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Showing 1 to 15 of 113 results Save | Export
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Mustian, April L.; Cervantes, Henry; Lee, Robert – Educational Forum, 2022
Restorative Justice (RJ) is an educational "innovation" introduced into school communities as a counter approach to traditional punitive discipline practices. In this paper, we provide a critical examination of RJ in education by naming common pitfalls to RJ implementation in schools and providing four transformational cultural shifts…
Descriptors: Justice, Conflict Resolution, Punishment, Program Implementation
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Jason van Tol – Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
This article develops a model of education from Murray Bookchin's social ecology by demonstrating how "the economy," specifically growth and employment, intervenes between the environment and education, impeding the goal of environmental education. By reformulating Bookchin's central claim in terms of power, rather than domination, the…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Sustainable Development, Economic Development, Employment
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Elizabeth Mary Nassem – Pastoral Care in Education, 2025
Bullying remains a serious problem in schools in England and internationally despite the plethora of research, interventions and policies which aim to address it. The majority of research and interventions are based on a traditional approach where school bullying is constructed as involving a clear imbalance of power between individuals. Recently,…
Descriptors: Bullying, Social Influences, Intervention, Student Behavior
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Houser, Neil O. – Social Studies, 2023
Social studies educators have long advocated using history and the social sciences for the development of citizens. However, vigorous debate continues over what kinds of citizens are needed and who should decide. Where does this leave us as social studies teachers and scholars? And where does it leave our students? In this paper, I argue that…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Educational Philosophy, Teacher Attitudes, Citizenship Education
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Bierdz, Brad – Power and Education, 2021
This exploration takes a look at how students in higher education are disempowered through regimes of social power that are always already extant and ubiquitous within educational regimes. Moreover, this exploration pays particular interest and attention to students in higher education because in many cases throughout relevant research, these…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Empowerment, Power Structure, Philosophy
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Desai, Karishma – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2023
Aspirations have gained significant attention within educational anthropology and yet the effects (and affects) of the imperative to aspire that undergird educational projects have been underexamined. This paper argues that aspirations within the context of material depravity often produce immaterial precarity, which I index as affective states of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Empowerment, Intervention
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Finefter-Rosenbluh, Ilana – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
This paper draws upon Foucault's problematisation of "governmentality" analysis to explore teacher interviews from Australian secondary schools, where student voice was 'enacted' within a teacher assessment reform strategy. By bringing teacher voices into relation with theory, it illustrates how the current 'sociality of performativity'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, Power Structure, Teacher Student Relationship
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Hang Thu Nguyen-Phung; Nahashon Nzioka Nthenya – Education Economics, 2024
This paper investigated the impacts of education on women's empowerment in Kenya using six waves of nationally-representative KDHS data. Our study utilizes the change in educational structure in 1985 as an instrument and finds that women under the new system enhanced their schooling by approximately two years. One year of education prolongs…
Descriptors: Females, Foreign Countries, Empowerment, Educational History
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Sean Kamperman – Written Communication, 2024
This essay analyzes the rhetorical framing tactics of a group of disability activists to understand how they use key words, topic shifts, and other framing maneuvers to amplify marginalized voices in public debates. Focusing on a town hall meeting and a legislator update meeting between activists and lawmakers, the author uses "stasis"…
Descriptors: Activism, Disabilities, Advocacy, Disadvantaged
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Cook-Sather, Alison – Theory Into Practice, 2020
Student voice is a concept and a set of approaches that position students alongside credentialed educators as critics and creators of educational practice. Student voice and student agency are closely linked when school stakeholders connect the sound of students speaking with students having the power to influence practices and analyses of…
Descriptors: Student Empowerment, Educational Research, Power Structure, Authors
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Marleen Reichgelt – History of Education, 2024
Despite a visual turn in the field of history of education, including visual sources has far from become standard practice when writing histories of education or when considering children's voices from the past. Yet photographs can be especially fruitful when considering marginalised children who left few traces in other records. Building upon…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Photography, Visual Aids
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Dion Enari; Jacoba Matapo; Yvonne Ualesi; Radilaite Cammock; Hilda Port; Juliet Boon; Albert Refiti; Inez Fainga'a-Manu Sione; Patrick Thomsen; Ruth Faleolo – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Growing interest in Pacific issues has meant a surge in Pacific research across the globe. Sadly, some research on Pacific people has been done without Pacific knowledge, wisdom and culture. As Pacific researchers, we understand the importance of outputs that interweave our ancestral and cultural wisdom, whilst centring and privileging our…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Research, Indigenous Knowledge, Research Methodology
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Nicanor Legarte Guinto; Brian D. Villaverde; Amiel Jansen Demetrial; Aurelio Teodoro Maguyon III – AILA Review, 2024
Recent studies on language and migration have attempted to address the social injustices stemming from global disparities in wealth and opportunities. However, there's a risk of researchers unintentionally reinforcing traditional power dynamics, positioning themselves in power while reducing participants to mere data sources. Focusing on migrants…
Descriptors: Language Research, Researchers, Social Justice, Immigration
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Shrestha, Bhawana – i.e.: inquiry in education, 2021
This article explores my process of being emotionally literate, realizing my personal power through this process, and deciding to move ahead with my PhD to explore further my contribution to the flourishing of humanity. In this qualitative reflective self-study, I have used my detailed personal, professional, and academic reflective journal and…
Descriptors: Emotional Development, Doctoral Programs, Emotional Intelligence, Foreign Countries
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Mühlbacher, Sarah; Sutterlüty, Ferdinand – Global Studies of Childhood, 2019
The normative aim of childhood studies is to show that children are and should be recognized as active shapers of their lifeworlds. In this article, we discuss which concept can best be used to accomplish this. Our thesis is that the agency concept ubiquitous in childhood studies only inadequately advances the field's normative agenda. Mostly…
Descriptors: Children, Early Childhood Education, Empowerment, Personal Autonomy
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