6,946 results
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2. Considering social justice: Lived experiences of education students during the first course year.
- Author
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Jones, Sian E, Eady, Sandra, and Craig, Linda
- Subjects
ECOLOGICAL systems theory ,PREJUDICES ,SOCIAL justice ,EDUCATION students ,UNIVERSITY rankings - Abstract
Increasing research focus is placed on how to embed social justice within Education degrees. This paper reports findings from the first two phases of a cohort study completed just before and at the start of the pandemic, which track Scottish Education students' reflections on social justice at one university. We used three focus groups (n = 14) and surveys to analyse students' (n = 45) definitions of social justice. Using Bronfenbrenner's Ecological System's Theory and Saldana's Analytical Coding framework we found that themes around prejudice, culture, policy and emerging professional identity captured participants' reflections as both beginning teachers and students of educational studies. Key to our findings was that fewer reflections of social justice were cited to global than to local contexts. This paper highlights ways in which university educators may conceive of social justice such that it is considered by students in both their immediate and in global contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. The Impact of Manufacturing Credentials on Earnings and the Probability of Employment.
- Author
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Brown, Vanessa, Carrick, Gardner, Jones, Maggie R., Pharris-Ciurej, Nikolas, Voorheis, John, and Walker, Caroline
- Subjects
AMERICAN Community Survey ,JOB qualifications ,RACE ,LABOR market ,EDUCATION & training services industry - Abstract
This article examines the labor market returns to earning industry-certified credentials in the manufacturing sector. Specifically, the authors are interested in estimating the impact of a manufacturing credential on earnings and probability of employment, both overall and within the pre- and post-credential industry of employment. They link students who earned manufacturing credentials to their educational enrollment and completion records, and then further link them to IRS tax records for earnings and employment and to the American Community Survey and decennial census for demographic information. Earnings trajectories are presented for workers with credentials by demographic group, including age, race/ethnicity, gender, and educational attainment. To obtain more causal estimates of the labor market impacts of credentials, the authors implement a coarsened exact matching strategy to compare outcomes between otherwise similar people with and without credentials. Findings show that the attainment of a manufacturing industry credential is associated with increasingly higher earnings and a higher likelihood of labor market participation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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4. Enabling touch in an art museum: A curatorial reflection.
- Author
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Engen, Line
- Subjects
ART museums ,MUSEUM curatorship ,TRAVELING exhibitions ,INTERDISCIPLINARY research ,SURVEYS - Abstract
In 2016 the National Museum in Oslo launched a nationwide touring exhibition that allowed visitors for the first time to touch the sculptures of modernist Aase Texmon Rygh. The aim was to encourage visitors to experience these abstract stone works through the body before engaging with various contextualising practices for a more comprehensive process of meaning-making. Allowing members of the public to touch original sculpture in an exhibition context was new not only for the National Museum but also internationally, and the exhibition generated considerable professional and media attention. In my role as the exhibition's curator, I set out to investigate the interdisciplinary process of developing the exhibition concept and the audience response through a practice-led research project. Drawing on different theoretical perspectives, such as learning theory and interdisciplinary sensory research, and audience surveys which were conducted during the exhibition, I wanted to learn more about how audiences experienced touching the sculptures, and how touch affected their process of meaning making. In this paper, I share some of my findings and also reflect on the importance of practitioners doing research on their own practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. The Votes Are In! Candidate Debates as Large Policy Course Experiential Learning Method.
- Author
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Redmond, Melissa, Woodside, Liz, and Martin, Beth
- Subjects
KOLB'S Experiential Learning theory ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,SOCIAL constructivism ,CAREER development ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,SOCIAL work students - Abstract
Background: Like other professional training programs, social work pedagogy has long recognized the value of experiential learning for professional development. Despite social work's rich experiential learning literature involving field education, direct practice courses, and program evaluation, there is a dearth of literature examining how to make learning in the policy classroom experiential, particularly for large class sizes. Purpose: We asked, "How might electoral candidate debates provide experiential learning opportunities for large classes?" Approach: The authors organized municipal and federal election candidate debates attended in-person and online by over 300 undergraduate students in a social work policy class at a Canadian university. Integrating our experiences as instructors/organizers and a teaching assistant, within a social constructivist framework, we used Kolb's experiential learning theory, and critiques thereof, to analyze reflective assignments from 73 students. Results and Conclusions: Candidate debates, when facilitated appropriately, can encourage students in large courses to work through the stages of experiential learning and consider related concepts and possible links among social justice course content and social policy, social work practice, and political engagement. Implications: The paper contributes to a broader understanding of the opportunities and constraints associated with employing experiential learning in the large social work classroom and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Services for Latino Family Dementia Caregivers: Is the Workforce Prepared?
- Author
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Martinez, Iveris L., Acosta Gonzalez, Elaine, and Black, Leah
- Abstract
The American healthcare system is ill-fitted to meet the needs of the growing population with Alzheimer's and Related Dementias (ADRD) and their caregivers, which disproportionately affects Latinos. This paper describes the caregiving process for Latino patients with ADRD from the perspective of caregivers and service providers to reveal service areas in need of improvement. Ten providers and 24 Latino caregivers were interviewed through the Miami-Dade County Aging Network. Interviews were analyzed using a grounded theory approach. Five themes emerged: lack of social service connectivity, case management challenges, unmet mental health needs, language barriers, and the need for alternative service models. Our analysis indicates insufficient training and the need to improve dementia competencies, support strategies, and understanding of cultural nuances among service providers. These findings can help inform the development of a required ADRD provider education curriculum that incorporates cultural competency training to improve the quality and effectiveness of care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Disentangling the intersectional field of education and housing in China: Genesis, strategies and discontents.
