30 results
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2. 'A New Spirit of Hope': Educating the Book Trade, 1920-1930.
- Author
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Rayner, Samantha
- Subjects
BOOKSELLERS & bookselling ,BUSINESS partnerships - Abstract
This paper looks at the initiatives by the Associated Booksellers of Great Britain and Ireland between 1920 and 1930 to formalise training for booksellers, reflecting on the current moves to reinstate some kind of bookselling qualification through the partnership of Waterstones with the University of Derby. It uses as primary sources the trade papers of The Publishers' Circular and Booksellers' Record and The Bookseller, both key narrative repositories for histories of this nature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Combating educational disadvantage through early years and primary school investment.
- Author
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Frawley, Denise
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL equalization ,EDUCATION policy ,PUBLIC investments ,IRISH economy, 1949- ,IRISH social conditions ,LOW-income students ,EDUCATIONAL finance ,CHILDREN ,EARLY childhood education ,PRIMARY education ,EDUCATION ,20TH century Irish history - Abstract
In 1965, following a review of second-level education in Ireland, the report Investment in Education was published. While a concern with educational inequality and disadvantage pre-dates this report, it clearly identified the significant socio-economic disparities in educational participation at the time and emphasised an urgent need for remedial action. However, while the discussions emanating from this seminal report are concerned with issues around educational disadvantage, less attention has been given to the processes at play in underlying such inequality. Moreover, it can be argued that overarching debates on educational investment over the last 50 years (as reflected in the papers in this special issue) have focused predominantly on post-primary and higher education, to the detriment of early education. Given the recent proliferation of research stemming from the USA around the significant human capital and societal gains of early years investment – which is especially pronounced for disadvantaged children – this paper argues that it is vitally important that early education is viewed as an important window of opportunity for increased public spending and treated on par with later educational investments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The investment in education report 1965 – recollections and reminiscences.
- Author
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Hyland, Áine
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,ECONOMIC development ,IRISH economy, 1949- ,IRISH social conditions ,PUBLIC investments ,EDUCATIONAL finance ,20TH century Irish history - Abstract
This paper is based on the recollections of its author of the work of the Investment in Education team from its inauguration in summer 1962 until the completion of its work in early 1965. The author was a research assistant to the team throughout the period of the study and was directly involved in the collection and analysis of the data on which the findings of the report were based. The paper describes the conditions under which the team operated. It adverts to some of the contentious issues which arose out of the data analysis. It explores the evolving roles of the Steering Committee, of senior civil servants in the Department of Education and of the chairman and of individual members of the team during the two-and-a-half-year period. It discusses some of the external influences which impacted on members of the team and explores how the changing economic and cultural life of Ireland in the early 1960s affected their thinking. It touches on the setting up of the Development Branch in the Department of Education in 1966 and its premature disbandment by the Minister Richard Burke in 1973. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Contesting the Limond thesis on British influence in Irish education since 1922: a comparative perspective.
- Author
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O'Donoghue, Tom and Harford, Judith
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CHURCH & education ,SCHOLARSHIPS ,POLITICAL autonomy ,IRISH politics & government, 1922- - Abstract
This paper is a response to David Limond's exposition, “[An] historical culture … rapidly, universally, and thoroughly restored”? British influence on Irish education since 1922', which appeared in Comparative Education, Vol. 46, No. 4, November 2010, pp. 449–462. Limond's overall thesis is that ‘a post-colonial overhang affects Irish policy-makers and bureaucrats in their educational policies and practices’. This paper contests three main aspects of Limond's exposition. First, in his analysis of the period 1831–1922, he fails to place sufficient emphasis on the extent to which the educational system was favoured by the Catholic Church, which operated in a manner which served not only its own interests, but also those of the middle classes of Irish Catholic farmers, merchants and business people. Secondly, he does not sufficiently indicate the extent to which the structure of Irish education from the early years of independence until the mid-1960s, and associated curriculum changes, were very different from the situation in Britain at the time. Thirdly, while he is correct in stating that, since the 1960s, Ireland has imported certain ideas on educational policy and practice from Britain, he neglects to demonstrate that there were also other sources, and that they were probably more dominant than the British ones. Hopefully, as a rejoinder, the paper will be read in a positive light by indicating how the historical study of Irish education within a comparative context is a neglected area of scholarship, and thus stimulate researchers to address the situation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Do undergraduate general practice placements propagate the 'inverse care law'?
