadvantaged, Elementary Secondary Education, Access to Internet
Catherine C. Thomas; Michael C. Schwalbe; Macario Garcia; Geoffrey L. Cohen; Hazel Rose Markus – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2024
We investigate the contrasting realities of the pandemic on psychosocial experiences and ways of coping among American Voices Project respondent surveys (N = 720) and interviews (N = 172). Despite similar levels of distress early in the pandemic, by late 2020 clear differences across education, race and ethnicity, and gender emerged, both…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Coping, Equal Education
Gaia Scerif; Jelena Sucevic; Hannah Andrews; Emma Blakey; Sylvia U. Gattas; Amy Godfrey; Zachary Hawes; Steven J. Howard; Liberty Kent; Rebecca Merkley; Rosemary O'Connor; Fionnuala O'Reilly; Victoria Simms – npj Science of Learning, 2025
Executive functions (EF) are crucial to regulating learning and are predictors of emerging mathematics. However, interventions that leverage EF to improve mathematics remain poorly understood. 193 four-year-olds (mean age = 3 years; 11 months pre-intervention; 111 female, 69% White) were assessed 5 months apart, with 103 children randomised to an…
Descriptors: Numeracy, Executive Function, Mathematics Skills, Preschool Children