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He, Qiong and He, Shenjing
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Drawing on the Bourdieusian concept of 'field' and the theorization of 'intersectionality', this paper proposes a concept 'intersectional field' to disentangle the complex interrelations between housing and education in China, where they mutually constitute and co-produce yet trouble and counteract with each other, whereby exerting simultaneous exclusion in cultural and economic (re)production. Drawing on policy documents and 38 in-depth interviews with various stakeholders in China, we first delineate the genesis and evolvement of this intersectional field. We then demonstrate how middle-class parents rationalize and strategize their heavy investment in cultural and economic reproduction against the most recent policies that seemingly aim to de-intersect/decouple these two fields. We show that the intersectional field of housing and education in China emerges from state-imposed rules while being increasingly self-reinforced. It was also temporarily counteracted and suspended responding to the escalated crises of housing unaffordability and over-competition over quality schooling opportunities, through policies like franchising key schools from the city centre to the suburb and random allotting enrolment. These changes in the 'rules of the game' indeed bring uncertainties to the intersectional field. However, while discontent to this intersectional field abound, these actions are self-constrained by the internal logic of the intersectional field and thus unable to bring fundamental changes. Those with limited socio-economic capacities remain extremely disadvantageous in both fields. The policy intervention turns out to be merely a spatial reordering that relocates and expands the fierce competition from the city centre to the suburbs while repositioning the suburbs to be the focal point for strategic investment in the intersectional field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. The if , why and how of fitness testing in secondary school physical education in the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Harte, Naomi Paula Alice, Alfrey, Laura, Spray, Christopher, and Cale, Lorraine
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PHYSICAL education ,PHYSICAL fitness ,TEACHER attitudes ,SECONDARY schools - Abstract
Historically fitness testing has been identified as a common but controversial physical education (PE)-for-health practice across the globe. Despite this, little is known about the current prevalence and implementation of fitness testing. This paper therefore reports on findings from a survey which gathered both quantitative and qualitative data to explore the 'if?', 'why?' and 'how?' of fitness testing and provide new insights into teachers' learning intentions, pedagogical practices, and attitudes towards it. The survey was distributed to PE departments in secondary schools across the UK, and responses were analysed and reported descriptively and thematically. Responses from 260 schools highlighted that fitness testing remains a common practice in PE, with 80% of PE teachers reporting it to feature in their curriculum. There was less consensus surrounding the 'why?' and 'how?' of testing, with variation evident in teachers' stated learning intentions, pedagogical practices, and attitudes. Despite its prevalence, PE teachers expressed concerns over negative pupil outcomes potentially arising from fitness testing, and over 60% of teachers were uncertain or agreed that fitness testing can have a negative impact on pupils' psychological health. Given the findings and the reported widespread prevalence of fitness testing, further research should explore pupils' perspectives, responses, and outcomes of fitness testing, including their motivational and emotional responses to testing. Working with teachers and encouraging them to critically reflect on the 'if?', 'why?' and 'how?' of fitness testing is recommended and will hopefully help to bridge the gap between research and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. 'Voices' of early school leavers in Greek educational system: A Bourdieusian approach.
- Author
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Panagiotis, Giavrimis
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SCHOOL dropouts ,EDUCATION ,INCLUSIVE education ,CULTURAL capital ,PSYCHOLOGICAL typologies - Abstract
In the present paper, we research the phenomenon of early school leaving through the biography of school leavers. The participants were 14 individuals (five females and nine males) who had left school early before completing secondary education. The interviewees' discourse highlighted the mediating factors and the reasons for leaving school. Also, early school leavers are a heterogeneous group of individuals, where the diversity of their family's cultural capital has shaped different inclusion conditions in the Greek educational system. According to the typology of Nairz-Wirth and Gitschthaler, we identified four types of early school leavers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Child Education Rights Versus Parental Preferences: A Paradox Between United Nations Conventions and Alternative Schooling Methods.
- Author
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Chiang Jr., Tom and Killian, Caitlin
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ALTERNATIVE schools ,CONVENTION on the Rights of the Child ,RIGHT to education ,HOME schooling ,PARENT-child legal relationship ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,PARENT participation in education - Abstract
Alternative schooling has been staunchly advocated for by groups disillusioned by government-sponsored public schooling that want to take personal control of their children's education. There are concerns, however, about nontraditional schooling options that do not meet standards that apply to public schools. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) specifies children's fundamental educational rights. In the United States, this includes mastering basic English literacy and numerical abilities, as well as exposure to some scientific and historical knowledge needed to negotiate mainstream society. This paper focuses on how certain homeschooling and religious schooling practices run the risk of denying adolescents the right to the education necessary to work in the modern economy and achieve their potential. We argue that the United States should allow alternative schooling options but ensure that they conform to specific standards set by the state in order to meet the CRC goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Violence and Children's Education: Evidence From Administrative Data.
- Author
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Duque, Valentina
- Subjects
DRUG cartels ,HOMICIDE rates ,PERFORMANCE in children ,HIGH school dropouts ,VIOLENCE ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
This paper exploits the sharp escalation of violence in Colombia in the 1980s associated with the emergence of drug cartels to provide novel evidence on the long-run effects of violence exposure throughout the life-course, on children's educational attainment and academic achievement using administrative data. I find that, a higher homicide rate in early-childhood is associated with a higher probability of school dropout and conditional on completing high school, lower scores on a national end-of-high school exam. Results are robust to several falsification tests, and analyses of potential sources of selection bias. I provide supportive evidence that changes in fetal, child, and adolescent health outcomes are important potential mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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12. Educational Programming Environments for Enhancing Conceptual Design in the Object-Oriented Paradigm: A Systematic Mapping Study.
- Author
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Tsichouridis, Alexandros, Xinogalos, Stelios, and Ampatzoglou, Apostolos
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CONCEPTUAL design ,SCHOOL environment ,OBJECT-oriented programming ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,EDUCATIONAL games ,RESEARCH questions - Abstract
Teaching and learning programming, and especially Object-Oriented Programming (OOP), is a complicated and challenging task. Students have to comprehend various OOP concepts and utilize them for designing object-oriented programs. Various types of educational programming environments, such as microworlds and educational games, have been devised for supporting novices mainly in comprehending OOP concepts. However, such environments do not usually support students in the conceptual design of object-oriented programs of a considerable length and complexity. In this paper, we focus on a systematic mapping study (SMS) of educational programming environments for enhancing the conceptual design in OOP, which relies on modularity, abstraction and encapsulation. The research questions investigate the intended learning outcomes, the empirical evidence on the effectiveness, and the teaching/learning technologies used by educational programming environments for enhancing the conceptual design in OOP. The findings can support instructors in selecting appropriate tools for their courses and researchers in the field of educational programming environments for OOP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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13. 'You just need to work harder': Misalignments between the rhetoric of social mobility and education for social justice.
- Author
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Wood, Margaret, Su, Feng, and Pennington, Andrew
- Subjects
SOCIAL mobility ,SOCIAL classes ,SOCIALIZATION ,EDUCATIONAL mobility ,SOCIAL justice ,POLITICAL participation ,POLICY discourse - Abstract
Examining the entanglement of democracy and social justice in education and the relationship to social mobility, this paper critiques the individualising nature of social mobility in policy discourse as inimical to human flourishing and education as a public good. The rhetoric of social mobility which responsibilises individuals for their success, without due regard to the systemic changes needed to enable this and the societal barriers to social mobility experienced disproportionately by some groups in society, is detrimental to social justice. A conception of education as a pathway to social mobility must be located in a wider vision of civic engagement in a more inclusive and fairer society. Yet civic engagement in education at the local level has been eroded, as illustrated in this paper by the example of an evolving model of school governance in England. As a corporatist, market driven reform, this model exemplifies how local democratic ties between schools and engagement with their communities can be undermined. Social mobility to enable opportunities, access and participation in democratic civic society becomes a fantasy when society is riven with systemic inequalities, lacks the necessary conditions to enable human flourishing and links to community engagement in education for democratic renewal are downplayed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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14. A Meta-Analysis: The Association Between Relational Parental Involvement and Student and Parent Outcome Variables.
- Author
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Jeynes, William H.