- Author
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Butler, Daniel, O'Donovan, Diarmuid, McClung, Alice, and Hart, Nigel
- Subjects
- *
TEACHING methods , *HEALTH services accessibility , *FAMILY medicine , *QUANTITATIVE research , *INTERNSHIP programs , *UNDERGRADUATES , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *HEALTH equity , *MEDICAL education - Abstract
Fifty years since Dr Tudor-Hart's publication of the 'Inverse Care Law', all-cause mortality rates and COVID-19 mortality rates are higher in more deprived areas. Part of the solution is to increase access and availability to healthcare in underserved and deprived areas. This paper examined how socio-economically representative the undergraduate general practice placements are in Northern Ireland (NI). A quantitative study of general practices involved in undergraduate medical placements through Queen's University Belfast, comparing practice lists by deprivation indices, examining both blanket deprivation and deprivation quintile trends for teaching and non-teaching practices. Deprivation data for 135 teaching practices were compared against the 323 NI practices. Teaching practices had fewer patients living in the most deprived quintiles compared with non-teaching practices. Fewer practices with blanket deprivation were involved in undergraduate medical education, 32% compared with 42% without blanket deprivation. Practices in areas of blanket deprivation were under-represented as teaching practices, 10%, compared to 14% of NI general practices that met this criterion. Practices with blanket deprivation were under-represented as teaching practices. Exposure to general practice in deprived areas is an essential step to improving future workforce recruitment and ultimately to closing the health inequalities gap. Ensuring practices in high-need areas are proportionately represented in undergraduate placements is one way to direct action in addressing the 'Inverse Care Law'. This study is limited to NI and further work is required to compare institutions across the UK and Ireland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Investment in edification: reflections on Irish education policy since independence.
- Author
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O'Connor, Muiris
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL finance ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,EDUCATION marketing ,PUBLIC investments ,IRISH economy, 1949- ,HISTORY of education - Abstract
Beginning with a historical review of Irish education policy since the establishment of the Irish Free State in 1922, this paper focuses on the issue of investment in education through the lens of theInvestment in Educationreport. Following this historical review, the author explores how the legacy of the past continues to define the ways in which education is structured and delivered in Irish schools. The key achievement of the 1965 report was its success in altering the Irish state's perception of expenditure on education. While this was previously viewed as an expense and an obligation, the report highlighted its longer-term economic value as an investment in the future. While acknowledging the transformative impact of the 1965 report in terms of subsequent trends in the scale of public investment in education, this paper argues that the report's advice in relation to the nature of investment and to the optimal configuration of resources has been largely ignored and neglected in the intervening years. This paper revisits what theInvestment in Educationauthors describe as ‘the question of the existing organisation of facilities’ in an attempt to understand contemporary challenges in Irish education. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. An exploratory international study into occupational therapy students' perceptions of professional identity.
- Author
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Ashby, Samantha E., Adler, Jessica, and Herbert, Lisa
- Subjects
CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CURRICULUM ,FIELDWORK (Educational method) ,SENSORY perception ,PROBABILITY theory ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,SOCIALIZATION ,SURVEYS ,CLINICAL competence ,JUDGMENT sampling ,PROFESSIONAL identity ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy students ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Background/aim The successful development and maintenance of professional identity is associated with professional development and retention in the health workforce. This paper explores students' perspectives on the ways pre-entry experiences and curricula content shape professional identity. Methods An online cross-sectional survey was sent to students enrolled in the final year of entry-level programmes in five countries. Descriptive statistical analyses of data were completed. Results The results reflect the perceptions of 319 respondents from five countries. Respondents identified professional education (98%) and professional socialisation during placement (92%) as curricula components with the greatest influence on professional identity formation. Discipline-specific knowledge such as, occupation-focussed models and occupational science were ranked lower than these aspects of practice. The students' length of programme and level of entry-level programme did not impact on these results. Conclusion When designing curricula educators need to be mindful that students perceive practice education and professional socialisation have the greatest affect on professional identity formation. The findings reinforce the need for curricula to provide students with a range of practice experiences, which allow the observation and application of occupation-based practices. It highlights a need for educators to provide university-based curricula activities, which better prepare students for a potential dissonance between explicit occupation-based curricula and observed practice education experiences. The study indicates the need for further research into the role curricula content, and in particular practice education, plays in the multidimensional formation of professional development within entry-level programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Knowing how to feel about the Other? Student teachers, and the contingent role of embodiments in educational inequalities.
