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Mikko Kohvakka; Arto Nevala – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2024
Studies of global university rankings often assume that rankings as Anglo-American policy scripts have an increasing influence resulting in a convergence of policies and practices, or that the ideas of rankings continue to diverge into national types. In this article, we take a middle ground by arguing that when an idea of ranking is grounded in a…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Institutional Evaluation, Foreign Countries, Universities
Anna Traianou – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2025
Education policy research has seen a growing interest in the consequences of teacher trade unionism of global education reform. Less attention has been paid to teacher unions as strategic social actors attempting to influence both national education policy and employment relations at the school level. Addressing this topic, the article examines…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Unions, Educational Change, Educational Policy
Bartolic, Silvia K.; Boud, David; Agapito, Jenilyn; Verpoorten, Dominique; Williams, Siobhan; Lutze-Mann, Louise; Matzat, Uwe; Moreno, Ma Monica; Polly, Patsie; Tai, Joanna; Marsh, Heidi L.; Lin, Lin; Burgess, Jamie-Lee; Habtu, Senay; Rodrigo, Ma Maria Mercedes; Roth, Mary; Heap, Tania; Guppy, Neil – Educational Review, 2022
COVID-19 has had a profound influence on the conduct of teaching and learning in higher education. Almost everywhere a sudden shift occurred as educators transitioned courses from mainly face-to-face teaching and learning to emergency remote instruction, mostly conducted online. While details varied for individual faculty members, institutions,…
Descriptors: Educational Change, College Instruction, COVID-19, Pandemics
Laura Mentini; Antonina Levatino – European Educational Research Journal, 2024
The widespread adoption of school autonomy with accountability reforms in education has generated debate regarding the relationship between autonomy, innovation and accountability. While at the policy design level, these three elements are highly related, several authors highlight the contradictions among them. By analyzing key documents and…
Descriptors: Models, Accountability, Institutional Autonomy, Educational Innovation
Li, Zhen; Zhong, Lingna; Lu, Yuling – Education and Urban Society, 2023
More than half of the presidents in top universities of China have been grown up in their original universities. According to the upper echelon theory, the "indigenization" characteristics of university presidents will have an impact on their cognitive level and thus affect the scientific research performance of universities. Based on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Presidents, Career Development, Motivation
Ana Godonoga; Barbara Sporn; Katharina Reidl – European Journal of Higher Education, 2024
Universities, and business schools specifically, are experiencing a transformation of their societal mission. Similar to the STEM fields, business schools are nested in global competitive environments facing multiple competing pressures, one being the need to demonstrate their social impact (SI). While business schools signal their commitment to…
Descriptors: Business Schools, Institutional Mission, Management Development, Educational Change
Ellen Larsen; Georgina Barton; Kristina Turner; Susie Garvis – Australian Educational Researcher, 2025
The work of contemporary teacher educators in university contexts is under increasing political and public scrutiny as the focus on Initial Teacher Education (ITE) reform intensifies. Consequently, there are growing concerns for teacher educators' wellbeing amidst escalating expectations and pressures. While research has explored the wellbeing of…
Descriptors: Well Being, Foreign Countries, Institutional Evaluation, Organizational Culture
Galioto, Carmelo; Pérez Navarro, Camila – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
This paper aims to recognise the transformations in the concept of quality as formulated by Chilean educational policies between 1985 and 1990, at the beginning of the educational privatisation process. Using a conceptual history approach allowed us to analyse the meanings attributed to the concept of quality in the design and implementation of…
Descriptors: Educational History, Semantics, Educational Quality, Reputation
James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal, 2024
College accreditation began as a voluntary means to advise American institutions of higher education on "best practices" and signal to prospective students and their parents that the accredited school offered a quality education. This document critiques the current accreditation system in higher education, which has shifted from a…
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Educational Quality, Educational Change, Best Practices
Rachel Smith – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Most higher education institutions in the United States are bound to the triad's regulations, but their methods for integrating external policies with internal ones are unstudied. Employing a single-case, embedded design, this qualitative study centers on a midsize public, research institution in the eastern United States to explore how one higher…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Change, Program Implementation, Public Colleges
Lingard, Bob; Baroutsis, Aspa; Sellar, Sam – Journal of Educational Change, 2021
This article describes the use of a "Learning Commission" to experiment with conceptualising and implementing richer modes of educational accountability. A "Learning Commission" is a form for collaborative thinking that brings different kinds of knowledge and expertise to bear in relation to a common matter of concern: the role…
Descriptors: Accountability, School Community Relationship, School Role, Expectation
Lídia Serra; José Alves; Diana Soares – Journal of Pedagogical Research, 2024
The inconsistencies between agents of the educational system, where it reigns tensions and disjointed mechanisms that express failures of multidisciplinary action, make schools behave like pseudomorphic systems. This article examines interactions between autonomy and control, resorting to a qualitative study with a quantitative approach to…
Descriptors: School Districts, Educational Change, School District Autonomy, Government School Relationship
Phil Wood; Aimee Quickfall – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
The COVID pandemic temporarily altered the functioning of all sections of society. In England, it led to major disruption in the teacher education sector leading to curtailed training in schools and a rapid shift to alternative approaches to teaching and learning. By the 2021-2022 academic year, it was hoped that activity would return to a level…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Teacher Education Programs, COVID-19, Pandemics
John Hansen; Amanda Nemeth; John Stewart – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2024
Curricular analytics (CA) is a quantitative method that analyzes the sequence of courses (curriculum) that students in an undergraduate academic program must complete to fulfill the requirements of the program. The main hypothesis of CA is that the less complex a curriculum is, the more likely it is that students complete the program. This study…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Physics, Science Instruction, Science Curriculum
Kayyali, Mustafa – Online Submission, 2023
To ensure that students obtain an effective and appropriate education, quality assurance in higher education is crucial. The primary concepts, structures, and procedures associated with quality assurance in higher education are extensively addressed in this paper. To improve student learning outcomes, institutional reputation, and overall…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Quality Assurance, Higher Education, Educational Change