- Subjects
PARENTING ,FAMILY structure ,AGE groups ,RACE ,AGE differences ,PSYCHOLOGY of students ,STUDENT engagement - Abstract
This paper shares the results of a meta-analysis on the parental-relational component of parental-involvement and its association with the academic and behavioral outcomes of urban students. This meta-analysis includes 76 quantitative studies. The results indicated that statistically significant effects emerged across students of different backgrounds, including differences by age groups, race, gender, and nationality. The results were also substantial in the highest quality studies. The significance of these results is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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15. Age Gap Between Spouses in South and Southeast Asia.
- Author
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Dommaraju, Premchand
- Subjects
MARRIAGE ,SOUTHEAST Asians ,INCOME ,RESEARCH funding ,SPOUSES ,CULTURE ,AGE distribution ,POPULATION geography ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SOUTH Asians ,RESEARCH ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LONGEVITY ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Age gap between spouses has important implications for a range of outcomes—from fertility and longevity, to gender relationships, marital quality, and stability. This paper examines the age gap between spouses in 12 countries in South and Southeast Asia. The average age difference (husband's minus wife's age) is positive in all countries and ranges from 2.7 in Myanmar to 8.4 in Bangladesh. Age homogamous marriages accounted for 5% of all marriages in Bangladesh to close to half of all marriages in Thailand. The proportion of age hypogamous marriages was uniformly low in all the countries except for Myanmar where it reaches close to 10%. Men's marriage age has a stronger effect in determining the age gap. In general, the age gap for women with lower education was larger than for those with higher education. However, much of this effect was explained by the difference in marriage timing across educational groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. Preparing Social Justice Leaders in the Era of High-Stakes Licensure Assessments: Student and Faculty Perceptions of a Redesigned Principal Preparation Program.
- Author
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Biolchino, Erin
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SOCIAL justice ,STAKEHOLDERS ,EDUCATION ,CLASS size ,LEADERSHIP - Abstract
Principal preparation programs face the unique challenge of preparing social justice leaders who are equipped to dismantle the many inequities in K-12 schools. In 2017 California's credential requirements for school administrators (e.g., principals) changed significantly with the adoption of new state standards for administrators and the addition of a new high-stakes administrator performance assessment (the California Administrator Performance Assessment, or CalAPA). Accordingly, principal preparation programs throughout California had to respond to this change. The purpose of this paper is to share faculty and student perceptions of one principal preparation program's revision to equip candidates to be social justice leaders; to align to new state leadership standards (the CAPE); and to prepare candidates for a high-stakes, state-mandated performance assessment (the CalAPA). Data for this study included student focus groups and faculty interviews as students and faculty shared their perceptions of and experiences with the new program and the CalAPA performance assessment. Several implications for principal preparation programs were found: the need for a comprehensive curriculum with an explicit social justice focus, the benefits of the cohort model, the value of field based assignments, the need for supportive instructional practices, and the challenges and benefits of state-mandated performance assessments such as the CalAPA. The process of program revision and adaptation to a new state-mandated, high-stakes administrator performance assessment may be relevant to other programs seeking to prepare social justice leaders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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17. Non-profit organizations in training for employment: On the transformative potential of their critique of education.
- Author
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Molpeceres, Mariángeles, Martínez-Morales, Ignacio, Bernad, Joan Carles, and Marhuenda-Fluixá, Fernando
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TRANSFORMATIVE learning ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,DISCOURSE analysis - Abstract
A sociology of conventions perspective is used in this paper to examine how non-profit organizations make sense of their educational action in the field of training for employment. Both critiques of education that such organizations voiced and compromises that they had to establish at the turn of the 21st century are revisited here in view of the transformations that the field of training for employment has experienced in recent years. We show empirical data illustrating their discourses on education 20 years ago that were obtained through in-depth, focused interviews with trainers and management of Spanish non-profit organizations. Some critiques are highlighted that were prominent in their discourse at the turn of the century, when the 'third sector' was regarded as a promising actor that could amend some of the most concerning inadequacies of the education system. However, the transformative potential of such critiques is critically re-examined in view of the transformations that such an increasingly hybrid field has experienced since, transformations that allow for a new perspective into those once change-promising discourses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. Public Health Students and Instructors Weigh in on Generative Artificial Intelligence: Are They on the Same Page?
- Author
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Anderson, Olivia S., Laubepin, Frederique A., and August, Ella T.
- Subjects
GENERATIVE artificial intelligence ,PUBLIC health education ,HEALTH education teachers ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,PERCEIVED benefit - Abstract
Generative artificial intelligence (genAI) technology is used among students, yet it remains unclear how public health students and instructors perceive it to be effective in a learning environment. We described how and why public health students and instructors are using genAI technology along with their perceived benefits and limitations of using genAI, noting where perceptions overlap. We surveyed public health students and instructors at a higher education institution in the United States. Student survey questions covered which genAI technologies they used, which activities they used genAI for, and perceived benefits and limitations of using genAI. Questions for instructors covered which genAI technology they used, course activities genAI was integrated, and perceived benefits and limitations of using genAI. Student respondents (n = 300) indicated using genAI technology for writing or clarifying concepts. Students and instructors (n = 62) agreed genAI technology could save time on tedious tasks and will be part of our future workforce. They agreed that appropriate use in the classroom will better prepare future professionals. Alternatively, students and instructors indicated genAI may impede learning, produce inaccurate information, and pose opportunities for unethical behavior. While students and instructors agree on many aspects of genAI technology, instructors should be explicit about their expectations and rationale for use of genAI technology in classrooms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Violence against Scheduled Caste Women: The Case of Rape across States in India.
- Author
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Chakraborty, Chandrima, Pal, Soma, and Pal, Dipyaman
- Subjects
INDIAN women (Asians) ,LAW enforcement ,ECONOMIC expansion ,PUNISHMENT ,VIOLENCE ,RAPE - Abstract
The present paper is an endeavour to get in the brutal social practices against scheduled caste (SC) women in India utilizing state-level information over the period of nearly two decades, that is, 2001–2019. Besides law enforcement and punishment, there can be other compelling instruments for controlling rape against SC women. The result proposes interstate disparity in rape rate. Rape against SC women may be controlled with higher economic growth, education and expanding expenditure on police. The DEMARU states are still found slacking behind in controlling rape of SC women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Assessing children's health literacy: A curricular approach.
- Author
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Otten, Claire, Kemp, Nenagh, Cruickshank, Vaughan, Peralta, Louisa, Hawkins, Melanie, and Nash, Rose
- Abstract
Objectives: Increasing childhood health literacy (HL) is a crucial means of improving health outcomes and reducing preventable deaths globally. Understanding how to best support children's HL development in schools is essential. However, identifying pedagogical strategies that develop children's HL relies on a fit-for-purpose measure. Currently, no universally accepted approach for measuring HL among children exists. The purpose of this paper was to propose and discuss how a curricular approach to assessing children's HL could provide a means to overcoming the challenges with existing children HL measures. Design/Methods: The discussion is framed by the key components of assessment – outcome of interest, and collection, analysis and interpretation of data – and is underpinned by contemporary HL and educational research. Setting: The Australian Curriculum is used to discuss the approach in practice. Results: A curricular approach to HL assessment suggests that HL assessment may work best when it is relevant to the child and their context, is integrated with other areas of the curriculum, allows children to demonstrate a wide range of HL skills and contains an element of open-endedness. Measurement could be guided by a rubric (underpinned by a taxonomy), and interpretation of scores consistently aligned with the learning intentions outlined in the curriculum. Conclusion: A curricular approach provides a contextually adaptive framework from which HL assessment tools for children can be developed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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21. Study design: The social wellbeing of newly-arrived adolescent migrants in reception education in Flanders (socNAMs).