- Author
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Kitching, Karl, O'Brien, Stephen, Long, Fiachra, Conway, Paul F., Murphy, Rosaleen, and Hall, Kathy
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL equalization ,TEACHER education ,STUDENT teacher attitudes ,TEACHER-student relationships ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper explores affective dimensions to the positioning of teachers within persistent educational inequalities. Drawing on Sara Ahmed’s concept of ‘affective economies’, we argue that inequalities are not maintained through how teachers and student teachers ‘feel about’ ‘different’ students per se. Rather, the very possibility of becoming a particular subject and object of feeling is itself already part of the production of learner differences and inequalities. We examine how affects circulate to shape particular objects (e.g. a teacher’s physical body) and collective attachments to particular signs (e.g. ‘the national teaching body’). We argue that contemporary changes to Irish and European teacher education policy reinforce rather than question educational inequalities. They produce and align ‘shock’ at student underachievement with teachers’ physical and collective bodies, while ‘sympathetically’ responsibilising teachers to professionalise in order to cope with or compensate for persistently ‘different’ and/or underachieving students. To explain how this process is lived and resisted, an analysis of interviews with our own student teachers explores how the affective economy which constitutes teacher education may become contingently directed in socially just or unjust ways. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Partnership in learning between university and school: evidence from a researcher-in-residence.
- Author
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Young, Ann-Marie, O'Neill, Amy, and Mooney Simmie, Geraldine
- Subjects
TEACHER selection ,TEACHERS ,TEACHER education ,EDUCATION ,COLLEGE-school cooperation - Abstract
The status of school placement in the Republic of Ireland has recently been elevated in importance within a reconceptualisation of initial teacher education (ITE). This paper shares the findings from one case study of a school–university partnership enacted in this regard. The partnership involved a researcher-in-residence at the school championing the concept of a structured authentic democratic partnership. The findings show the impact of a champion at the school site in developing professional conversations among a multiplicity of policy actors. An unexpected finding was the depth of higher order peer cooperation achieved in this first iteration of a structured setting by student teachers. However cultural and contextual challenges abound in seeking to build the trust required to enact authentic partnerships in this regard. The findings have significance for the Teaching Council as they build capacity for new and innovative models of the practicum in ITE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Investment in Education and the tests of time.
- Author
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Loxley, Andrew, Seery, Aidan, and Walsh, John
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL finance ,PUBLIC investments ,HUMAN capital ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Thirty years after the publication ofInvestment in Education, Patrick Clancy wrote that the report represented ‘“the” foundation document of education’ in the era since the introduction of economic planning in the late 1950s. This paper considers the importance of the report in disseminating theories of human capital formation (as well as other less recognised influences) among Irish political and educational elites.Investmentcontributed to a seminal shift in educational policy linked to a widely held conviction among politicians, officials and international advisers that education was vital to national economic salvation. This paradigm shift was informed not only by changing domestic priorities driven by a legacy of economic failure but also by wider international trends inseparable from the Cold War, especially the importance accorded to education and technological development as key battlegrounds in the global struggle between the capitalist West and the Soviet Union. Defining ideas ofInvestment– notably increased financing of education as an essential factor in economic development and the necessity for a far-reaching expansion of participation at post-primary and higher levels, not least to meet a perceived shortfall in the supply of well-qualified workers – became central to Irish educational policy over the two generations that followed publication of the report, as illustrated by quantitative trends examined here. Due to the extraordinary persistence of these features over this period, it is worthwhile examining their emergence as lasting forces in an ‘effective history’ of education that is much more than historiographical interpretation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Clinical education of nursing students with learning difficulties: An integrative review (part 1).
- Author
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L'Ecuyer, Kristine M.
- Subjects
EDUCATION of students with disabilities ,NURSING schools ,CINAHL database ,ERIC (Information retrieval system) ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,LEARNING disabilities ,MEDLINE ,NURSES ,PSYCHOLOGY of nursing students ,POPULATION geography ,SCHOOL environment ,SOCIAL stigma ,CLINICAL competence ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,NURSING school faculty ,EDUCATION ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract Schools of Nursing have witnessed an increase in the number of nursing students who struggle with learning difficulties. Support and accommodations are available in academic settings. Because nursing is a practice profession students also learn in clinical settings, which may not have similar support and accommodations. The compatibility of the clinical setting for the education of students with learning difficulties has not been studied. Staff nurses responsible for the clinical education of students and new nurses receive little preparation for their role as educator, and may not feel supported to meet the needs of those with learning difficulties. This is part one in a series of articles about the clinical education of nursing students with learning difficulties. This paper provides a framework and literature review for the development of a study (part 2) exploring the issue from the perspective of the nurse preceptors who educate students and new graduates with learning difficulties. Highlights • There is an increase in the number of students in school of nursing with learning difficulties. • The literature on nursing students with learning difficulties can be understood from the perspectives of nursing schools, faculty, and students. • Nurse educators have a role in preparing the learning environments for students with learning difficulties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Colonialism, education and social change in the British Empire: the cases of Australia, Papua New Guinea and Ireland.
