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Showing 1 to 15 of 71 results Save | Export
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Geoffrey Lewis – Educational Review, 2025
This paper reports on the results of a critical literature review that focusses on the classroom deployment of teaching assistants (TAs) in England between 2010 and 2020, a period marked by an upward trend in the number of these adults in school workforces internationally. The study utilises the theory of practice architectures (Kemmis, Wilkinson,…
Descriptors: Teaching Assistants, Foreign Countries, Educational Trends, Educational Practices
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Roma Thomas – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2025
This article presents findings from qualitative research on school exclusion. The study was conducted in a Pupil Referral Unit (PRU), part of alternative education provision, in England. Mixed methods used included ethnographic approaches, drama-based group work, focus group discussions and interviews. Research participants were teenage boys (age…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nontraditional Education, Adolescents, Males
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Geeson, Rebecca; Clarke, Emma – Pastoral Care in Education, 2023
This paper considers issues around identity for teaching assistants (TAs) in mainstream English primary schools. We discuss the concomitant problems TAs experience around role definition and role-creep as well as the challenges inherent in equivocally defining their evolving and flexible role. We used key themes drawn from the literature…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Assistants, Elementary Schools, Professional Identity
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Rob Webster – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
This study provides a detailed picture of how the on-going challenge of teacher shortages in England and Wales is driving the deployment of teaching assistants (TAs) to cover classes in place of teachers. Analyses of data from a survey of nearly 6000 TAs in mainstream and special schools found that TAs cover classes for up to 4 h a week, with one…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Assistants, Teacher Role, Staff Utilization
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Rao, Namrata; Hosein, Anesa; Raaper, Rille – Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
Neoliberalisation of academia has led to an increasing recruitment of doctoral students in teaching roles. Whilst there is evidence of doctoral students being engaged in teaching roles and the reasons for doing so, there is a pressing need to understand their experiences and to develop effective support practices to help them in their roles as…
Descriptors: Doctoral Students, Teaching Assistants, Foreign Countries, Teacher Role
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Prentice, Caitlin M. – British Educational Research Journal, 2022
Extensive evidence indicates that education is an integral part of the settling in process for refugee and asylum-seeking children. Furthermore, it has been suggested that positive teaching practice with refugee pupils should be asset-based and holistic in nature. The present study examines educators' positive practices with refugee pupils and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Refugees, Students, Teachers
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Martindale, Nicholas – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
How have public sector austerity and the outsourcing of school provision under the Academies programme affected the state school workforce in England? Existing research claims that teachers are being substituted by cheaper support staff and that schools are becoming increasingly dominated by managers. However, these claims focus on the period…
Descriptors: Public Sector, Retrenchment, Outsourcing, Educational Trends
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Gooseman, Annabel; Defeyter, Margaret Anne; Graham, Pamela Louise – Education 3-13, 2020
The issue of 'holiday hunger' (i.e. food insecurity during school holidays) has received increased attention in recent years, though research in this area is limited. Through qualitative, semi-structured interviews, the current study investigated the views of 12 primary school staff on the existence, impacts and potential solutions to holiday…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Hunger, Elementary Schools, Food
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Clarke, Emma; Visser, John – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2019
This paper considers the challenges experienced by a doctoral student engaging in qualitative research. It examines the difficulties experienced in selecting an appropriate approach from the traditional methodologies. A pragmatic methodology which provides the researcher with the opportunity to utilise a range of strategies to answer the research…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Educational Research, Student Research, Graduate Students
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France, Emily; Billington, Kate – Educational Psychology in Practice, 2020
This study was interested in the views of Emotional Literacy Support Assistants (ELSAs) in one English county. Support staff from ten schools experienced 7 days of ELSA training over one academic year and attended four supervision sessions led by educational psychologists over the subsequent 12 months. Five ELSAs were interviewed about their views…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Supervision, Emotional Development, Social Development
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Collins, Jo – Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
International Graduate Teaching Assistants (GTAs) have often been characterised as lacking training, skills, English language proficiency and knowledge of the 'host' education system. In this study, a group of 18 GTAs from postcolonial countries were interviewed, to explore their perceptions of transitioning into UK higher education teaching at…
Descriptors: Postcolonialism, Graduate Students, Foreign Students, Teaching Assistants
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Aktar, Tasnima; Oxley, Laura – Higher Education Pedagogies, 2019
Having the opportunity to teach is a valuable experience to those starting out in the world of academia. In this article, the authors cast a reflective lens on their experiences of teaching and their participation in a structured programme York Learning and Teaching Award (YLTA), designed for new and aspiring academics and working towards becoming…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Doctoral Students, Foreign Countries, Teaching Assistants
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Nicholson, Laura J.; Rodriguez-Cuadrado, Sara; Woolhouse, Clare – Mentoring & Tutoring: Partnership in Learning, 2018
The benefits of peer mentoring in school settings are well-documented, however, the focus has been on the perceptions of teachers, as opposed to teaching assistants, who report distinct beliefs about their professional development. A mixed methodology was used in which 304 primary school teaching assistants completed questionnaires regarding their…
Descriptors: Peer Teaching, Mentors, Communities of Practice, Teaching Assistants
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Money, Julie; Nixon, Sarah; Graham, Linda – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2020
Entering higher education (HE) is a critical moment for many students and one in which their educational experiences may change dramatically, but are students academically prepared? From a structured and supported environment, they enter a more autonomous and independent setting and little is known about their preparedness for this transition.…
Descriptors: Educational Experience, College Preparation, Teacher Attitudes, Self Determination
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Slater, Edwina; Gazeley, Louise – Educational Review, 2019
The deployment of Teaching Assistants (TAs) to support learning has been the subject of much critical debate, including the particular concern that TAs too often becomes a less skilled replacement for the teacher rather than acting as an additional source of support. Despite efforts to encapsulate the TA's contribution to learning within specific…
Descriptors: Teaching Assistants, Secondary Education, Inclusion, Secondary Schools
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