- Author
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Devos, Sarah, Deforche, Benedicte, Derluyn, Ilse, Bracke, Piet, and Delaruelle, Katrijn
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SOCIAL capital ,CROSS-sectional method ,SCHOOL environment ,EDUCATION ,RESEARCH funding ,NOMADS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,QUANTITATIVE research ,STUDENTS ,EXPERIENCE ,SURVEYS ,MIGRANT labor ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,STUDENT attitudes ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,WELL-being ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,SELF-perception ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Aims: socNAMs provides a comprehensive and comparative dataset for researchers to identify how students' recent migration and their school setting relates to their social wellbeing, particularly regarding their feelings of loneliness. Results: This study design article delineates a quantitative cross-sectional research study (socNAMs) which successfully developed three questionnaires that were administered with unique and hard to reach populations, newly-arrived adolescent migrants (NAMs) and school staff offering reception education in Flanders, Belgium. Methods: At the individual level, socNAMs collected information on: (1) socio-demographic variables of NAMs; (2) migration and family context; (3) social relationships; (4) school experiences; (5) self-perceived wellbeing (physical and social); and (6) experiences with discrimination. The questionnaire developed for NAMs is available in 16 languages. To gain a further understanding of the impact of the school environment on NAMs, socNAMs collected contextual information primarily concerning school social capital by including data collected from teachers and reception-class coordinators. The final sample included 1379 NAMs, 50 teachers and 26 reception-class coordinators, from 35 schools offering reception education. Conclusions: In this article, we present the rationale for this study, the methodology of sampling and recruitment, the development and content of the questionnaires, some preliminary descriptive results and the strengths and limitations of the study. Future empirical studies will address the research aims outlined in this protocol paper. In addition, we highlight the opportunities that the dataset provides for advancing research regarding the social wellbeing of NAMs in varying school and national contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Developing contextualised literature-informed competency frameworks for middle managers in education.
- Author
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Corbett, Stephen
- Subjects
VOCATIONAL education ,EDUCATIONAL leadership ,CONTINUING education ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
The role of a manager within any organisation is often complex and multifaceted. Overtime management theory has developed in an effort to appreciate these complexities and suggest frameworks from which managers should operate. However, should management and the role of a manager be considered generic? Or, instead should we appreciate the distinctions dependant on the context in which a manager is operating in? This paper focuses on education middle managers working in vocational education and training using the Further Education sector in England as a case study to investigate the role. Utilising systematic review the paper will discuss literature on management theory, competency theory and further education management. It considers a range of management theories such as scientific, human relations and open systems theory discussing how these have informed the development of competency theory and frameworks, highlighting the strengths and limitations of prior studies. Building from these studies, this paper creates a new way to develop management competency frameworks. This is illustrated by proposing a contextualised literature-informed competency framework for further education middle managers. Challenging the generic approach to management competency frameworks and providing a platform for empirical studies that develop frameworks contextualised to the external operating environment of the manager. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Landscape of competition: Education, economisation and young people's wellbeing.
- Author
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Pyyry, Noora and Sirviö, Heikki
- Subjects
YOUNG adults ,WELL-being ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,HUMAN geography ,RESPONSIBILITY - Abstract
This paper probes the function of competition in society through an analysis of the affective landscape that competition creates. Our focus is on education and the connected process of subjectification. We argue that the analysis of competition in human geography needs to advance through abstractions of political economy to the entanglements and relations in which competition is internalised through embodied experience. We conceive competition as a process of organising power relations that work through affective subjectivation and knowledge-production. Those processes are efficiently at work in education, and hence, in young people's everyday lives. It is our suspicion that education is increasingly organised in a way that naturalises competition and marginalises or even closes horizons from other actual and possible modes of social relations and organisational principles. This organising frame links to ideas about learning as an individual endeavour, a linear process that can be pre-planned and measured with representational evidence. To challenge the harmful ethos of personal control and responsibility of young people for their own education and life-paths, we pursue a nonrepresentational analysis of the educational landscape of competition and approach the (learning) human subject as emergent and relationally agentive. Then, also young people's wellbeing needs to be mirrored against the landscape in which it is continually built. As a case for our argument, we discuss two documents linked to Finnish education: an OECD document on education and national competitiveness, and the newly revised curriculum for upper secondary education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Political Spectacle and the Decline of Public Education in Botswana.
- Author
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Suping, Kekgaoditse
- Subjects
PUBLIC education ,INCLUSIVE education ,HIGHER education ,MASSIVE open online courses ,EDUCATIONAL change ,PUBLIC spending - Abstract
Botswana has achieved a lot in education development since the country's independence in 1966. Public education funding and access increased significantly, literacy rates rose, more schools were constructed and student enrolment rates increased at both primary and secondary schools. However, this paper argues that Botswana's education system has been declining over the past 10 years, but that is concealed by the use of political spectacle. The data collected from secondary sources were used and subjected to content analysis. The findings show high public education expenditure and access in Botswana, but high failure rates; success narratives and pronouncements without commitment to educational effectiveness and efficiency; massive construction of public schools, but poor teaching–learning conditions; and trivialization of meaningful education reforms. This paper concludes by recommending the introduction of learner-friendly methods of assessment, improving teacher–government relations, the inclusion of stakeholders in education decision-making and the implementation of cost–benefit and cost-effectiveness measures in Botswana's education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Power of Silence: Anxiety and Autonomy in TA Labor.
- Author
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Eby, Margaret
- Abstract
When I took on increasing responsibilities within my university's pedagogical training programs during the pandemic, I expected an increase in collaboration and pedagogical discussion because of the difficult teaching circumstances. Instead, I came to see a silence that kept teaching assistants (TAs) from talking about their labor process either with their instructors or with fellow TAs. In this paper, I theorize this silence both as a defense against anxiety and as protecting autonomy. I draw on my own experiences as a TA, my work as a pedagogy instructor in my department and for the university, and an ethnography of working TAs to investigate how TAs leverage their silence to strategically manage multiple competing interests. Finally, I suggest that TAs first internalize these dual purposes of silence to make sense of their teaching labor and later carry it with them as they go from trainee to professional academic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Teaching in the Age of AI/ChatGPT in Mental-Health-Related Fields.
