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Moore, Mary Elizabeth – Religious Education, 2019
The persistence of white privilege and escalating racism in the United States challenges religious educators to analyze the roots and destructive potential of both. This article draws on historical and contemporary analyses in dialogue with personal reflection and the oral histories of two leaders who seek to recognize and live beyond their own…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Whites, Racial Bias, Religious Education
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Blackmore, Jill; Rahimi, Mark – Journal of Education and Work, 2019
Very few organisations, even local firms, are insulated from global economic activity or the social and cultural consequences of widespread global migration programs such as international education. Nonetheless, established recruitment processes remain stubbornly local, privileging candidates who conform to the criterion of 'people like us' to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Students, College Graduates, Employment Potential
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Munro, Paul G.; Bartlett, Anne L.; Dhizaala, James T.; Laloyo, Stella Apecu; Oswin, Sebastian Oguti; Walker, Sarah – Higher Education Research and Development, 2019
International fieldschools to developing countries have become an important component of the university curriculum because they provide experiential learning and research skills, while also contributing a range of soft skills such as resilience, empathy, resourcefulness, critical thinking, and cross-cultural communication. Yet, with the increasing…
Descriptors: International Schools, Experiential Learning, Empathy, Resilience (Psychology)
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Downey, Douglas B.; Quinn, David M.; Alcaraz, Melissa – Sociology of Education, 2019
What is schools' role in the stratification system? One view is that schools are an important mechanism for perpetuating inequality because children from advantaged backgrounds (white and high socioeconomic) enjoy better school learning environments than their disadvantaged peers. But it is difficult to know this with confidence because children's…
Descriptors: School Effectiveness, School Role, Advantaged, Socioeconomic Status
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Denmead, Tyler – Educational Theory, 2019
In this article, Tyler Denmead draws upon critical race theory to argue that the creative city discourse reproduces racial injustice for youth. In particular, the creative city invests in the property rights and profitability of whiteness by inscribing creative superiority on the bodies of young people who are more likely to be privileged by…
Descriptors: Creativity, Educational Theories, Artists, Self Concept
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Ergin, Murat; Rankin, Bruce; Göksen, Fatos – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2019
This article examines the perceptions of education in Turkey, which refer to a nebulous package of formal education and a cultured stance. Guided by the literature on symbolic violence, we argue that underprivileged groups misrecognize arbitrary hierarchies by considering them just and inevitable. Elite tastes have been internalized by other…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Violence, Disadvantaged, Neoliberalism
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Stephenson, Grace Karram; Rajendram, Shakina – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2019
Malaysia and the United Arab Emirates are home to wealthy minority groups with little or no access to public higher education. These countries share parallel trajectories of economic and educational growth, yet they have starkly different citizenship and educational policies that govern the diverse populations within their borders. The result in…
Descriptors: Minority Groups, Advantaged, Access to Education, Reputation
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Sanchez, Ninive; Norka, Alexander; Corbin, Megan; Peters, Clark – Journal of Social Work Education, 2019
This study discusses the use of experiential learning, reflective writing, and metacognition to develop cultural humility among undergraduate students enrolled in a social and economic justice course. Students participated in an activity that challenged them to learn about people who may have different social identities and experiences from their…
Descriptors: Reflection, Experiential Learning, Metacognition, Cultural Awareness
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Figueiredo, Ana; Madero, Cristobal; Cano, Daniel – Multicultural Education Review, 2020
This manuscript presents the results of a pilot study, Kuykuitin. A project that provides history teachers of elite schools in Chile with firsthand contact with history teachers in an intercultural school in the Araucanía. This region is the conflict zone with higher levels of violence between the Mapuche and the Chilean State. The pilot study…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Pilot Projects, Student Attitudes, Advantaged
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Maesse, Jens – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2017
From the 1990s onwards, economics departments in Europe have changed toward a culture of "excellence." Strong academic hierarchies and new forms of academic organization replace "institutes" and "colleges" by fully equipped "economics departments." This article seeks to demonstrate how and why…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Organizational Change, Economics Education
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Fuller, Rhema D.; Lawrence, S. Malia; Harrison, C. Keith; Eyanson, Jeff; Osika, Lauren – American Secondary Education, 2017
The purpose of the study reported in this article was to investigate high school teachers' perceptions of special privilege given to student-athletes. Additionally, researchers sought to explore teachers' perceptions as to why these privileges exist and who controls them. Qualitative data were collected from the teaching staff (N = 40) at one high…
Descriptors: High School Students, Athletes, Teacher Attitudes, Athletic Coaches
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Clifford, Valerie; Montgomery, Catherine – Higher Education Research and Development, 2017
In this article, differing interpretations of the internationalisation of higher education curriculum are explored analysing the structural and cultural aspects of the curriculum. Voices of tertiary staff from around the world taking part in a four-week, fully online course, entitled "Internationalising the curriculum for all students"…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Global Approach, Higher Education, Citizenship Education
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Mangset, Marte – Journal of Education and Work, 2017
According to classical elite theory, increased circulation is related to increased integration which is thought to increase elites' power. Based on a comparative analysis of some European countries' elite education systems, recruitment to elite positions and degrees of circulation--with a specific focus on administrative elites--this article…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis, Social Theories, Social Change
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Strømme, Thea Bertnes; Hansen, Marianne Nordli – Journal of Education and Work, 2017
This article examines if and how the elite professions of law and medicine have managed to maintain their exclusivity in a period of educational expansion in Norway. The extent to which these professions disproportionately recruit students with socio-economically advantageous backgrounds is seen as an indication of intergenerational closure. Using…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Lawyers, Physicians, Advantaged
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Lee, Jenny J. – Studies in Higher Education, 2017
Given the rise of regional hubs, emerging economies are experiencing international student growth as higher education providers in their respective regions. This study examined the neo-national experiences of international students in South Africa. Neo-nationalism refers to a new nationalism based national order in the new global economy. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nationalism, Higher Education, Foreign Students
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