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Quickfall, Aimee; Wood, Philip; Clarke, Emma – London Review of Education, 2022
Those training to become teachers in England during the 2019/20 academic year were severely impacted by the first national lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with many missing school placements, giving them less time to build experience and confidence before becoming newly qualified teachers (NQTs). Their first year of teaching was also…
Descriptors: Teaching Experience, Beginning Teachers, COVID-19, Pandemics
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McElearney, Paula – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2020
Critical pedagogy in the UK has traditionally been practised in the Lifelong Learning sector. However, the sector has become constrained by funding cuts, instrumental curricula and accountability measures, and teachers can feel that they have little room for professional autonomy and therefore the practice of critical pedagogy. Yet some do…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Professional Autonomy, Foreign Countries, Professional Identity
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Wilkinson, Samantha – Higher Education Research and Development, 2019
This paper offers an autoethnographic account of my first academic year as a Human Geography lecturer at a 'new' public university in the North West of England. This research is timely and much needed, since teaching at universities in England has recently come under increasing scrutiny. The Teaching Excellence Framework is a new scheme, which…
Descriptors: Human Geography, Teacher Attitudes, Beginning Teachers, College Faculty
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Brady, Norman; Bates, Agnieszka – European Educational Research Journal, 2016
The quest continues to standardise quality assurance systems throughout the European Higher Education Area (EHEA) under the auspices of the Bologna Process and led by the European Network for Quality Assurance (ENQA). Mirroring its member organisation in England, the Quality Assurance Agency (QAA), ENQA identifies, as one of its core aims, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Quality Assurance, Higher Education, Accountability
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Muskett, Judith A.; Village, Andrew – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2016
Rural clergy often lack colleagues and may struggle with isolation, especially if over-extended in multi-parish benefices. Theory suggests that this sense of isolation could be addressed by launching clergy action learning sets, which have the potential to establish a peer support network through the formation of social capital as a by-product of…
Descriptors: Rural Areas, Experiential Learning, Social Capital, Clergy
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Earley, Peter; Bubb, Sara – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2013
It is known that the work of headteachers is demanding. Observation, diaries and logs completed by headteachers show a relentless, complex and emotionally demanding workload. What can be learned about headship from how new headteachers spend their time, and perhaps as importantly, what can new headteachers themselves learn? This article draws upon…
Descriptors: Beginning Principals, Phenomenology, Observation, Barriers
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Orr, Kevin – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2012
This article examines what both in-service and pre-service trainee teachers learn from their early experience of teaching in further education (FE) colleges in England. Despite differences between in-service and pre-service trainees, that early experience is often characterised by isolation and lack of control over practice for both groups.…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Adult Education, Coping, Foreign Countries
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Goouch, Kathleen; Powell, Sacha – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2013
This article has emerged from a research and development project, The Baby Room, which was designed to examine how babies are cared for in daycare settings. Within the project, a form of professional development was created which designated a central space for dialogic encounter, primarily to enable the baby room practitioners who participated in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Professional Identity, Early Childhood Education, Preschool Teachers
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Devecchi, Cristina; Dettori, Filippo; Doveston, Mary; Sedgwick, Paul; Jament, Johnston – European Journal of Special Needs Education, 2012
Various models of providing for the inclusion of children with disabilities and special needs exist in different European countries. Central to all these models is the notion that support for children and teachers is pivotal in ensuring effective inclusion. This article draws from three qualitative studies on the role, employment and deployment of…
Descriptors: Qualifications, Foreign Countries, Teaching Assistants, Inclusion
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Burn, Katharine; Mutton, Trevor; Hagger, Hazel – Oxford Review of Education, 2010
The data discussed in this paper derive from post-lesson and end-of-year interviews with 17 teachers in their second year of teaching. They form part of a longitudinal study which first tracked these teachers through their initial postgraduate teacher education programme and induction year. In the light of earlier analysis, which had highlighted…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Longitudinal Studies, Teacher Attitudes, Faculty Development
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MacBeath, John – School Leadership & Management, 2011
While there are significant differences between England and Scotland in the politics, the policy environment and the management of schools, leadership development both north and south of the border is charged with addressing what has been termed a recruitment and retention "crisis". An emerging phenomenon in both jurisdictions is that of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Instructional Leadership, Principals, Leadership Training
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Warwick, Jane; Warwick, Paul; Hopper, Bev – Teacher Development, 2012
This paper reports the perspectives of male trainees on mechanisms instituted to support them during their Post-Graduate Certificate of Education in Early Years and Primary Education in England. The male trainees were interviewed towards the end of their training, using semi-structured interviews that provided scope for pursuing several lines of…
Descriptors: Teacher Education Programs, Males, Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education
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Mercer, David – School Organisation, 1996
Builds on the idea of the lonely headship by analyzing interview data obtained form 39 secondary headteachers in northeastern England. Results suggest that the legislation of the past 15 years is responsible for increasing headteachers' isolation from other headteachers, the local education authority, boards of governors, and teaching staff.…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Foreign Countries, Influences, Interviews
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Murray, Jean – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2007
This article compares the practices of teacher educators with those of academics working as educators on pre-service courses for nurses and social workers. It includes a framework for analyzing professional education work, which conceptualizes the educators as "second order practitioners." The findings of the study show that similar…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Teacher Educators, Teacher Education, Social Work
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Menter, Ian; Hextall, Ian; Mahony, Pat – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2003
Following the 1998 Green Paper on teachers' work, the UK government introduced Threshold Assessment of teachers in England and Wales in 2000. Teachers who met the Threshold standards were rewarded with a pay rise and access to an upper pay spine. At the time ministers gave assurances that equal opportunities would be taken very seriously in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Race, Educational Policy, Rhetoric