- Author
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Rajaei, Afarin
- Subjects
CHATGPT ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,MENTAL health education ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,LEARNING - Abstract
In recent years, the fusion of Artificial Intelligence (AI) with traditional sectors has catalyzed a paradigm shift that extends beyond technological advancements and reaches into the core of human learning and development. One such domain undergoing significant transformation is mental health education. This short conceptual paper seeks to examine the intricate relationship between AI and education in the context of mental health studies, shedding light on the challenges, opportunities, and ethical considerations that arise as teaching evolves in the Age of AI. This paper is not intended to serve as THE definitive solution to inquiries regarding the integration of AI/ChatGPT in mental health education. Rather, its purpose is to provide AN approach to contemplating this matter and to initiate further discussions within mental health-related fields about the utilization of AI and ChatGPT in education, given the persistent prominence of AI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Making Sense of Burnout: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis of How Teachers in England Discuss and Encounter the Term Burnout.
- Author
-
Soames, Matthew and Willis, Martin
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,COGNITION disorders ,DISCUSSION ,TEACHING ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOLOGY of teachers ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,SOCIAL stigma ,INTERVIEWING ,EXPERIENCE ,TERMS & phrases ,THEMATIC analysis ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SHAME ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
Despite extensive research looking at the phenomenon of burnout, little is known about how individuals working in traditionally high-burnout occupations understand the term. Interviews were conducted with six teachers working in state schools in England centring on how the term burnout was understood and how it was used or encountered. Reflexive thematic analysis was employed from a critical realist perspective to analyse the data generated. All participants described burnout as a stress-related condition, yet for some participants the point at which stress became burnout was unclear leading to an understanding that burnout was the point at which one was unable to work. Many participants highlighted an individualistic understanding of burnout, perceiving it as representing an individual deficit rather than an organisational failing. This was often reinforced by where the term was encountered (at work or in the media) and was linked to the stigma many participants associated with burnout. This paper concludes that individualistic framings of burnout obscure its organisational determinants while reinforcing notions that mental well-being is something which should be personally – and privately – managed by individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Students' Perspectives on the Factors That Influence the Use of Private Tutoring Usage in Qatar.
- Author
-
Abu-Shawish, Reem Khalid
- Subjects
TUTORS & tutoring ,SECONDARY school students ,EMPLOYMENT ,PARENT attitudes - Abstract
This paper unpacks the factors likely to influence students' use of supplementary private tutoring in Qatar. Drawing on insights from Ajzen's theory of planned behavior (TPB), the current study seeks to understand the main predictors of private tutoring usage in the context of Qatar. This study used survey questionnaire data to ascertain key predictors of participation in private tutoring, as perceived by students in preparatory schools (grades 8 and 9) and secondary schools (grades 11 and 12). The regression analysis revealed that upper-grade students were more likely to use private tutoring than their lower-grade counterparts. Additionally, parental attributes, particularly their educational levels, employment status, and involvement in their children's schooling, were strong determinants of household decisions to hire private tutors. The results also indicated that the demand for private tutoring is strongly associated with the quality of teaching. The paper offers relevant recommendations for policymaking and calls for future study and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Networked Movements and Bureaucratic Unions: The Structure of the 2018 #R ed F or E d Teachers' Strikes.
- Author
-
Tarlau, Rebecca
- Subjects
TEACHERS' strikes & lockouts ,STRIKES & lockouts ,TEACHERS' unions ,TEACHERS ,LABOR unions ,LABOR movement - Abstract
How do digitally enabled movements of workers reshape, replace, or reinforce the role of unions? Based on a comparative case study of the 2018 #RedForEd teachers' strikes in West Virginia, Oklahoma, and Arizona, this article argues that despite the hierarchical and bureaucratic character of statewide teachers' unions, the infrastructure they provided to organize, connect, and legitimize teachers' actions was critical for statewide strikes. Facebook provided a forum for teachers to express frustrations, scale participation, and in some cases, organize actions. However, the unions' coordinating capacities were also central. These findings show how combining the mobilizing capacities of social media with existing movement infrastructure can facilitate collective action. In contrast to predictions of digitally enabled activism ushering in an era of "organizing without organizations," these findings suggest that 21st-century labor movements must meld old and new organizational forms, and not discard the century-and-a-half accumulation of labor infrastructure won by previous generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Men changing nappies: Dismantling a key barrier to gender-diversifying the early years workforce.
- Author
-
Wilkinson, Joann, Davies, Jeremy, and Warin, Jo
- Subjects
GENDER stereotypes ,EARLY childhood education - Abstract
Currently the number of men working in early years education in England is very low at 2%. This stubbornly resistant workforce pattern matters because it perpetuates the entrenched gender stereotype of young children's education and care as women's work. It is extraordinary to find this corner of gender statis in a world that is supposedly in the grip of a gender revolution. This gender revolution does not appear to have impacted on, or even dented, the gendered nature of the early years workforce. This is all the more remarkable because early years staffing shortages have now reached crisis point in England (the country where the authors reside and where they have carried out the research referred to in this paper). The small minority of men that do take up work in this sector often work interchangeably with their female counterparts, adopting a range of roles and responsibilities including reading, rough and tumble, comforting and food preparation. The task of intimate care however, or more specifically 'nappy changing', remains an area of tension within men's presence in early years settings, with parents or carers sometimes requesting that male practitioners do not change their child's nappy or nursery managers removing men from this role. Although the Sex Discrimination and Equalities Act 2010 stipulates that no employee should be discriminated against because of their sex, a 2-year study into the recruitment and support of men in early years education in England (GenderEYE) shows that discriminatory practices around intimate care are very much alive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Personality Traits of Creative Advertising Professionals.
- Author
-
Devlin, Michael B.
- Subjects
ADVERTISING ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,SOFT skills ,TALENT development ,COMPETITIVE advantage in business - Abstract
Within the evolving landscape of advertising, educators and employers continuously strive to recognize students and potential employees for every competitive advantage. Creativity, a pivotal determinant of campaign effectiveness, has been recognized as the foremost soft skill sought by employers according to LinkedIn. Grounded in trait theory, this paper posits that personality serves as a crucial tool for educators and employers in identifying individuals predisposed to a career in creative advertising and delineates personality traits that are predictive of an individual's propensity to engage in creative advertising. This not only bridges the gap between personality and advertising practices but also offers empirical insights that could inform educational strategies and recruitment processes. Thus, it contributes a novel perspective to the discourse on talent identification and development in the creative advertising domain. Lastly, this study utilizes HEXACO Personality Inventory, an advancement from models such as the Big-5 to advance trait theory research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A laboratory for teaching process control: The wastewater treatment plant.
