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Lynda Dunlop; Lucy Atkinson; Claes Malmberg; Maria Turkenburg-van Diepen; Anders Urbas – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2024
Politics and science are inextricably connected, particularly in relation to the climate emergency and other environmental crises, yet science education is an often overlooked site for engaging with the political dimensions of environmental issues. This study examines how science teachers in England experience politics--specifically political…
Descriptors: Science Education, Foreign Countries, Science Teachers, Political Attitudes
Reay, Diane – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2022
This article, as coruscating as it is well-grounded, sketches the appallingly unfair state of contemporary education in England. It outlines the historical and contemporary drivers of that unfairness and the consequences that ensue in the lives of young people. It calls for a renewed movement on the left to call out the education system's shocking…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational Improvement, Justice
Fay Lowe – Journal of Religious Education, 2024
This research addresses the concerning influence of far-right extremism on pupils in England, highlighting risks leading to potential radicalisation and violent extremism. Conducted through focus groups at the national RE conference 'RExChange 2022', the study explores whether and how far-right extremism should be integrated into the Religious…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Religious Education, Political Attitudes, Focus Groups
Martin Fautley – Arts Education Policy Review, 2024
In England, there is a National Curriculum in place which is intended to outline what will be taught and learned in each of the required subjects in state schools, music being one of these subjects. However, for some years, a right-wing conservative government has been working on systemic change, which removes many schools from state control and…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Middle Class, Foreign Countries, Music Education
Young, Susan – British Journal of Music Education, 2023
Neoliberalism and neoconservatism are two political ideologies that currently shape state directives for education in many countries. In this article, I describe the confluence of neoliberal and neoconservative ideologies that led to the introduction, by the English state department for education, of a Model Music Curriculum for schools. I…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Music Education, Curriculum, Neoliberalism
Ku, Hsiao-Yuh – History of Education, 2022
Brian Simon (1915-2002), a Marxist historian and educationist in Britain, was a leading pioneer in the comprehensive education movement. Although Simon's great contribution to this movement has been recognised by historians, the development of Simon's ideas and his actions in this movement have hardly been examined in great depth by previous…
Descriptors: Educational History, Political Attitudes, Historians, Criticism
Apple, Michael W. – London Review of Education, 2022
I have had a close and long-standing relationship with the IOE (Institute of Education), UCL's Faculty of Education and Society (University College London, UK). In order to understand why and how for many years the IOE became my 'second home', I infuse this article with a combination of critical academic and political points and a detailed sense…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Political Attitudes, Social Change, Interpersonal Relationship
Tröhler, Daniel – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
The guiding thesis of this article is that international comparisons have been shaped by nationalist, and thus potentially imperial, religious and consequently also latent missionary, motives. By means of selected milestones in the last 250 years, this thesis is made plausible by asserting a historical development of nationalism that started from…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Educational History, Educational Change, Religious Factors
Watson, Steven – British Educational Research Journal, 2021
This article is concerned with teacher populism on social media in England. This has grown in the last 10 years, facilitated by Twitter. While it appears to be a response to challenging working conditions and declining pay, it has largely been driven by conservative political strategy, an adaptation of the New Right coalition between social…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Media, Political Attitudes, Teachers
Leighton, Ralph – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2023
All education is political; the radical approach to Citizenship Education promotes social justice and critical active participation. In synthesizing a pedagogy of discomfort and the principles of subversive teaching, this is predicated on the notion that authority should be accountable, that people should be able and enabled to take decision…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Social Justice, Social Change, Foreign Countries
Ku, Hsiao-Yuh – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2022
Brian Simon (1915-2002) was a leading advocate of comprehensive education in the second half of the twentieth century in Britain. In the 1980s, in the face of the ideological offensive from the New Right, he firmly stood by Marxist ideals and resolutely resisted policies of the right-wing leading to the 1988 Education Reform Act. Despite this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational Legislation, Politics of Education
Tsui, Lin – History of Education, 2022
Current accounts of the British New Right in education during the 1980s generally begin with an observation of the tensions between its neoliberal and neoconservative wings. The subsequent task becomes to explain how they could be reconciled in bringing about the fiercest reform of education in history. This article reverses the interpretive…
Descriptors: Educational History, Political Attitudes, Educational Administration, School Choice
Craske, James – British Educational Research Journal, 2021
A lot has been written about the lasting implications of the Conservative reforms to English schooling, particularly changes made by Michael Gove as Education Secretary (2010-2014). There is a lot less work, however, on studying the role that language, strategy and the broader political framework played in the process of instituting and winning…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Political Attitudes, Politics of Education
Faye Stanley; Gurpinder Singh Lalli – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2025
This doctoral case study research aims to explore the values of English and Swedish pre-school teachers, focusing on their roles and the experiences they provide for 3 and 4-year-old children. Values are beliefs held by individuals to which they attach special worth or priority; and this research recognises that values are personalised and shaped…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Methods
Raaper, Rille – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2020
Informed by policy sociology and a Foucauldian theorisation, this article explores how a selection of sabbatical officers from English students' unions formed their political subjectivity during the policy consultation processes leading to the Higher Education and Research Act 2017. Discourse analysis demonstrated a strong influence of the unions'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Unions, College Students, Professional Personnel