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Anderson, Kaitlin P. – Educational Administration Quarterly, 2020
Background: Exclusionary discipline (e.g. suspension and expulsion) is associated with lower student achievement, drop-out, and involvement in the juvenile justice system. Recently, states and school districts have begun to restrict exclusionary discipline, but there remains much to be learned about the potential impact on students. Research…
Descriptors: Suspension, Expulsion, Discipline, State Policy
Kushnir, Iryna – European Educational Research Journal, 2020
This article belongs to a limited body of scholarship concerning inclusion in the Bologna Process. The Bologna Process aims to create the European Higher Education Area with comparable higher education structures within the European Higher Education Area member states. Unlike previous research that focuses on the implementation of one of the…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Higher Education, Educational Policy, Student Mobility
Holme, Jennifer Jellison; Frankenberg, Erica; Sanchez, Joanna; Taylor, Kendra; De La Garza, Sarah; Kennedy, Michelle – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2020
Each year, the federal government provides billions of dollars in support for low-income families in their acquisition of housing. In this analysis, we examine how several of these subsidized housing programs, public housing and Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) financed housing, relate to patterns of school segregation for children. We use…
Descriptors: Public Housing, School Segregation, Racial Segregation, Low Income Students
Kilpatrick, Sue; Burns, Gemma; Barnes, Robin Katersky; Kerrison, Marcel; Fischer, Sarah – Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 2020
The research, focused on parents with children in years 5-10 in three low-socioeconomic rural and regional communities, drew on an understanding of educational aspiration as culturally and socio-spatially embedded to develop practical strategies for parents to engage with their children as they made education and career pathways choices. It draws…
Descriptors: Empowerment, Parents, Economically Disadvantaged, Career Pathways
Brantlinger, Andrew – Urban Education, 2020
This article presents a critique of a teacher quality agenda promoted by a network of elitiste organizations in the United States. Network leaders posit that gaps in teacher quality cause achievement gaps. Their solution is to incentivize the graduates of the nation's most selective colleges to teach in hard-to-staff schools. Summarizing prior…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, College Graduates, Colleges, Selective Admission
Geduld, B. W.; Sikwanga, H. S. – Perspectives in Education, 2020
Teachers are expected to be self-directed and to instill in their learners the ability to self-regulate their own learning processes. There are however personal and contextual factors that promote or inhibit teachers' abilities to develop self-regulated learning skills. This study was conducted in two South African secondary township schools and…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Secondary School Teachers, Self Management, Skill Development
Saidy, Awa K. – ProQuest LLC, 2020
The unprecedented increase in the number of students enrolled in colleges and universities in Africa coupled with growing unemployment and underemployment of higher education graduates calls for a comprehensive and in-depth inquiry into the quality of higher education for the entire continent. The purpose of this study is to identify factors…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Educational Quality, Birth Rate
Faw, Leah; Jabbar, Huriya – Urban Education, 2020
In recent years, districts have paid special attention to the common practice of "district hopping," families bending geographic school assignment rules by sending a child to a school in a district where the child does not formally reside-usually to a district that is more desirable because of higher performing schools or greater…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, Antisocial Behavior, Crime, School Districts
Hargreaves, Eleanore; Elhawary, Dalia – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2020
This article explores teachers' learning from a Vygotskian perspective, which emphasises collaborative interaction and self-direction. The article describes case-studies of three senior teachers in socio-economically disadvantaged Egyptian primary schools where collaboration and self-direction were systemically discouraged. It analyses how,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Collaboration, Faculty Development
McCarthy, Katherine M. – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2020
While navigating numerous pressures as they work with vulnerable clients and communities, social workers are expected to use their emotional responses intentionally rather than to be ruled by them. Social work accreditation competencies require that students demonstrate regulation of their own affective processes, but their ability to do so will…
Descriptors: Social Work, Emotional Response, Affective Behavior, Self Control
Pillay, Jace – School Psychology International, 2020
The aim of this article is to discuss the social justice implications for educational psychologists working with orphans and vulnerable children (OVC) who comprise 3.7 million of the population in South Africa. The author begins with a global conceptualisation of social justice and then discusses the nature of social justice in South Africa. This…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Parents, Death, Educational Psychology
Koukounaras-Liagkis, Marios – British Journal of Religious Education, 2020
Based on a qualitative research (2012-15) this paper is concerned with the identification of concepts and constructs of knowledge in RE. It is based on participative enquiry and educational action-research methodology. Over a three-year period, the researcher, teachers and the students of a High School in one of the most difficult social, economic…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Student Attitudes, Religious Education, Foreign Countries
Hale, Adrian – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2020
First-year students' literacy deficits are not the problem. They are emblematic of an overall skill set which can be scaffolded from the first year of university study. If we treat literacy deficits as contingent upon other items of motivation, and as an element of Academic "Motivational" Literacy, we can usually also see these deficits…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Literacy, Disadvantaged, Student Diversity
Administration for Children & Families, 2020
"The Family Partnership Process: Engaging and Goal-Setting with Families" explores how strong partnerships can positively influence the goals families set in the Family Partnership Process. This guide recommends "Seven Steps for Setting and Reaching Goals with Families" and will help program staff: (1) learn about families and…
Descriptors: Goal Orientation, Trust (Psychology), Partnerships in Education, Family Programs
Outes-León, Ingo; Sánchez, Alan; Vakis, Renos – World Bank, 2020
This paper evaluates the academic impact of a growth-mindset intervention on students starting the secondary level in public schools in urban Peru. ¡Expande tu Mente! is a 90-minute school session aimed at instilling the notion that a person's own intelligence is malleable. Students in schools randomly assigned to treatment showed a small…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Urban Schools, Secondary School Students, Intervention

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