- Author
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Tejado, Inés and Pérez, Emiliano
- Subjects
SEWAGE disposal plants ,PROCESS control systems ,PROGRAMMABLE controllers ,AUTOMATIC control systems ,STUDENT teaching ,LABORATORIES ,WINERIES - Abstract
Laboratory experiments offer one way to introduce more realism in education and play a key role for the acquisition of practical skills, especially in engineering. This paper addresses the development of an equipment to teach fundamentals of industrial process control engineering mainly for undergraduate courses at the University of Extremadura. The laboratory consists of the DELTALAB–COSIMI wastewater treatment plant SP244, which is controlled by a CompactRIO-9014 high-performance real-time embedded controller, a kind of programmable logic controller of National Instruments. Learning objectives and a summary of students activities carried out in the laboratory lessons are given to illustrate the possibilities of use of this equipment for teaching of industrial process control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. 'Dare to be silent': Re-conceptualising silence as a positive pedagogical approach in schools.
- Author
-
Su, Feng, Wood, Margaret, and Tribe, Robert
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,CLASSROOMS ,PARADOX ,BIFURCATION theory ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
In Western societies, school pedagogies tend to be biased in favour of talk and emphasise the links between talking, thinking and learning. Thus talk is often privileged over silence as the basis for learning activities in classrooms, sustained by theories of learning which afford priority to talk. Such cultural bias towards talk means that by contrast, silence can be perceived negatively and construed as a form of 'non-participation'. Through a systematic literature review of journal articles relating to silence as a pedagogical approach published between 2000 and 2021, this article reappraises the role and value of silence in school education. Some of the apparent paradoxes of silence as a pedagogical approach, different types and uses of silence in the classroom, cultural dimensions of silence and the relationships between silence, power and critical pedagogy are examined. The pedagogical importance of silence as a participatory approach to learning emerges as a significant point for educators and the paper offers some suggestions for potential applications in classroom practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The critique of social reason in the Popper–Adorno debate.
- Author
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Reynolds, Iaan
- Subjects
CRITICAL theory ,SOCIAL science research ,INTERPERSONAL confrontation ,SOCIAL services ,DISAPPOINTMENT ,RATIONALISM - Abstract
This article examines the differences and affinities between Karl Popper's critical rationalism and Theodor Adorno's critical theory through renewed attention to the original documents of their 1961 debate. While commentaries often describe the Popper–Adorno encounter as a theoretical disappointment, I reveal a confrontation between conceptually opposed programs of social research. Though both theorists are committed to critique as a political and epistemological struggle for human freedom, their conceptions of this struggle are starkly different. In the original seminar papers, we find a conflict between critique as a practice of social rationality (Popper) and a critique of social rationality itself (Adorno). The versions of critical rationalism and critical theory meeting in this debate thus emphasize opposite dimensions of a reflexive practice of immanent critique. In closing, I suggest dissolving this conceptual tension by recovering the educational orientation of critique. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Voices from the rising of the curtain: Democracy and deliberation bringing the disadvantaged to the fore.
- Author
-
Goh, Daeyoung
- Subjects
EDUCATION & politics ,DEMOCRACY ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL ideologies - Abstract
A large and growing body of literature has attempted to devise discussion frameworks for school education. However, conceptualizing deliberation able to appreciate the expression of socially disadvantaged people has received relatively little attention. Since the voices of culturally and linguistically depreciated populations would disappear in the institutionalized deliberation process, this paper aims to extend the meaning of democratic deliberation capable of putting forward marginalized accounts. The paper proposes and builds a temporal speech stage named 'generating deliberation' on which superiority-based claims can weaken through 'expressive speech' anchored in the democratic value of equality. The paper also addresses how expressive speech requires truth-telling based 'mindful speech' as a basis for the democratic value of freedom and a more attentive dialogue of generating deliberation. The article first explores divergent assumptions associated with democratic deliberation and their potential dilemmas in foregrounding socially marginalized people. Next, it examines the concept of critical awareness put to work through Rancière's ideas of dissensus and equality, followed by Foucault's parrhesia and freedom. Whilst navigating the magnitude of freedom and equality, the paper theorizes generating deliberation as an expressive/mindful conversation that illuminates the socially invisible. The process of generating deliberation would ultimately enrich deliberation participants' formative experiences of democracy and education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The imperative to develop health literacy: An ethical evaluation of HealthLit4Kids.
- Author
-
Otten, Claire Emma, Moltow, David, Kemp, Nenagh, and Nash, Rose Enid
- Abstract
An imperative exists to promote health literacy (HL) development in today's young people. Included in curricula worldwide, health literacy has been recognised as a social determinant in its own right, which has the potential to redress inequity and positively impact health and educational outcomes. While it has been shown that schools provide an ideal setting to support HL development, available evidence suggests that health may be undertaught in primary schools, and further resources are required to support educators' inclusion of HL in their lessons. The aims of this paper were to (1) highlight the ethical imperative to promote HL through schools and (2) provide an ethical evaluation of an existing HL intervention. Spike's (2018) four principles for public health ethics were employed as a framework for evaluating a program's ethical status and suitability in the school setting. In this paper, one program, HealthLit4Kids, is evaluated according to Spike's framework, and shown to be an ethically acceptable approach to foster HL in young people. These results model how other HL programs may be evaluated and offer critical insights concerning how HL could be promoted in an ethically acceptable manner in the classroom. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Aesthetic Knowing: Cut-Ups and Haiku Poems.
- Author
-
Turner, Ashley R., Velasco, Roque Anthony F., Oman, Kathleen, and Sousa, Karen H.
- Subjects
GRADUATE nursing education ,TEACHING methods ,PHILOSOPHY of nursing ,LEARNING strategies ,DOCTORAL programs ,POETRY (Literary form) ,CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
Enhancing course design and pedagogy to encourage engagement and creativity is fundamental in doctoral education. Using poetry is an innovative way to enrich nursing education through aesthetic knowing. The authors in this paper aim to describe an educational exercise utilizing the Cut-Up Method to create haiku poems. PhD nursing students used the Cut-Up Method to produce haiku poems describing the meaning of nursing science. Themes from the haiku poems include relationship building, caring and caring relationships, and the evolution of nursing. Learning activities promote aesthetic knowing to facilitate engagement, creativity, and collaboration. The Cut-Up Method and haikus are creative ways of developing aesthetic knowing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The development of an advanced diploma program for palliative care leaders in Chile.
- Author
-
Stoltenberg, Mark, Leiva-Vásquez, Ofelia, Pérez-Cruz, Pedro E., and Daubman, Bethany-Rose
- Subjects
CULTURE ,RESEARCH methodology ,CURRICULUM ,WORLD health ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,SPECIAL degree programs ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,CURRICULUM planning ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PALLIATIVE treatment - Abstract
Context: The majority of people with serious health-related suffering in low- and middle-income countries lack access to palliative care (PC). Increased access to PC education is greatly needed. Objectives: This paper describes the process to adapt an advanced PC training course for a Chilean context. Methods: A joint team of intercultural PC educators from the US and Chile conducted a series of key informant interviews and a target audience survey to iteratively design a PC training course in Chile. Results: Eight key informant interviews identified a strong need for formal PC education pathways, confirmed the five central learning domains, and helped to identify potential course sub-topics. A target audience survey of 59 PC providers from across Chile confirmed a strong desire to participate in such a course. Conclusion: Our team of intercultural PC educators adapted an advanced PC course to the unique context of Chilean providers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Integrating evidence-based medicine into resident education.
