NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 10 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Robin Simmons; Martyn Walker – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2024
This paper draws on an oral history project which focuses on former coalminers' experiences of education and training. It presents the stories of five participants, all of whom undertook significant programmes of post-compulsory education during or immediately after leaving the coal industry and achieved a degree of social mobility over the course…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Fuels, Mining, Dislocated Workers
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Heila Lotz-Sisitka; Simon McGrath; Presha Ramsarup – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2024
In this paper, drawing on an extensive research project across three countries (VET Africa 4.0 Collective 2023), we produce an emerging argument that it is necessary to rethink and reframe VET logics and approaches in a warming future dominated by informality and mass unemployment. Currently, neither the formal VET college or workplace are…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Climate, Ecology, Political Issues
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Malcolm-Neale, Andrew – Physics Education, 2019
Fusion energy research is 'mission oriented' big-science. It has both rapid progress and a reputation for being forever distant that excites many with a curiosity for science. However, it is difficult to give time to in lesson plans given both its lack of associated learning objectives and complexity. Outreach at the Fusion Centre for Doctoral…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Energy, Worksheets
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Dunlop, Lynda; Atkinson, Lucy; Mc Keown, Denise; Turkenburg-van Diepen, Maria – British Educational Research Journal, 2021
A necessary condition for a functioning democracy is the participation of its citizens, including its youth. This is particularly true for political participation in environmental decisions, because these decisions can have intergenerational consequences. In this article we examine young people's beliefs about one form of political…
Descriptors: Mining, Fuels, Conservation (Environment), Activism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Simpson, Katherine; Simmons, Robin – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
This paper examines the intergenerational effects of deindustrialisation on the processes and experiences of education at 'Lillydown Primary', a state primary school in a former mining community in the north of England. Complicating Avery Gordon's notion of 'haunting', and drawing on conceptualisations of affect and community 'being-ness', it…
Descriptors: Mining, Fuels, Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Dunlop, Lynda; Atkinson, Lucy; Turkenburg-van Diepen, Maria – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2020
Fracking is a controversial process that requires both chemical and political knowledge in order for young people to make informed decisions and hold industry and government to account. It does not appear in the English chemistry curriculum and little is known about young people's beliefs about fracking, nor of their attitudes towards it. In this…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Political Issues, Science Instruction, Fuels
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
David Hayes – Prism: Casting New Light on Learning, Theory & Practice, 2017
Critical criminology will be applied to a discussion of environmental responsibility and the proposed controversial practice of 'fracking'. First, Green Criminology is discussed, as it seeks to re-direct the traditional focus of criminology onto patterns of crime and forms of criminality often marginalised by dominant research agendas and…
Descriptors: Conservation (Environment), Ecology, Sustainable Development, Criminology
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Cook, Emma – Primary Science, 2011
Increased energy efficiency and reduced reliance on fossil fuels are both essential if people are to have any chance of avoiding escalating energy prices and the grim reality of catastrophic climate change. By increasing the diversity of energy sources people can also achieve increased security, reducing their dependence on imports. As…
Descriptors: Fuels, Energy Conservation, Energy, Climate
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Bright, N. Geoffrey – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2012
This article reflects on some aspects of a doctoral ethnographic study of young people disaffected from schooling in a post-industrial space of ruin in a former coal-mining community in England. It considers how their experiences of resistance and refusal of schooling can, in the relational ethos of non-school support settings, come to speak back…
Descriptors: Fuels, Ethnography, Student School Relationship, Young Adults
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Theobald, Paul; Rochon, Ronald S. – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2006
The following is an historically-based analysis of a new phenomenon affecting rural schools and communities: animal confinement operations. A contrast is made between "enclosure" as it unfolded in England a few centuries ago and the way animal concentration units constitute a second, "modern" form of enclosure today. In both…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Essays, Foreign Countries, Animal Husbandry