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J. Jordan; M. Larkin; E. Tilley; J. Vseteckova; S. Ryan; L. Wallace – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2025
Background: There are increasing numbers of ageing family carers of older (40+) adults with intellectual disabilities who convey behaviours that challenge others in the UK. It is important to understand the needs and experiences of these carers as they support their older family member to transition to different care contexts. Method: A rapid…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literature Reviews, Caregivers, Older Adults
Rebecca Palmer; Katerina Hilari; Carla Magdalani; Joanne Coster; Suzanne Beeke; Emma Gibbs; Helen Witts; Kate Sudworth; Caroline Jagoe; Madeline Cruice – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2025
Introduction: Life with aphasia affects the whole family with shorter, less frequent conversations, frustration, reduced social networks, isolation and tension in relationships. Evidence suggests communication partner training (CPT) benefits families. However, expected improvements are poorly articulated. The Aphasia Partnership Training (APT)…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Speech Language Pathology, Speech Therapy, Expectation
Emily Danvers; Abigail Wells – Higher Education Research and Development, 2025
Homeification refers to the intensification of the home environment through the accelerated lifestyle changes triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic. These changes resulted in blurred and altered boundaries between places and new relations with spaces, things, and technologies. Drawing on multi-modal creative research with UK undergraduate students,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Seniors, COVID-19, Pandemics
I. Lin Sin; Alina Schartner – Journal of International Students, 2024
This article casts light on informal caregiving, an essential aspect of the international postgraduate researcher (PGR) experience, but which is often invisible in literature and discourses on international education. Drawing from qualitative semi-structured interviews with international PGRs in a British university, it highlights their dual role…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Mental Health, Well Being, Graduate Students
Rushton, Rosie; Kossyvaki, Lila – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2022
Background: Music is weaved within our cultures; it is ever-present within daily-life and can considerably influence our mood, well-being and relationships. This study explores parental perceptions of the role of music in the home-lives of children and young people with profound and multiple learning disabilities in the UK. It considers parental…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Music, Parent Attitudes, Severe Intellectual Disability
Patfield, Sally; Gore, Jennifer; Fray, Leanne – Educational Review, 2022
Universities have increasingly adopted "first-generation status" as a new category for addressing equity in higher education, especially in the UK and Australia. This category targets students whose parents do not have a university degree and therefore are "newcomers" to higher education. While the category is well-intentioned,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, First Generation College Students, Social Capital, Social Networks
Crompton, Catherine J.; Hallett, Sonny; Ropar, Danielle; Flynn, Emma; Fletcher-Watson, Sue – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2020
Many autistic people are motivated to have friends, relationships and close family bonds, despite the clinical characterisation of autism as a condition negatively affecting social interaction. Many first-hand accounts of autistic people describe feelings of comfort and ease specifically with other autistic people. This qualitative research…
Descriptors: Adults, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Friendship
Wright, Emily; Stojanovik, Vesna; Serratrice, Ludovica – Deafness & Education International, 2023
Parents of deaf children must decide whether to raise their child using spoken and/or signed language. Multilingual parents have the additional decision of whether to use multiple spoken languages (with or without a signed language as well). These communication choices -- which can be both explicit and implicit -- can change over time and are…
Descriptors: Deafness, Speech Communication, Sign Language, Parent Child Relationship
Raaper, Rille; Brown, Chris; Llewellyn, Anna – Educational Review, 2022
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a global crisis in higher education, affecting all aspects of university work and practices. This article focuses on student experiences, in particular by problematising academic and wellbeing support available to non-traditional students. This article proposes an original approach to student support as comprising…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nontraditional Students, Social Support Groups, Well Being
Petts, Louisa; Urmston, Elsa – Research in Dance Education, 2022
Community dance has been used as an arts-based approach in healthcare, key for expression in populations who may not typically have access to dance. This study sought to conduct an empirical exploration of family caregivers' perceived psychosocial wellbeing when regularly participating in community dance classes. Community dance can be defined as…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Dementia, Community Programs, Well Being
Dunleavy, April; Sorte, Rossella – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2022
Inclusion of special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) in the UK mainstream school provision has been identified as a human right in the United Nations Convention for the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD). The UK Children and Families Act of 2014 stipulates that children in mainstream school provision must have access to…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Experience, Foreign Countries, Mainstreaming
Khadij Gharibi; Seyed Hadi Mirvahedi – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
With a focus on an under-studied group of immigrants in the UK, this paper examines Iranian families' language ideologies and practices at home in relation to Persian acquisition and maintenance for their children. Working within a family language policy (FLP) framework, we draw on sociolinguistic data from semi-structured interviews with eighteen…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Language Usage, Family Relationship, Native Language
Parimala V. Rao – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
Thomas Munro, a Scottish highlander, came to the Madras Presidency in South India as a soldier in the army of the East India Company in 1780. He rose to the position of its governor 40 years later in 1820 and died in India in 1827. His rise was not through military campaigns but peaceful administrative policies. During his stay in India, he…
Descriptors: Indians, Colonialism, Military Personnel, Educational History
Huxford, Grace – History of Education, 2022
This article traces the emergence of the term 'turbulence' to describe the educational disruption experienced by military children after 1945. It asks why the term came to dominate professional discussion of military education so much from the late 1960s onwards and the wider tensions it exposed in post-war Britain: between welfare and warfare;…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, War, Educational History, Military Personnel
Wilson, Sonia – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2020
According to the latest report of the (Office for National Statistics [2018]. "Births by Parents' Country of Birth, England and Wales: 2017." UK: Statistical Bulletin), 34% of children born in Britain have at least one parent from another country. With nearly 20% of children in primary schools categorised as speakers of English as an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Relationship, Language Usage, Language Planning