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Showing 1 to 15 of 20 results Save | Export
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McInch, Alex – Ethnography and Education, 2020
Ethnography as a methodological approach presents the fieldworker with many ethical crossroads throughout the research process. This is because of the unique position that ethnographers find themselves in, the environments that they research and the relationships which are formed. This paper presents four confessional vignettes from a broader…
Descriptors: Ethics, College Faculty, Working Class, Field Studies
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Platts, Chris; Smith, Andy – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2018
Drawing upon data generated by 303 young male footballers employed in 21 professional clubs in England and Wales, this article explores some key aspects of players' masculinities, identities and engagement with education. Although many players described their educational experiences in largely negative terms, some aspired towards averageness, or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Males, Athletes, Team Sports
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Preston, John – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2016
Children, and schools, are potent symbols of victimhood in industrial disasters. In the case of historical industrial disasters such as Aberfan and Flixborough, and in terms of preparation for future industrial disasters under Control of Major Accident Hazard regulations, communities are seen as passive responders to accidents. Moreover, following…
Descriptors: Accidents, Industry, Victims, Working Class
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Ivinson, Gabrielle – Improving Schools, 2014
This article explores poverty from the perspective of the intergenerational transmission. That is, it suggests that communities, and specifically a post-industrial community in South Wales, had developed coping strategies to manage the precarious character of employment associated with the mining and steel industries. These post-industrial…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poverty, Poverty Areas, Working Class
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Ivinson, Gabrielle Mary – Sport, Education and Society, 2014
During an ethnographic research project exploring young people's perceptions of living in a post-industrial semi-rural place, boys aged 13/14 years revealed their semi-clandestine motorbiking activities across mountains trails. It was found that riding motorbikes and fixing engines were potential resources for young boys' transitions into adult…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Masculinity, Motor Vehicles, Rural Areas
Walker, Martyn – Journal of Adult and Continuing Education, 2012
Further education colleges in England and Wales have offered government-recognised courses and qualifications which receive public funding and have included technical and vocational courses since their foundation in the early twentieth century. Yet developments in such curricula and qualifications are not new and they can be traced back to the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adult Education, Educational History, Vocational Education
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Mannay, Dawn – Gender and Education, 2013
This paper revisits Diana Leonard's seminal paper "Keeping close and spoiling in a south Wales town", by drawing on one mother and daughter case study. Leonard focused on geographical closeness and the strategies employed by parents to keep their children living at home, rather than sending them to university. In contrast, this paper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family School Relationship, Case Studies, Parent Child Relationship
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Ivinson, Gabrielle; Renold, Emma – Gender and Education, 2013
This paper draws on materialist feminist theories to rethink relationships between girls' bodies and agency. New feminist onto-epistemologies redefine agency as "becomings" that dynamically emerge through assemblages comprising moving bodies, material, mechanical, organic, virtual, affective and less-than-conscious elements. Vignettes…
Descriptors: Vignettes, Females, Feminism, Human Body
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Ward, Michael R. M. – Gender and Education, 2014
During the last few decades, the South Wales Valleys (UK) have undergone a considerable economic, social, cultural and political transformation, altering youth transitions from school to work. Drawing on a two and a half year ethnographic study, in the paper I concentrate on a group of academically successful young white working-class men aged…
Descriptors: Working Class, Masculinity, Ethnography, Whites
Mannay, Dawn; Morgan, Melanie – Journal of Adult and Continuing Education, 2013
The "Anatomy of Economic Inequality in Wales" (2011) provides quantitative evidence for the pervasive nature of class-based inequalities in education, demonstrating that an individual in social housing is approximately 10 times less likely to be a graduate compared to those in other types of accommodation. This article moves beyond the…
Descriptors: Mothers, Social Class, Social Differences, Foreign Countries
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Ringrose, Jessica; Renold, Emma – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2012
This paper challenges post-feminist discourses and recuperative masculinity politics in education that have evoked mythical constructions of the successful "achieving" girl in ways that flatten out social and cultural difference and render invisible ongoing gendered and sexualised inequalities and violence in the social worlds of schools…
Descriptors: Feminism, Working Class, Qualitative Research, Social Status
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Thompson, Ron – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2009
This paper examines the class distribution of young people, aged 16-17 years, in colleges of further education (FE) using data from the Youth Cohort Study. It finds that, contrary to popular perceptions of FE colleges as being for "other people's children", middle-class students as well as working-class students are well represented.…
Descriptors: Working Class, Middle Class, Foreign Countries, Youth
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James, David C.; Davies, Brian – History of Education, 2009
The article examines the genesis of school inspection in South East Wales during the period 1839-1843 through the writing of Hugh Seymour Tremenheere, one of the first school inspectors. It discusses the formation of the new inspectorate and provides a narrative analysis of educational provision and social, cultural and economic conditions…
Descriptors: Working Class, Social Control, Inspection, Foreign Countries
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Tannock, Stuart – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2009
The "knowledge economy" has become the buzzword of development policy in the early twenty-first century. Nations and regions around the world are all told that they must transform themselves into knowledge economies to survive and prosper. This article uses the example of Wales and its recent embrace of a massive military privatisation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economic Development, Rhetoric, Privatization
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Iannelli, Cristina – Higher Education Quarterly, 2007
This paper uses data from the Scottish School Leavers Surveys and the England and Wales Youth Cohort Study to analyse changes over time in gender and social class inequalities in the opportunities of young people to participate in higher education (HE) in Scotland, England and Wales. The results show that in Great Britain, in the period from the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Access to Education, Higher Education, Youth
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