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Moote, Julie; Archer, Louise; DeWitt, Jennifer; MacLeod, Emily – Research Papers in Education, 2021
Increasing and diversifying participation in science remains a key educational policy concern for governments across the world. "Science capital" has been proposed as a useful theoretical lens that can explain patterns in science aspirations among young people aged 11-16 -- but to date it has not been explored in relation to educational…
Descriptors: Late Adolescents, Secondary School Students, Cultural Capital, Science Interests
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Dawson, Emily; Archer, Louise; Seakins, Amy; Godec, Spela; DeWitt, Jennifer; King, Heather; Mau, Ada; Nomikou, Effrosyni – Gender and Education, 2020
Science education has a seemingly intractable gender problem and remains largely the reserve of White, middle-class men and boys, especially in the physical sciences. In this paper, taking an intersectional approach to Butler's idea of identity as performance, we explore the affordances and limitations of a specific science learning space (a…
Descriptors: Females, Science Activities, Museums, Science Education
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DeWitt, Jennifer; Archer, Louise – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2018
Participation in post-compulsory physics is a matter of longstanding concern from economic and equity perspectives. The current study draws upon Bourdieu's theory of social practice, particularly notions of the 'cultural arbitrary', to explore what insights into post-compulsory physics choice might be provided by students who chose other sciences.…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Secondary School Students, Social Capital
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Moote, Julie; Archer, Louise; DeWitt, Jenifer; MacLeod, Emily – Journal of Engineering Education, 2020
Background: Women (along with minority ethnic and low-income communities) remain underrepresented in engineering, despite a 30-year history of research and equality legislation. Compared with the United States and other European Union countries, this underrepresentation is particularly pronounced in the United Kingdom. While existing literature…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Students, Engineering Education, Occupational Aspiration
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Archer, Louise; Moote, Julie; MacLeod, Emily – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2020
Background: There is widespread agreement that participation in post-compulsory physics needs to be widened and increased, particularly among women and under-represented communities. This paper contributes to understanding of the processes that produce unequal participation, Methods: The paper undertakes a Bourdieusian analysis of longitudinal…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Foreign Countries, Advanced Courses
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Archer, Louise – Primary Science, 2018
Over the past decade, the author and their colleagues have been carrying out research to try to better understand the factors that shape students' engagement with science, as well as their science and career aspirations. The ASPIRES/ASPIRES 2 studies have tracked a cohort of students in England from the age of 10 to 18, combining large-scale…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Foreign Countries, Elementary Secondary Education, Student Attitudes
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Moote, Julie; Archer, Louise – Research Papers in Education, 2018
Currently, in England, there is widespread concern that careers education (information, advice and guidance) is relatively poorly resourced in schools and there is much debate about its current effectiveness. In this paper, we investigate students' views on careers education provision and their satisfaction with this provision. The work draws on…
Descriptors: Career Education, Student Attitudes, Student Satisfaction, National Surveys
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Archer, Louise; Dawson, Emily; DeWitt, Jennifer; Seakins, Amy; Wong, Billy – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2015
This paper sets out an argument and approach for moving beyond a primarily arts-based conceptualization of cultural capital, as has been the tendency within Bourdieusian approaches to date. We advance the notion that, in contemporary society, scientific forms of cultural and social capital can command a high symbolic and exchange value. Our…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Capital, Social Capital, Science and Society
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Crozier, Gill; Burke, Penny Jane; Archer, Louise – Whiteness and Education, 2016
In spite of the relative success of the Widening Participation policy and strategies to increase the numbers of students from Black and Minority and White working-class backgrounds going to university, universities in Britain continue to be White and middle-class-dominated institutions. We found, in our two-year qualitative Higher Education…
Descriptors: Peer Relationship, Student Diversity, White Students, Middle Class
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DeWitt, Jennifer; Archer, Louise – International Journal of Science Education, 2015
There is broad international agreement about the importance of increasing participation in science once it is no longer compulsory in school, particularly among groups who have been historically underrepresented in science. Previous research reflects that despite broadly positive attitudes to science in and outside of school, there is limited…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Science Careers, Scientists, Career Choice
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Archer, Louise; Francis, Becky; Mau, Ada – Oxford Review of Education, 2010
Notions of culture, ethnicity and identity are highly political (and also personally meaningful) issues within diasporic communities. Complementary schools are particularly interesting sites in this respect, as they are often set up with an explicit cultural agenda of "preserving" or "maintaining" "traditional" culture and language within…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Student Attitudes, Identification (Psychology), Cultural Maintenance
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Francis, Becky; Archer, Louise; Mau, Ada – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2010
User perceptions and experiences of complementary education are neglected in the research literature, yet they are important in providing understanding concerning complementary schools and their impact on educational and social identities. This paper explores the constructions of parents of pupils attending these schools, and of teachers at these…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Parent Attitudes, Power Structure
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Francis, Becky; Archer, Louise – Oxford Review of Education, 2005
British-Chinese pupils are the highest achieving ethnic group in the British education system, and British-Chinese boys performance equals that of girls. This paper investigates aspects of British-Chinese pupils constructions of learning, focusing particularly on subject preferences and their constructions of themselves as pupils. The results are…
Descriptors: Ethnic Groups, Social Class, Immigrants, Foreign Countries
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Archer, Louise; Francis, Becky – Race, Ethnicity & Education, 2005
British Chinese pupils stand out as a high achieving group within the British education system and yet very little theoretical or policy attention has been given to these pupils' identities and experiences of education. In this paper we consider British Chinese pupils' (and parents') reports of their experiences of racism/s and their views on the…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Ethnic Stereotypes, Masculinity, Educational Policy