- Author
-
O'Donoghue, Tom
- Subjects
IMPERIALISM & society ,SOCIAL change ,EDUCATION ,ADMINISTRATION of British colonies ,EDUCATION policy ,SOCIAL movements ,HISTORY of education - Abstract
This paper focuses on the history of relations between colonialism, schooling and social change in Australia, Papua New Guinea and Ireland, countries that were once part of the British Empire. It indicates that responses to schooling ranged from acceptance and tolerance, to modification and rejection, depending on the country, the issue, and the historical period. There were also differences in the historical connections in schooling between Britain itself and each country: regarding Australia, the relationship was predominantly unidirectional, from the centre to the Antipodes; in PNG British educational ideas which arrived were filtered through the Australian administration; while in Ireland, British initiatives in schooling contributed not only to social change there, but also helped produce loyal personnel to work in Britain and the colonies. Attention is also given to areas of interdependence and interconnectedness, and to illustrating how conducting such case studies is important in order to help counter alternative interpretations promoted by powerful sectors in society in the interest of reproducing their social privilege. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Conversational repair in speakers with autism spectrum disorder.
- Author
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Volden, Joanne
- Subjects
SPEECH therapy education ,FOREIGN students ,FOREIGN study ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Background: The ability to repair communicative breakdown is an important pragmatic language skill, yet very little is known about it in the population of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Previous investigations have shown that people with ASD, across a variety of ages and language levels, recognized communicative breakdown and responded to requests for clarification (RQCLs) with a wide variety of repair strategies. No previous work has assessed the repair abilities of speakers with ASD when faced with a persistent communicative breakdown indicated by a stacked series of RQCLs. Aims: The present paper aimed to determine whether school-aged, high-functioning children with ASD responded to a stacked series of RQCLs in a way similar to children matched for language age. Methods & Procedures: Nine school-aged, high-functioning children with ASD were recruited and matched to nine control group children based on language level. During conversation, an unfamiliar examiner engineered 10 episodes of communicative breakdown. Each consisted of a stacked series of three RQCLs ('What?', 'I don't understand', 'Tell me another way'). Verbal and non-verbal responses to each RQCL were coded. Reponses were analysed by a series of repeated measures analyses of variance with diagnostic group and RQCL type/position as independent variables and type of repair as the dependent variable. Outcomes & Results: Children with ASD were similar to language age-matched control children in responding to RQCLs and employing a variety of repair strategies. In addition, their pattern of responding over the series of RQCLs was very similar to the controls in varying the repair strategy by adding increasingly more information as the breakdown persisted, i.e. as the sequence of RQCLs progressed. Children with ASD, however, were significantly more likely than language age-matched controls to respond to an RQCL with an inappropriate response. Conclusions: The ability to repair communicative breakdown successfully raises questions about some of the currently popular theories about the source and nature of social and communicative deficits in autism. In addition, the presence of significantly more inappropriate utterances in the group with ASD poses both theoretical and clinical challenges. In theoretical terms, several possible explanations are proposed, but future work will need to test these hypotheses. Clinically, it is important to focus on utterances that disrupt the conversational flow and that generate severe social penalties for the speaker with ASD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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15. Educational homogamy in Ireland and Britain: trends and patterns*.
- Author
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Halpin, Brendan and Tak Wing Chan
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,MARRIAGE ,ECONOMIC development ,WOMEN ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
This paper examines the pattern of educational homogamy in Ireland and Britain. Using contemporary data on recent marriages from the early 1970s through to the mid-1990s, we show that these two countries share a broadly similar pattern of educational homogamy, which is quasi-symmetric in character, with no tendency for women to marry up over and above that which can be attributed to the gender difference in educational attainment. In the 1970s, the strength of homogamy was much weaker in Ireland than in Britain. But we discern a clear inter-country difference in how the net strength of homogamy has changed over time. While it has declined in Britain since the 1970s, in Ireland the strength of homogamy has first increased and then levelled off. Our findings are inconsistent with the inverted U-shaped relationship between economic development and homogamy reported by Smits, Ultee and Lammers (1998) - an argument premised on secular change in the criteria of spouse selection. Instead, our results are better understood in terms of Mare's (1991) life course argument that homogamy is inversely related to the time-gap between school departure and first marriage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Neurology and Neurosurgery Interest Group (NANSIG)—ten years of cultivating interest in clinical neurosciences.
