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Binhas, Adi; Yaniv, Iris – Journal of Jewish Education, 2022
This article deals with the perceived professional and personal identity of Israeli public-school teachers of subjects related to Jewish culture who have immigrated from the former Soviet Union (FSU). Our research question was: What was the impact of the emigration from the FSU on the teachers' Jewish-Israeli identity construction, and how did…
Descriptors: Jews, Judaism, Self Concept, Professional Identity
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Chachashvili-Bolotin, Svetlana; Lissitsa, Sabina; Milner-Bolotin, Marina – International Journal of Science Education, 2019
This large-scale study (N=173,636) examines between-group differences in Israeli high school STEM enrolment and average grades between five groups of Israeli-born Jews. Four of them comprise second-generation immigrant students with high-skilled parents, from North America (NA), South America (SA), France, and the Former Soviet Union (FSU). The…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Immigrants, Parent Background, High School Students
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Matusov, Eugene – Dialogic Pedagogy, 2018
Through my autobiographical reflective ethnography of my Soviet childhood, schooling and teaching, I try to investigate the phenomenon of political multiple consciousness that I observed in the USSR and its development in children. In my analysis, I abstracted eight diverse types of consciousness, five of which are political in their nature.
Descriptors: Social Systems, Autobiographies, Ethnography, Political Attitudes
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Krinko, Evgeny Fedorovich – Russian Education & Society, 2016
The article explores Soviet schooling in the occupied territory of the USSR during the Great Patriotic War. The author considers such issues as the reduction in the number of schools, changes in curricular content, and problems in the organization of schooling and the work of teachers. The article notes the effects of various factors on the…
Descriptors: Jews, Social Discrimination, Foreign Countries, War
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Levi-Keren, Michal – Cogent Education, 2016
This study explains mathematical difficulties of students who immigrated from the Former Soviet Union (FSU) vis-à-vis Israeli students, by identifying the existing bias factors in achievement tests. These factors are irrelevant to the mathematical knowledge being measured, and therefore threaten the test results. The bias factors were identified…
Descriptors: Mathematics Achievement, Mathematics Tests, Immigrants, Interviews
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Titzmann, Peter F.; Silbereisen, Rainer K.; Mesch, Gustavo – Developmental Psychology, 2014
On the basis of general theories of delinquency and the specific situation of immigrants, this longitudinal study investigated predictors of initial levels and rates of change in delinquency among 188 male ethnic German Diaspora immigrants from the former Soviet Union (FSU) in Germany, 237 male native German adolescents, and 182 male Jewish…
Descriptors: Delinquency, Immigrants, Longitudinal Studies, Predictor Variables
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Dietsch, Johan – European Education, 2012
The article examines how Ukrainian history textbooks dealt with the Holocaust between independence and 2006. The analysis reveals two major, conflicting narratives about the Holocaust, though both externalize and relativize the Holocaust. As a template for understanding genocide, the Holocaust was applied to the Soviet-imposed 1932-33 famine in…
Descriptors: Jews, Foreign Countries, Death, Historians
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Semyonov, Moshe; Lewin-Epstein, Noah – Social Forces, 2011
This research examines wealth distribution across ethnic groups in Israel and evaluates the role of labor market rewards and intergenerational transfers in producing ethnic disparities. Israel SHARE data from 2005-2006 are used in the analyses. The findings reveal considerable ethnic disparities in wealth. Wealth disparities are most pronounced…
Descriptors: Jews, Arabs, Labor Market, Foreign Countries
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Lipshits-Braziler, Yuliya; Tatar, Moshe – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2012
This study investigated gender and ethnic differences in the perception of different types of career barriers among young adults in relation to their views of themselves as individuals (Personal Career Barriers) and their views of their gender and ethnic group (Group Career Barriers). This study also explored gender and ethnic differences in the…
Descriptors: Jews, Young Adults, Coping, Foreign Countries
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Corning, Amy D. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2010
Research on memory of public events consistently reveals generational effects, where individuals remember best the events from their "critical years" of adolescence and early adulthood--a phenomenon attributed to privileged encoding or retrieval of memories due to primacy of experience. Prior research, however, has not decoupled the…
Descriptors: Jews, Adolescents, Young Adults, Foreign Countries
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Birman, Dina; Persky, Irena; Chan, Wing Yi – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2010
The current paper explores the salience and impact of ethnic and national identities for immigrants that are negotiating more than two cultures. Specifically, we were interested in the ways in which Jewish immigrant adolescents from the former Soviet Union integrate their Russian, Jewish, and American identities, and to what extent identification…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Jews, Structural Equation Models, Adolescents
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Markowitz, Fran – Adolescence, 1994
Assessed role played by Soviet Jewish emigre family in exacerbating dual disjunctures of immigration and adolescents. Results, based on life history interviews with five women who came from United Soviet Socialist Republic to United States as teenagers in 1970s, challenge bipolar model of adolescent immigrants and raise questions about previous…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Family Relationship, Females, Foreign Countries
Center for Applied Linguistics, Washington, DC. Language and Orientation Resource Center. – 1981
The uneven but continuing emigration of Soviet Jews since 1972 has been brought about by government policies that are all but openly anti-Semitic. More than 80,000 of these refugees have settled in the United States, many in New York City. They come from a population that is highly urbanized and well educated. Most speak Russian but identify…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Cultural Background, English (Second Language), History
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Vinokurov, Andrey; Birman, Dina; Trickett, Edison – International Migration Review, 2000
Assessed the relationship of work status to acculturation and psychological adaption among refugees from the former Soviet Union, examining life satisfaction, alienation, and work status. Findings underscore the relevance of work status to refugees' life satisfaction and psychological adaptation and suggest the importance of seeking employment in…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Alienation, Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries
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Graubert, Judah L. – Journal of Intergroup Relations, 1972
Discusses the three categories of the overall Soviet human rights movement: that of the Jewish community, that which is comprised of the numerous Christian sects, and the component comprised of Soviet intellectual dissidents. (JM)
Descriptors: Authors, Christianity, Churches, Civil Liberties
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