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Kilbane, Jackie; Hempsall, Sophie; North, Katharine; Zafeiris, Pavlos – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2022
This account of practice focusses on insights from the 'early days' of an action learning set within a leadership development programme in the English NHS. The account describes experiences of forming as a set as an important foundation for trust. Developing trust between set members enabled members to take more risks, sharing current and complex…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Health Services, Leadership Training, Trust (Psychology)
Compassion-Focused Therapy Groups for People with Intellectual Disabilities: An Extended Pilot Study
Goad, Elisabeth Jane; Parker, Kayleigh – Journal of Intellectual Disabilities, 2021
People with intellectual disabilities who experience mental health difficulties often have high levels of self-criticism and shame. Compassion-focused therapy is a therapeutic modality effective in working with such feelings. This article follows on from a previous compassion-focused therapy group study exploring the impact of two…
Descriptors: Altruism, Group Therapy, Mild Intellectual Disability, Moderate Intellectual Disability
Chadderton, Charlotte – Power and Education, 2020
In this paper, I argue that current arrangements for school-to-work transitions support in England, now school-based, are designed to contribute towards ensuring the consent of the population for what I refer to as the 'state of insecurity' (Lorey, 2015): the neoliberal relationship between the individual and the state in which insecurity is…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Foreign Countries, Security (Psychology), Freedom
Devis-Rozental, Camila; Farquharson, Lois – Higher Education Pedagogies, 2020
This qualitative study undertaken at a University in England investigates what influences the development of undergraduate students' socio-emotional intelligence (SEI). Through a thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews with students and lecturers, the study highlights various approaches that the learning environment, both physical and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Faculty, Student Development, Socialization
Ward, Gavin; Quennerstedt, Mikael – Education 3-13, 2019
By taking both pupils' and teachers' actions as the point of departure, this study aimed to understand governance within a primary school classroom. Video footage was recorded in an English primary school in which mathematics happened to be the focus. This data was analysed to identify the directions of both governance and self-governance and to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mathematics Instruction, Elementary Schools, Video Technology
Abdul Aziz Hafiz – Prism: Casting New Light on Learning, Theory & Practice, 2018
This paper builds on my previous work in this journal (Hafiz, 2017) on the potentialities of prosociality as a remedy and response to widespread precarity. The aim is to ground prosociality in co-operative social and educational practices rooted in the conscientisation of social and solidarity economy. Pedagogical practices based on principles of…
Descriptors: Social Capital, Social Class, Educational Practices, Foreign Countries
Bradbury, A.; Braun, A.; Duncan, S.; Levy, R.; Moss, G. – Institute of Education - London, 2021
The pandemic has shown how important schools are as networks of support for children and families. Our project, "Learning Through Disruption," also shows that schools have a particularly vital role in addressing the needs of high poverty communities, both directly and indirectly. Yet this work goes largely unrecognised and underfunded.…
Descriptors: Poverty, Community Needs, Elementary School Students, COVID-19
Singer, Elly; Wong, Sandie – Early Child Development and Care, 2021
We discuss oral history interviews with academics who laid the foundation of research and pedagogies in daycare for under three-year-olds in Europe and North and South America since the 1970s. Their work is clearly embedded in the social-political context of their country: the left-wing programmes for disadvantaged families in the U.S.A.;…
Descriptors: Oral History, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Neoliberalism
Webber, Louise – Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties, 2017
This article focuses on teachers' experiences of supporting looked after and adopted children in one case study primary school in England. Children who are looked after and adopted may have a disrupted attachment with their primary carer which has resulted in an insecure attachment. Children with insecure attachments can feel anxious, uncertain…
Descriptors: Security (Psychology), Semi Structured Interviews, Attachment Behavior, Case Studies
Moss, Gemma; Bradbury, Alice; Braun, Annette; Duncan, Sam; Levy, Rachael – Institute of Education - London, 2021
The "Learning through Disruption" research project ran between May-August 2021, with funding from the Economic and Social Research Council. The project was based at UCL Institute of Education (IOE) and data collection began in May 2021, shortly after primary schools in England had emerged from the spring 2021 national lockdown, and were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing
Fish, Rob; Lobley, Matt; Winter, Michael – Journal of Rural Studies, 2013
Drawing on the findings of empirical research conducted in the South West of England, this paper explores how farmers make sense of re-emerging imperatives for "food security" in UK policy and political discourse. The analysis presented is based on two types of empirical inquiry. First, an extensive survey of 1543 farmers, exploring the…
Descriptors: Land Use, Rural Development, Rural Education, Agricultural Occupations
Gearon, Liam – Religious Education, 2013
The article identifies international cases--from the United States, Europe, and the United Nations--of an emergent interface of religion, education, and security. This is manifest in the uses of religion in education to counter religious extremism, the notional "counter terrorist classroom." To avoid an over-association of extremism with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Terrorism, Role of Religion, Political Attitudes
Maxwell, Claire; Aggleton, Peter – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2013
This paper takes as its starting point the concept of concerted cultivation as coined by Annette Lareau. It examines whether a focus on concerted cultivation adequately captures the various practices observed in young women's experiences of being privately educated in four schools in one area of England. We suggest that a variety of practices of…
Descriptors: Females, Foreign Countries, Private Education, Curriculum
Swaray, Raymond – Social Indicators Research, 2007
The increase in burglary crimes, along with the rise in the citizens' worry about burglary crimes, has brought new challenges to the criminal justice systems in developed nations over the last decade. Crime surveys often point to a substantial dissonance between the actual likelihood of burglary and the perceived likelihood of victimization. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Developed Nations, Security (Psychology), Safety

Golby, Michael – Cambridge Journal of Education, 1996
Considers the situations of two women teachers who have profound commitments to their pupils and who gain considerable emotional security from this. Argues that they tend to define school matters outside of teaching as distractions. Suggests that professional development requires a whole-school approach with greater emotional commitment to…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Females, Foreign Countries, Job Satisfaction
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