- Author
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Park, Jay J., Ooi, Setthasorn Zhi Yang, Gillespie, Conor S., Bandyopadhyay, Soham, Chowdhury, Yasir A., Solomou, Georgios, Gough, Melissa, Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney, Yanez Touzet, Alvaro, Poon, Michael T. C., Demetriades, Andreas K., Jenkinson, Michael D., and Jenkins, Alistair
- Subjects
CLINICAL neurosciences ,MEDICAL school curriculum ,NEUROSURGERY ,NEUROLOGY ,EDUCATIONAL cooperation - Abstract
Collaboration and successful teamworking are important components of clinical practise, and these skills should be cultivated early in medical school. The breadth of current medical school curricula means that students often have limited exposure to clinical neurosciences. Since its inception in 2009, the Neurology and Neurosurgery Interest Group (NANSIG) has become a national (UK and Republic of Ireland) example of student and junior doctor synergistic collaboration to deliver educational materials, research, conferences, seminars and workshops, as well as advocating for diversity in this field. Recently, it has expanded to incorporate an international audience and cater for a larger group of young medical professionals. The organisation has overcome numerous challenges and is constantly innovating new approaches to harness the necessary knowledge, skills and network to succeed in a career in neurosciences, neurology and neurosurgery. This article summarises the initiatives undertaken by the group over its first 10 years of existence and its organisational structure, as well as its future plans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Assessment as learning: Lessons from the art and design studio.
- Author
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Granville, Gary
- Subjects
ART education ,EDUCATIONAL evaluation ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,DIVERGENT thinking ,DESIGN education ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
The contemporary rhetoric of education policy is replete with references to problem solving, divergent thinking, learning from and through failure, risk-taking and similar desired qualities of education. Yet the connection between the 'new' rhetoric of education policy and the established language of art and design is rarely made. This is especially true in matters of student assessment. Perhaps the truth is that much of the rhetoric of education policy is presented in a deceptive discourse of criticality that masks an essentially different policy orientation: a 'command-economy' model of education. Educationists generally, and art and design educationists in particular, have been weak in challenging or at least questioning the new globalized orthodoxies. This article addresses the fault lines between these fields, with particular reference to the visual arts and suggests some options and implications for education policy. A brief introduction to the curriculum context in Ireland is provided in the first section. The second section comprises the main body: a discussion of fifteen principles of assessment that are derived from the literature of the past few decades. These fifteen principles are grouped in four categories and these are discussed in terms of their implications for curriculum structure and their resonance to with art and design education. The third and final section is a brief reflection on the potential of art and design education to inform general curriculum policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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18. PATRIOTISM, PEDAGOGY AND PROFIT: GALBRAITH AND HAUGHTON'S MATHEMATICAL SERIES (1851-91).
- Author
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DeArce, Miguel, Jackson, Patrick N. Wyse, and McMillan, Norman D.
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,TEXTBOOKS ,CIVIL service ,PATRIOTISM ,MILITARY education ,HISTORY ,HISTORY of education - Abstract
The article discusses the series of courses and textbooks known as the "Mathematical Series" developed by mid-19th century Trinity College Dublin (TCD) fellows Joseph Allen Galbraith and Samuel Haughton (G&H). According to the article, the "Mathematical Series" was developed in order to provide Irish youth the opportunity enter the organization the Indian Civil Service (ICS) and military schools. The article discusses Irish patriotism, the market for the series, and military education.
