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Rodrigo Velásquez-Burgos; Belén Hernando-Lloréns – Curriculum Inquiry, 2024
In this article, we analyze the problematization of immigration in citizenship education in Chile. Drawing on Foucault's genealogy of problematizations, we explore the conditions under which curricular discourses about immigration shifted from a historical phenomenon that emphasized "the civilization process" during the 19th century to a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigration, Citizenship Education, Educational History
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Buckner, Elizabeth; Zhang, You; Blanco, Gerardo L. – Higher Education Quarterly, 2022
Both Canada and the United States enrol a significant number of international students. However, in March 2020, both countries closed their borders and increased restrictions to international travel due to COVID-19, which had a direct impact on international students' ability to travel between their home countries and study destinations. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Students, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Nicolás Bentancur – Teaching Public Administration, 2024
The main theories of the thriving field of study of public policies have been formulated at institutions of developed countries, mostly by the American academy, based on the particular conditions of policy-making processes of their own country. However, its heuristic premises are considered, initially, as universal and are used extensively in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Policy, Geographic Regions, Theories
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Hussein Chaitani – International Journal of Adult Education and Technology, 2024
It could be argued that the current adult education paradigm aligns with a liberal knowledge economy. A more critical perspective is Paulo Freire's banking education concept that removes criticality from a learner's repertoire and facilitates alignment with the prevalent liberal education and its hegemonic objectives. Drawing from Paulo Freire's…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Critical Thinking, Terrorism, World Views
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Sarah Tomlinson; Robin Simmons – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2025
This paper critically examines New Labour's New Deal for Young People (NDYP) and its intended role in reducing the number of socially excluded young people classified as NEET (not in education, employment or training). It focuses on New Deal as an example of Third Way policy design aimed to address social exclusion, including the promotion of an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Bias, Public Policy, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Celinda Lake; Alysia Snell; Jesse Kline; Jenna Scarbrough – Hunt Institute, 2024
Education is returning to a sense of normalcy, but as education issues remain in the headlines, parents, voters, and students are left dealing with both new and persistent problems. 2024 marks the continuance of education in the headlines and minds of Americans across the nation. As the United States recovers from pandemic learning, graduation…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Parent Attitudes, Politics of Education, Public Policy
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Duque, Juan Felipe – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2021
Over the past 30 years, quality assurance in higher education has rapidly developed on a global scale and become a widely studied research topic. However, a good deal of the research on this issue has been subject to an instrumental bias. The attention given to the technical features and expected results of quality assurance has overshadowed the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Quality Assurance, Cultural Differences
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Niederjohn, M. Scott; Schug, Mark C.; Wood, William C. – Social Studies, 2023
Years ago, it became established that the severity and length of the Great Depression were due largely to misguided Federal Reserve monetary policy and the resulting catastrophic bank failures. This result is confirmed by surveys of scholars in the area and books specifically written on economic history. Yet the leading textbooks used in high…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, Economic Climate, Textbooks
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Tommi Yuniawan; Sri Rejeki Urip; Izzati Gemi Seinsiani; Wardatul Akmam Din; Suyansah Swanto; Havid Ardi – Eurasian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2023
The purpose of this study was to identify how newspaper headlines framed the COVID-19 infodemic in Indonesia. This study collected headlines from Republika.co.id, an influential national online mass media with a wide coverage of news readers. Data were collected by tracing news portals directly about the COVID-19 infodemic published from January 1…
Descriptors: Newspapers, Foreign Countries, Electronic Publishing, Journalism
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Melissa Redmond; Liz Woodside; Beth Martin – Journal of Experiential Education, 2024
Background: Like other professional training programs, social work pedagogy has long recognized the value of experiential learning for professional development. Despite social work's rich experiential learning literature involving field education, direct practice courses, and program evaluation, there is a dearth of literature examining how to…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Social Work, Professional Education, Class Size
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Lynda Dunlop; Elizabeth A.C. Rushton; Sarah Clayton; Jane Essex; Joshua Stubbs; Maria Turkenburg-van Diepen – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2025
This short article reflects on 'public switching' as a methodology for research on public perspectives on potential responses to the climate crisis. There have been recent calls for early public engagement with potentially controversial science and technology. Such 'upstream' engagement is often conducted by those close to the science, presenting…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Climate, Science and Society, Citizen Participation
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Labanino, Rafael; Dobbins, Michael – Higher Education Quarterly, 2022
The article analyses the strategies of Hungarian higher education interest organisations against the encroachments on academic freedom by Viktor Orbán's governments. We contrast the 2012-2013 and 2017-2019 protest waves and find that innovations in strategy came from new organisations in both periods, whereas established ones were rather passive…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Activism, Change Agents
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Rice, Whitney S.; Narasimhan, Subasri; Newton-Levinson, Anna; Pringle, Johanna; Redd, Sara K.; Evans, Dabney P. – Health Education & Behavior, 2022
The exceptionalism of abortion in public health education, due to social stigma, politicization, and lack of training, contributes to misinformation, policies unjustified by rigorous science, lack of access to person-centered health care, and systemic pregnancy-related inequities. Now that abortion access has vanished for large portions of the…
Descriptors: Pregnancy, Social Bias, Political Issues, Health Education
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Soares Carvalho, Ana Paula; Bignami, Filippo – Intercultural Education, 2021
Traditional schooling seems ill equipped to handle the political and social challenges that have recently arisen worldwide. Acquiring the capacity to be a politically, socially, culturally, and economically active member of society is a fundamental component of any citizenship education and will be influenced by the dynamic nature of societal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Development, Citizenship Education, Urban Areas
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Adbul-Majied, Sabeerah; Kinkead-Clark, Zoyah – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2022
Since 2015, Trinidad and Tobago experienced an influx of over 40,000 migrants from Venezuela. Having signed the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, young migrant children are entitled to education in Trinidad and Tobago. However, they face obstacles accessing schooling and social services…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Access to Education, Public Policy
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