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Oyinloye, Bukola – Research Ethics, 2021
This paper presents a participant-centred virtue ethics approach, the "Omolúàbí" moral-ethical framework, which moves beyond researcher-centred reflexivity to incorporate participants' moral virtues within a broader research ethics framework. It demonstrates a methodical application of the framework during research with rural…
Descriptors: Ethics, Research, Foreign Countries, Participant Characteristics
Maras, Katie; Norris, Jade Eloise; Nicholson, Jemma; Heasman, Brett; Remington, Anna; Crane, Laura – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2021
Despite possessing valuable skills, social communication differences mean that autistic people are frequently disadvantaged in job interviews. We examined how autistic and non-autistic adults compared on standard (unmodified) job interview questions, and then used these findings to develop and evaluate supportive adaptations to questions. Fifty…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Job Applicants, Disadvantaged
Lampert, Jo – Australian Educational Researcher, 2021
For teacher educators, one challenge is how to prepare pre-service teachers to engage more deeply with students in high-poverty communities, some of whom they will ultimately teach. Addressing community engagement requires an institutionally embedded strategy to involve Indigenous, refugee, poor, and other historically vulnerable communities in…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education, Poverty, Indigenous Populations
Cook, Kyle DeMeo; Coley, Rebekah Levine – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2021
Head Start programs engage in multiple practices to support children and families during the transition to kindergarten. Children moving from Head Start to kindergarten often encounter discontinuities between the program and services they were receiving and the new elementary school environment. This paper uses multiple datasets and methods to…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Kindergarten, Young Children, Preschool Children
Morgan, Haydn; Parker, Andrew; Marturano, Naomi – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
The utilisation of non-formal educational methods has long been advocated as a means of supporting marginalised young people. For many in this cohort, the adverse social circumstances that confront them can limit their sense of hope and leave them susceptible to educational under-achievement and/or engagement in anti-social behaviour. Research…
Descriptors: Nonformal Education, Disadvantaged Youth, Critical Theory, Athletics
Murray, Jane; Murray, Jemima – Early Child Development and Care, 2021
This article reports findings from a small-scale case study that captured parents' views about their experiences of a targeted government funded programme of early childhood education and care for the 40% 'most disadvantaged' two-year-olds in England. The programme is funded in the context of national government policies oriented to (i) closing…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Toddlers, Experience, Foreign Countries
Rankin, Joss; Garrett, Robyne; MacGill, Belinda – Australian Educational Researcher, 2021
Debates about what constitutes a socially just education remain a central concern in these complex times. Embodied and creative practices in schooling offer a pedagogical approach that can respond to social justice within schooling and classrooms. This paper draws on pedagogies that utilise the body and creative practices as a method for engaging…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Creativity, Human Body, Mathematics Instruction
Doherty, Katherine; Holt-White, Erica – Sutton Trust, 2021
Access to apprenticeships for young people and those from disadvantaged backgrounds is an ongoing problem, particularly among the most sought-after apprenticeship opportunities. Since the apprenticeship reforms in 2017 there have been a number of main trends. A decline in the number of apprenticeships overall (a trend further exacerbated by the…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Access to Education, Outreach Programs, Best Practices
Heffernan, Troy – Higher Education Research and Development, 2022
Over the last forty years, Australasian researchers have witnessed problems and negative trends relating to academics and students from marginalised groups operating within the higher education sector. This article demonstrates that these researchers have become increasingly aware of the need for more equitable practices in higher education.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Justice, Educational Research, Equal Education
Pearman, Francis A., II; Marie Greene, Danielle – Sociology of Education, 2022
Largely overlooked in the empirical literature on gentrification are the potential effects school closures have in the process. This study begins to fill this gap by integrating longitudinal data on all U.S. metropolitan neighborhoods from the Neighborhood Change Database with data on the universe of school closures from the National Center for…
Descriptors: School Closing, Disadvantaged, Social Class, Land Acquisition
Soylu, Ayse – Journal of Theoretical Educational Science, 2022
Explaining the social function of schooling through maintaining, reproducing, and increasing inequalities does not provide a clear framework for what can be done to help the disadvantaged benefit from education. In order to break this vicious circle of describing deficiencies and perpetuating, it is necessary to focus more on the recovery and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Disadvantaged Youth, Institutional Role, Inclusion
Sheth, Manali J.; Salisbury, Jason D. – Educational Policy, 2022
Equity-oriented school improvement driven by neoliberal policies focuses attention on a narrow range of inequities. Such policies fail to achieve substantive transformations that address educational constraints experienced by multiply-marginalized youth of color. We engage a critical race and intersectional feminist examination of our pedagogy in…
Descriptors: Race, Critical Theory, Neoliberalism, Educational Policy
Argueta, Stephanie M. – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Purpose: The purpose of this journal-ready dissertation was to examine the extent to which differences were present in the mathematics achievement of Grade 3 Emergent Bilingual students by their economic status, ethnicity/race, and gender. In the first study, the extent to which economic status (i.e., Poor and Not Poor) was related to the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Achievement, Elementary School Students, Grade 3, Bilingual Students
McAvinue, Laura P. – Irish Educational Studies, 2022
Educational disadvantage is a multilevel and multifactorial phenomenon, with a myriad of contributing factors having been identified within the social contexts inhabited by the student from a lower socioeconomic status (SES) background. Irish research has accumulated a comprehensive body of empirical evidence on the factors operating within…
Descriptors: Educationally Disadvantaged, Social Environment, Neighborhoods, Socioeconomic Status
Siebecke, Deborah Elin; Jarl, Maria – Large-scale Assessments in Education, 2022
Background: A variety of studies point to a deterioration of educational equity in Sweden and increasing school segregation with respect to achievement and socioeconomic composition. Some schools are resilient to socioeconomic disadvantages in their student body and demonstrate high levels of achievement. However, little attention has been given…
Descriptors: Well Being, Socioeconomic Status, Disadvantaged, Resilience (Psychology)

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