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Dewulf, Lisa; van Braak, Johan; Van Houtte, Mieke – Research Papers in Education, 2022
At-risk students are overrepresented in disadvantaged segregated primary schools. Often, these students begin with an educational delay and have less parental support, which makes them more dependent on the quality of their education. Since quality of education depends in great measure upon mechanisms at the class level, it is crucial to gain…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Disadvantaged Schools, School Segregation, Teacher Student Relationship
Sarkar, Tanushree; Cravens, Xiu – Comparative Education, 2022
A provision of India's Right to Education Act requires private schools to enrol 25% of children from 'disadvantaged' and 'economically weaker' backgrounds. Described as a unique public-private partnership, this policy has been widely debated for its promotion of private actors in ensuring equity and access to education. Within this controversial…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Social Justice, Neoliberalism, Foreign Countries
Longaretti, Lynette; Toe, Dianne – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2022
Teachers with a high sense of self-efficacy are more resilient to difficulties, experience greater job satisfaction and have higher expectations of their students. This study investigated teacher self-efficacy in high performing teachers at two points in their development: 1) as preservice teachers, halfway through their undergraduate degree using…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Beginning Teachers, College Graduates, Self Efficacy
Cameron, Craig; Hewitt, Anne – International Journal of Work-Integrated Learning, 2022
Work-integrated learning (WIL) can be expensive for tertiary students. There are potential accommodation, equipment, and travel expenses, as well as opportunity costs associated with lost income when completing unpaid WIL placements. Non-remunerative financial support such as bursaries, scholarships, stipends, and honorariums (collectively 'WIL…
Descriptors: Financial Support, Work Experience Programs, Classification, Foreign Countries
McGhee, Chy; Haynes, Aisha – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2022
Background: School leader decision making can be complicated by the enrollment of affluent, and often white families in educational spaces that have served low-income, Black, and Brown families post-Brown. Principals' behaviors influence whose power is coalesced and wielded to make school-wide curricular, budgetary, and personnel decisions.…
Descriptors: Principals, Elementary Secondary Education, Group Unity, Low Income Students
Foo, Aloysius; Yang, Peidong – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
Research in education has long noted teachers' role in assisting social and ideological reproduction. Separately, scholarship has also investigated the use of extra-curricular activities in equipping disadvantaged students with social and cultural capital, to embark on social mobility. Positioned at the intersection of these two apparently…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scholarships, Social Mobility, Teacher Role
Cheng, Miaoting; Chen, Lu; Yuen, Allan H. K. – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2022
Based on Bourdieu's cultural capital theory, our study examined the engagement of newly arrived children (NAC) with ICT and e-sports both at home and in school in the context of Hong Kong. Our in-depth case study of a Hong Kong secondary school revealed that the selected NAC typically came from disadvantaged school and immigrant family…
Descriptors: Technology Uses in Education, Immigrants, Secondary School Students, Foreign Countries
Pritzker, Suzanne; Lozano, Ali; Cotlone, Donisha – Journal of Social Work Education, 2022
The concept of political justice is deeply tied to our professional Code of Ethics. Social workers are well suited to challenge political inequalities that keep clients and communities from political participation. Laws affecting access to voter registration, casting a ballot, and having that ballot counted vary widely across the United States,…
Descriptors: Social Work, Counselor Training, Teaching Methods, Voting
Hadebe, Maureen; Moosa, Moeniera – South African Journal of Education, 2022
Grade retention is the practice of holding back learners who have failed to meet specific promotional requirements as stipulated by policy, in the same grade. The main objective of the research reported on here was to determine Foundation Phase (Grades 1-3) learners' experiences and perceptions of grade retention. The theoretical framework used…
Descriptors: Educational Experience, Grade Repetition, Student Attitudes, Elementary School Students
The Impact of Rural and Urban School Reopening on Missouri Students. An Essay for the Learning Curve
Diemer, Andrew; Park, Aaron – Urban Institute, 2022
The pandemic has heightened awareness of the gaps in education quality between the nation's most vulnerable students and most well-off students. And the reopening decisions school districts made in the 2020-21 school year may have both short- and long-term impacts on the academic achievement of the most vulnerable students. In addition to racial…
Descriptors: Pandemics, COVID-19, School Closing, Rural Schools
Commonwealth of Learning, 2022
The Commonwealth of Learning's Strategic Plan 2015-2021 sought to leverage open and distance learning (ODL) and contribute to the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal 4 by generating three long-term outcomes: better organisational capacity in ODL, increased opportunities for quality learning, and improved sustainable livelihoods. This…
Descriptors: Strategic Planning, Distance Education, Sustainable Development, Educational Opportunities
Hunt Institute, 2022
Native American students are a demographic group that has consistently been underrepresented in institutions of higher education (IHEs) in the United States. Despite tremendous growth in the enrollment of these students in recent years, they are still underrepresented compared to other subgroups. While other minority students encompass about 29%…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, College Students, Disproportionate Representation, Education Work Relationship
National Literacy Trust, 2022
Public libraries are a national reading service, supporting reading and literacy throughout life. As a free local resource, they are particularly powerful in supporting the development of literacy and reading skills in disadvantaged communities. Libraries have a unique and powerful role to play in raising literacy skills, vital for individuals and…
Descriptors: Public Libraries, Literacy, Achievement Gains, Pandemics
Rennie Center for Education Research & Policy, 2022
Massachusetts has developed a reputation for being a hub of innovation in science, technology, engineering, and math. Fields like health care and technology are booming here. Yet compared with the general population, the people who fill these roles are disproportionately White. Estimates indicate that between 2018 and 2028, one out of every three…
Descriptors: STEM Careers, Career Pathways, Demand Occupations, Labor Needs
Lindsay M. Fallon; Margarida Veiga – Grantee Submission, 2022
Educators' use of exclusionary discipline practices (e.g., our-of-school suspension) has been systematically applied to Black and brown youth, impacting opportunities for academic achievement. Federal policy calls for educators to refine their practice when racial discipline disparities are detected, yet there is little guidance in the law about…
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, Suspension, Racism, Culturally Relevant Education

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