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Bettini, Elizabeth; Park, Yujeong – Urban Education, 2021
Retaining teachers in high-poverty schools is essential for ensuring students who live in poverty have equitable educational opportunities. Understanding novices' experiences can help school leaders improve novices' retention in high-poverty schools throughout their careers. This integrative review of studies investigates novices' experiences…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Poverty, Disadvantaged Schools, At Risk Students
White, Susan; Ivie, Rachel – Physics Teacher, 2021
A recent "TPT" call for papers asks for "more research … about how to tear down and/or overcome the barriers to success that the world, and science, and academia, and the culture of physics put in the way of those who are not white and male." Women make up only 20% of bachelor's degree recipients in physics. Hispanic people…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Barriers, College Faculty
Huerta, Adrian H.; Rios-Aguilar, Cecilia – Urban Education, 2021
Latinos represent 20% of the more than 1 million gang-associated youth in the United States. This study explores how gang associated Latino males use their funds of gang knowledge to navigate their urban schools and communities. The findings highlight how Latino males build relationships and exchange information with each other, endure and…
Descriptors: Males, Hispanic Americans, Juvenile Gangs, Cultural Background
Seo, Hyunjin; Altschwager, Darcey; Choi, Baekyoung; Song, Sejun; Britton, Hannah; Ramaswamy, Megha; Schuster, Bernard; Ault, Marilyn; Ayinala, Kaushik; Zaman, Rafida; Tihen, Ben; Yenugu, Lohitha – ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2021
As society increasingly relies on digital technologies in many different aspects, those who lack relevant access and skills are lagging increasingly behind. Among the underserved groups disproportionately affected by the digital divide are women who are transitioning from incarceration and seeking to reenter the workforce outside the carceral…
Descriptors: Informal Education, Females, Transitional Programs, Program Development
Tsakeni, Maria; Jita, Loyiso – International Journal of Higher Education, 2021
In the wake of the United Nations' Agenda 2030 on sustainability, this study problematizes how conditions in multiple-deprived science classrooms are intricately connected to the sustainable development goals (SDGs). This narrative inquiry design research consisting of one participant, describes how the conditions of multiple-deprivation in…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Science Instruction, Preservice Teachers, Science Teachers
Hong, Moon Suk – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2021
This ethnographic research examines the sociocultural and educational experiences of migrant youth living in liminality in urban Yangon. Their liminality exemplifies the interplay between poverty, social-choice of dropping out of school and the militant culture of schooling. The research argues that narratives provide comprehensive understandings…
Descriptors: Dropouts, Migrant Workers, Migration Patterns, Urban Youth
Berry, Robert Q., III – Investigations in Mathematics Learning, 2021
This paper uses a hybrid policy analysis lens primarily informed by the work of Derrick Bell to make the case that policies and reforms in mathematics education were not designed to address the needs of historically excluded learners; instead, these policies and reforms are often designed and enacted to protect the economic, technological, and…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Policy Analysis
Gaerlan-Price, Eunice; Wardman, Janna; Bruce, Toni – Education Sciences, 2021
The field of gifted and talented studies has its origins in the intelligence quotient research of the late 19th and early 20th century. These psychological foundations remain a strong influence even though the field has since expanded to include other paradigms and greater diversity in conceptions of giftedness and talent. Some researchers argue…
Descriptors: Females, Talent, Interdisciplinary Approach, Environmental Influences
Ray, Brian D.; Shakeel, M. Danish; Worth, Fred; Bryant, Valerie – Journal of School Choice, 2021
Homeschooling has witnessed an upsurge in the United States since the movement for school choice gained momentum in the 1990s. Most research on homeschooling has been on non-representative samples of median-income white Americans, making it difficult for policymakers to accept its reliability. In addition, homeschoolers now include other ethnic…
Descriptors: Barriers, Home Schooling, Family Income, School Choice
Yilmaz, Ruhan Karadag; Yeganeh, Emir – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2021
The purpose of this study was to determine the perceptions and practices of teachers about inclusive education and to propose solutions to the problems experienced by the teachers in the light of the study findings. The study was carried out by qualitative research approach and case study design was used. The participants of the study consisted of…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Special Education, Teacher Attitudes, Elementary School Teachers
Hansson, Per-Olof – IAFOR Journal of Education, 2021
The coronavirus pandemic affected the whole world in 2020, with high pressure on the health sector, many deaths, reduced business activity, rising unemployment rates, travel restrictions and social distancing. These developments have had severe consequences for all areas of every society around the globe. This also includes education. In many…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Online Courses
Lee, Siew Fung – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2021
This article critically examines how the policy of funded nursery places for 'disadvantaged' two-year-olds in England opens up economic and political spaces in readiness for increased governance. The government introduced funded nursery places in September 2013, which aimed to promote disadvantaged children's educational outcomes, narrow the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Outcomes of Education, Child Care Centers, Toddlers
Patrick, Hosea O.; Abiolu, Rhoda T. I.; Abiolu, Oluremi A. – Transformation in Higher Education, 2021
Background: The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic brought unprecedented changes leading to 'business unusual' in all facets of life and livelihood on a global scale. The restrictions on gathering, social distancing and lockdown measures necessitated by the need to curtail its spread, had, and still have an enormous impact on the educational…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Delivery Systems, Electronic Learning
Li, Jin Hui – Nordic Journal of Studies in Educational Policy, 2021
In recent years, the Danish education context has seen an increased concern about underperforming students with migratory histories (particularly students perceived as non-Western descendants) in the political and pedagogical discourses. There seem to be some historical tensions between the societal expectation of class mobility through education…
Descriptors: Foreign Workers, Educational Experience, Social Differences, Racial Bias
Keddie, Amanda; Jacobs, Charlotte; Nelson, Joseph Derrick – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2021
Many elite schools proclaim a commitment to racial and other aspects of student diversity and inclusion. Pursuing this commitment is highly complex and contentious given the traditions of exclusion elite schools are founded upon. This paper examines some of these contentions drawing on research conducted at Cherry Tree Academy, an elite pre-K-12…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Race, Equal Education

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