- Author
-
Terrani, Kristina, Ibrahim, Ramzi, and Brucks, Eric
- Abstract
Evidence-based medicine (EBM) is the practice of applying scientific evidence to clinical decision-making, with a focus on addressing the individualized needs and values of patients. It requires not only a solid foundation of medical knowledge and the ability to gather a thorough patient history but also the skills to locate, interpret, and apply relevant principles from the medical literature. Given the rapid advancements in the field of medicine, understanding medical literature holds significant importance for residents during their education and future careers. It is particularly crucial for reducing medical waste, adhering to guidelines, and decreasing morbidity and mortality rates. This paper aims to underscore the significance of increasing residents' exposure to evidence-based approaches in clinical decision-making, propose time-efficient and effective methods to enhance their understanding of EBM, and promote the implementation of evidence-based practices within the inpatient setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Challenges facing Thai higher education institutions financial stability and perceived institutional education quality.
- Author
-
Scott, Timothy and Guan, Wenyu
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,POPULATION aging ,FINANCIAL institutions ,FINANCIAL security ,EDUCATIONAL quality ,THAI people - Abstract
Thailand 4.0 is an ambitious reform strategy that seeks to offset the impact of the Thai aging population by transitioning the economy towards a knowledge-based society skilled in advanced technology. Education reforms are paramount for Thailand 4.0 to succeed; however, significant challenges exist that draw into question the capabilities and quality of the nation's higher education institutions. The low perceived quality can be attributed to government inefficiencies, pronounced education inequality between rural and urban students, declining K12 students' core curriculum performance, and a growing dependence on international students to support higher education institutions' financial stability. This paper discusses the numerous challenges limiting higher education institutions from achieving an improved perception of academic quality both domestically and abroad. The recommendations proposed highlight the need for additional government oversight and educational funding. National and regional education policies must be promoted in a clear, consistent, and measurable method, emphasizing short, medium, and long-term goals. Improved national examinations and institutional collaboration will further support the necessary step to address festering conditions limiting any meaningful transition towards a knowledge-intensive workforce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Stigmatized: In/Forming identities of children in Care.
- Author
-
Janzen, Melanie D
- Subjects
CHILD care ,EQUALITY ,SCHOOL administrators ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,PRECARITY - Abstract
Stigma devalues, discriminates, and magnifies social inequalities. For children in care, who have far worse educational outcomes than children who are not in care, stigma negatively effects the others' perceptions, as well as the children's perceptions of themselves. This paper is drawn from a larger research project which considered the ways in which school leaders supported children in care in their schools and the barriers they experienced in doing so. Engaging with the interviews of school leaders and drawing on poststructural theory, I critically explore schooling discourses related to being in care and how these in/form the subjectivities of children in care. The analysis illustrates how being in care inscribes discourses of deficiency, erasure, and vulnerability, and as a stigmatized identity marker enacts inequalities and exclusions by and within school. The discourses related to being in care magnify children's precarity, determining certain norms of recognition including who cannot be—or are not allowed to be—seen as student-subjects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The incommensurability of digital and climate change priorities in schooling: An infrastructural analysis and implications for education governance.
- Author
-
McKenzie, Marcia and Gulson, Kalervo N
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,DIGITAL technology ,EDUCATION ,ENERGY infrastructure ,EDUCATION policy ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,SCHOOL administration - Abstract
This paper introduces the concept of infrastructure into discussions on climate change and education. We focus on the links between the increased use of digital data and the central role of data infrastructures in education, and the energy infrastructure needed to support their growing use in schools and school systems. We elaborate a need for a greater accounting of the climate and related social costs of these interwoven digital and energy infrastructures of schooling. We suggest this is part of the 'disposition' of the infrastructures of schooling that should be weighed into decisions on whether and how to continue with digital technologies in schools. By acknowledging the climate and environmental incommensurability of digital infrastructures, education leaders and young people can more fully understand their dispositions and their costs. We propose three implications for education governance that entail greater consideration of the limits of current school climate change infrastructures such as 'eco school' programs and EdTech 'AI for good' initiatives, pushes for 'computing within limits' without substantial changes, and current school governance practices which unnecessarily rely on digital infrastructures. Instead, what is needed may be a reversal of the extensive use of digital infrastructures by schools and education governance bodies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The good business school.
- Author
-
Rhodes, Carl and Pullen, Alison
- Subjects
EQUALITY ,PERIODICAL publishing - Abstract
As Organization celebrates its 30th Anniversary, this paper asks: what might it mean to be a good business school? The paper reviews research published in this journal to assess the current state of business schools, revealing a somewhat dismal picture of institutions beholden to instrumental managerialism, top-down hierarchical control, obsession with metrics, and narrow and elitist research agendas. This state of affairs is re-assessed though Raewyn Connell's idea of The Good University. Through this analysis, we are able to identify the good business school as one serves society by educating citizens and creating knowledge that leads to shared prosperity, social equality and human flourishing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Rhetorical Move Structure in High-Tech Marketing White Papers.
- Author
-
Campbell, Kim Sydow and Naidoo, Jefrey S.
- Subjects
EMPIRICAL research ,QUALITATIVE research ,LITERARY form ,MARKETING ,EDUCATION - Abstract
White papers are commonly produced by for-profit organizations to market high-tech products and services and are often created by technical writers. But writers of this genre have little evidence-based research to guide them. To fill this void, the authors tested a rhetorical move structure with a sample of 20 top-rated marketing white papers and found that, despite the lack of industry standards for white papers, those written for marketing purposes display similar rhetorical moves: introducing the business problem, occupying the business solution niche, prompting action, establishing credibility, and providing disclaimers or legal considerations. Based on the results of this study, the authors advance guidelines for writers of this genre and suggest areas for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Taking credit for stupidity: On being a student in the performative university.
- Author
-
Spoelstra, Sverre
- Subjects
STUPIDITY ,EDUCATION ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,ORGANIZATIONAL learning ,ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
Stupidity is generally thought of as a hindrance to learning: an epistemic vice that stands in the way of knowledge and understanding. In this article, I challenge this idea by exploring some of the meanings of stupidity that place it in a positive relation to learning. In this light, the article discusses two notions of stupidity: stupidity as unfinished thought and stupefaction through study. I show how these forms of stupidity, rather than indicating a lack of learning, can be considered as a crucial part of the learning process. These types of desirable stupidity have come under increasing threat in academic cultures that are dominated by performance criteria. On the basis of this analysis, the article argues for the importance of academic practices that make room for these positive forms of stupidity and thereby facilitate what it means to be a student. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Undergraduate public relations education in the United Kingdom: Quo Vadis?
