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Héctor Monarca; Soledad Rappoport; Javier Pericacho; Daria Mottareale; Gloria Gratacós; Cecilia Azorín; Juana Ruiloba; Claudia Messina – European Journal of Education, 2025
The article is based on a novel theoretical framework for studying the teaching profession and its professionalisation from a broad view of Education as a common field in which many different actors take part. The way the field of Education is (re)produced is rarely researched. Rather, its current order is assumed as valid, ignoring the infighting…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching (Occupation), Educational Attitudes, Professionalism
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Fantahun Admas; Abebaw Minaye; Kassahun Habtamu; Seleshi Zeleke; Abera Tibebu; Mesay Gebremariam Kotecho; Yohannis Adgeh; Habtamu Getnet – European Journal of Education, 2024
While the lack of educational opportunities limits the future of most people in Ethiopia, they pose dire consequences to young people in migration hotspot areas. Using input-process-outcome-context-education quality framework, this study investigated the quality of education in eight migration hotspot areas of Ethiopia and its association with…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Educational Opportunities, Foreign Countries, Student Attitudes
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Jun Shu; Lin Tian – European Journal of Education, 2025
Academic profession internationalisation is an important engine to promote higher education internationalisation, which can be analysed across four dimensions: international academic activities, cross-cultural concepts and contents, internationalisation attitudes and internationalisation knowledge and skills. The comparative analysis of the survey…
Descriptors: International Education, Higher Education, College Faculty, Cross Cultural Studies
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Adi Sapir; Ravit Mizrahi-Shtelman – European Journal of Education, 2024
This study explores how homeroom teachers construct meaningfulness in their work and in their professional identity, and how this meaningfulness serves them as they interpret and react to public criticism of their profession. Our study relies on interviews with 95 teachers working in Israeli elementary-, middle- and high schools, and draws on the…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, Teacher Role, Teacher Attitudes, Elementary School Teachers
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Tasaki, Noritomo – European Journal of Education, 2017
The author describes the results of PISA, including those of 2015 and Japan's reaction, as well as their impact. Highly-ranked in PISA, Japan has always tried to improve its education system. The promotion of reading comprehension remains an important issue and low interest and motivation to learn subjects are crucial problems. The author…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, International Organizations, Foreign Countries, Achievement Tests
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Elfert, Maren – European Journal of Education, 2015
Two education reports commissioned by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Learning to be, otherwise known as the "Faure report" (1972) and "Learning: The treasure within," otherwise known as the "Delors report" (1996), have been associated with the establishment of lifelong…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Global Approach, International Organizations, Interviews
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Tiana Ferrer, Alejandro – European Journal of Education, 2017
PISA, which was launched by OECD, is one of the most significant and successful initiatives on which education systems have recently collectively embarked. However, although it is a well-coordinated international programme, its reception differs according to country. There is therefore a need to analyse specific national circumstances in order to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Achievement Tests, Secondary School Students, International Assessment
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Hopfenbeck, Therese N.; Görgen, Kristine – European Journal of Education, 2017
Using the PISA 2015 releases in Norway and England, this article explores how PISA has been presented in the media and how the policy level has responded to the results. England will be used as an example for comparison. The article presents early media responses from the 20 most circulated daily newspapers in the two countries and discusses them…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Policy, Politics of Education, Foreign Countries
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Gashi, Ardiana; Mojsoska-Blazevski, Nikica – European Journal of Education, 2016
Students' well-being is crucial for learning motivation and effective learning, for their quality of life and their psychological health later in life. In this regard, this article investigates the factors that affect the well-being of students in secondary vocational schools in Kosovo and Macedonia. It empirically examines determinants of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Vocational Education, Well Being
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Veiga, Amelia – European Journal of Education, 2012
Government policies are central factors shaping the environment of higher education institutions. European governments have included in their higher education political strategies the principal goal of implementing the European Higher Education Area (EHEA). The perceptions that key actors of higher education institutions (HEIs) have about…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Public Policy, International Cooperation
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Teichler, Ulrich – European Journal of Education, 2007
Renewed public interest in the relationships between higher education and the world of work and a deficient data base contributed to the decision to undertake a major comparative study on graduate employment and work. In the framework of the CHEERS study, supported by the European Commission's TSER programme, some 40,000 graduates of the academic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Graduate Surveys
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Ash, Mitchell G. – European Journal of Education, 2006
Public debate on higher education reform today is dominated by competing views about what higher education institutions, particularly universities, are or should become. To a surprising extent, these views are based upon highly simplified characterisations of university history. The claims in question have been repeated so often that they have…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Educational Change, Educational Policy
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Sanderson, Michael – European Journal of Education, 1993
Five reasons, all rooted in Victorian values, are given for liberal education historically having more prestige than vocational education in the United Kingdom. Proposed reform strategies include revival of technical secondary schools; reform of technological universities, including deemphasis of liberal arts; and increased resources for…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Attitudes, Educational History, Foreign Countries
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Koucky, Jan – European Journal of Education, 1996
A discussion of educational reform efforts in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia looks at these changes in the larger context of recent substantial political, social, and economic change. It examines the role and value of education in the different societies, quantitative and structural development in education systems, and economic…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Educational Attitudes, Educational Change, Educational Economics
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Tomlinson, J. R. G. – European Journal of Education, 1991
Two views of the introduction of comprehensive secondary education into England and Wales are examined: that it is an episode connected directly to postwar building of the welfare state, and destined to fail; and represents a fundamental and permanent shift in the perception of what secondary education should attempt. (MSE)
Descriptors: Comprehensive Programs, Educational Attitudes, Educational Change, Educational History
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