- Author
-
Chmiel, Michal and Moise, Raluca
- Subjects
PUBLIC relations ,CURRICULUM planning ,EDUCATION ,TEACHING - Abstract
In the current context of the undergraduate PR academic education in the United Kingdom degrees being shut down or merged with other communication disciplines, the present essay represents a timely reflection on the results and internal incoherence of PR education provision in the United Kingdom. Starting from the key idea that public relations is a mature occupation and academic social discipline, we developed a thorough analysis of PR fields, where we analysed the intra- and inter-dynamics between these various types of fields, aiming at identifying the main issues that impact the teaching of PR and its academic expressions. Drawn from the field analysis, we then focused on two key trends which currently shape the undergraduate PR education in the UK to recommend changes to the process of curriculum development that reconstructs the social value of Public Relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Association of Levels of Mindfulness on the Cognitive Performance of Community-Dwelling, Low-Educated Older Adults From a Middle-Income Country.
- Author
-
Pelegrini, Lucas Nogueira de Carvalho, Monteiro, Diana Quirino, and Rodrigues, Rosalina Aparecida Partezani
- Abstract
Limited information exists on the potential link between levels of mindfulness and cognitive performance in seniors with low education. This cross-sectional study aims to explore the association between mindfulness levels and cognitive performance in older adults with different years of education. Participants were grouped by education levels and assessed for cognitive performance (ACE-R; Digit Span test), levels of mindfulness (Langer Mindfulness Scale-21), and depressive symptoms (Geriatric Depression Scale-15). Group comparisons, correlations, and linear and logistic regression analyses were conducted (p <.05). Cognitive performance, mindfulness levels, and depressive symptoms differed between groups, and correlations were found between mindfulness levels, ACE-R, and Digit Span scores. After controlling for education, the association between mindfulness levels and ACE-R performance remained significant. Logistic regression revealed that higher education and mindfulness levels increased the likelihood of scoring above the ACE-R cut-off. This study underscores the association between levels of mindfulness and cognitive performance in older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Development of Preliminary Integrated Health Care Clinical Competencies for United States Doctor of Chiropractic Programs: A Modified Delphi Consensus Process.
- Author
-
Daniels, Clinton J, Cupler, Zachary A, Napuli, Jason G, Walsh, Robert W, Ziegler, Anna-Marie L, Meyer, Kevin W, Knieper, Matthew J, Walters, Sheryl A, Salsbury, Stacie A, Trager, Robert J, Gliedt, Jordan A, Young, Morgan D, Anderson, Kristian R, Kirk, Eric J, Mooring, Scott A, Battaglia, Patrick J, Paris, David J, Brown, Amanda G, Goehl, Justin M, and Hawk, Cheryl
- Subjects
CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,INTEGRATIVE medicine ,HUMAN services programs ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,PATIENT-centered care ,THEMATIC analysis ,CLINICAL competence ,COMMUNICATION ,CLINICAL education ,DELPHI method ,DATA analysis software ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,CHIROPRACTIC ,MEDICAL practice ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Background: There has been rapid growth of chiropractors pursuing career opportunities in both public and private hospitals and other integrated care settings. Chiropractors that prosper in integrated care settings deliver patient-centered care, focus on the institutional mission, understand and adhere to organizational rules, and are proficient in navigating complex systems. The Council on Chiropractic Education Accreditation Standards do not outline specific meta-competencies for integrated care clinical training. Objective: The purpose of this study was to develop preliminary integrated health care competencies for DC programs to guide the advancement of clinical chiropractic education. Methods: A systematic literature search was performed. Articles were screened for eligibility and extracted in duplicate. Domains and seed statements were generated from this literature, piloted at a conference workshop, and evaluated via a modified Delphi consensus process. Of 42 invited, 36 chiropractors participated as panelists. Public comment period yielded 20 comments, none resulting in substantive changes to the competencies. Results: Of 1718 citations, 23 articles met eligibility criteria. After 2 modified Delphi rounds, consensus was reached on all competency statements. A total of 78 competency statements were agreed upon, which encompassed 4 domains and 11 subdomains. The 4 domains were: 1) Collaboration, (2) Clinical Excellence, (3) Communication, and (4) Systems Administration. Conclusion: We identified 78 preliminary competencies appropriate for preparing DC students and early career chiropractors for clinical practice in integrated healthcare settings. Educational programs may consider these competencies for curricular design and reform to strengthen DC program graduates for integrated practice, advanced training, and employment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Class Inequalities and Participatory Democracy: Assessing the Impact of Social Inclusion Tools in Citizens' Assemblies.
- Author
-
García-Espín, Patricia
- Subjects
PARTICIPATORY democracy ,SOCIAL classes ,SOCIAL integration ,EQUALITY ,PARADIGMS (Social sciences) - Abstract
Recent research has examined the effectiveness of inclusion tools aimed at encouraging greater involvement of disadvantaged social groups in local deliberative institutions. Most research, quantitative and qualitative, tends to examine positive outcomes, although results are frequently ambivalent. This research begins by arguing that analytical frameworks should consider the limitations of inclusion tools and that greater attention should be given to alternative approaches to inclusion (material/symbolic, formal/informal, focused/general). Based on these theoretical points, the study focuses on the views and experiences of working-class people and smallholder farmers in relation to their participation in open rural assemblies (concejos abiertos) in the Basque Country (Spain). The research employed an ethnographic methodology involving 20 observations of assemblies/events and 55 in-depth interviews conducted between 2012 and 2015. Three inclusion tools were identified as key to the functioning of the assemblies: "administrative and technical support" for engaging with the bureaucratic processes, a legal "right to paid work leave" for board members, and the use of "multi-disciplinary boards." The study examines the effectiveness of these tools in motivating and facilitating the involvement of participants from disadvantaged social class positions, presenting novel findings in the case of paid work leave and multi-disciplinary boards. The importance of informal practices and procedures for reducing material constraints are emphasized as well as the identification of some limitations of inclusion tools in a context of predominant elitist paradigms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Law and Cartoons: The Use of New Interactive Approach in Educating at Law Departments.
- Author
-
Abezin, Denis, Anisimov, Aleksey, and Melikhov, Alexander
- Abstract
The praxis article is devoted to the study of educational cartoon as an interactive method of teaching legal disciplines. The purpose of the article is to argue the usefulness of this methodology for the educational process (e.g., the development of critical thinking, increasing the activity of students when discussing educational tasks on the basis of cartoons, clarification of complex terms), to improve the image of the university (use of educational cartoons in universities during the week of the Faculty of Law), and explain how we assessed the effectiveness of this methodology through quantitative and qualitative methods. While it is a new approach in Russian Law schools, we draw attention to the universality of this methodology; as educational cartoons can be used in schools and across different university departments, and to the specificity of modeling of educational tasks in law, by providing specific examples of such educational tasks. We propose three variants of development of educational cartoons for the educational process at law faculties: placing an order for special production of educational cartoons; use of fragments of already existing cartoons; creation by the teacher of oral tasks on the motives of national fairy tales. The results of our research substantiate that the greatest effect of the proposed methodology can give only in the case of using for the preparation of educational cartoons national content, which is closest to the culture and mentality of students of a particular university. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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