- Published
- 2015
19. Children's palliative care education and training: developing an education standard framework and audit.
- Author
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Neilson, Susan, Randall, Duncan, McNamara, Katrina, and Downing, Julia
- Subjects
PALLIATIVE treatment ,EDUCATIONAL standards ,AUDITING standards ,PUBLIC health education ,CAREGIVER education - Abstract
Background: The need to align the range of guidance and competencies concerning children's palliative care and develop an education framework have been recommended by a UK All-Party Parliament Group and others. In response to these recommendations the need for a revised children's palliative care competency framework was recognized. A Children's Palliative Care Education and Training Action Group, comprising champions in the field, was formed across UK and Ireland in 2019 to take this work forward. Their aim was to agree core principles of practice in order to standardize children's palliative care education and training. Methods: Over four meetings the Action Group reviewed sources of evidence and guidance including palliative care competency documents and UK and Ireland quality and qualification frameworks. Expected levels of developing knowledge and skills were then agreed and identified competencies mapped to each level. The mapping process led to the development of learning outcomes, local indicative programme content and assessment exemplars. Results: Four sections depicting developing levels of knowledge and skills were identified: Public Health, Universal, Core, Specialist. Each level has four learning outcomes: Communicating effectively, Working with others in and across various settings, Identifying and managing symptoms, Sustaining self-care and supporting the well-being of others. An audit tool template was developed to facilitate quality assurance of programme delivery. The framework and audit tool repository is on the International Children's Palliative Care Network website for ease of international access. Conclusions: The framework has received interest at UK, Ireland and International launches. While there are education programmes in children's palliative care this is the first international attempt to coordinate education, to address lay carer education and to include public health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Female citation impact superiority 1996–2018 in six out of seven English‐speaking nations.
- Author
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Thelwall, Mike
- Subjects
AUTHORS ,AUTHORSHIP ,CIVIL rights ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EDUCATION ,EMPLOYEE selection ,EMPLOYMENT ,ENGLISH language ,GENDER identity ,EMPLOYEE promotions ,PUBLISHING ,SEX discrimination ,SEX distribution ,TIME ,WORK ,CITATION analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Efforts to combat continuing gender inequalities in academia need to be informed by evidence about where differences occur. Citations are relevant as potential evidence in appointment and promotion decisions, but it is unclear whether there have been historical gender differences in average citation impact that might explain the current shortfall of senior female academics. This study investigates the evolution of gender differences in citation impact 1996–2018 for six million articles from seven large English‐speaking nations: Australia, Canada, Ireland, Jamaica, New Zealand, UK, and the USA. The results show that a small female citation advantage has been the norm over time for all these countries except the USA, where there has been no practical difference. The female citation advantage is largest, and statistically significant in most years, for Australia and the UK. This suggests that any academic bias against citing female‐authored research cannot explain current employment inequalities. Nevertheless, comparisons using recent citation data, or avoiding it altogether, during appointments or promotion may disadvantage females in some countries by underestimating the likely greater impact of their work, especially in the long term. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Special Correspondence.
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,BRITISH prime ministers ,LEGISLATIVE bills ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Great Britain's Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone's administration has received a severe blow, and, though it has now come back again in its old shape, its prestige is seriously diminished. The Irish University bill now deceased may be dismissed with a very brief epitaph. Nobody was in favor of it with the exception of the Ministry and their thick-and-thin admirers, and nobody will weep over its remains. The only real question was whether the party ties of the majority were strong enough to stand the strain of so unpopular a measure, and that question has been decided in the negative. Gladstone's normal majority is between 80 and 90; some 35 Irish Roman Catholics deserted on this occasion to the enemy; and the supplement necessary to convert the majority into a minority was derived from the ranks of the discontented Radicals.
- Published
- 1873
22. Exploring why young people with Type 1 diabetes decline structured education with a view to overcoming barriers.
- Author
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Coates, V. E., Horigan, G., Davies, M., and Davies, M. T.
- Subjects
COMMUNICATION ,PEOPLE with diabetes ,EDUCATION ,GLYCOSYLATED hemoglobin ,TYPE 1 diabetes ,MENTAL health ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH self-care ,SELF-efficacy ,WELL-being ,ACQUISITION of data ,HUMAN research subjects ,CROSS-sectional method ,PATIENT selection ,PHYSICAL activity ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DISEASE complications ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Aims To identify factors that influence lack of engagement of young adults with Type 1 diabetes (aged 13-21 years) with structured diabetes education ( SDE) to inform and broaden the reach of future SDE. Methods A quantitative, cross-sectional survey was undertaken of 227 young people with Type 1 diabetes drawn from 11 health trusts across Northern Ireland and England, deemed to be representative of the wider population. Participants were asked to complete a questionnaire exploring non-attendance, along with the Diabetes Care Profile, the Diabetes Empowerment Scale (Short Form), the Diabetes Knowledge Test and the 12-item General Health Questionnaire. Demographic, health and diabetes-specific variables including HbA
1c were also collected. Results The five most commonly cited reasons for non-attendance were 'Had other things to do' (68.3%), 'No time' (62.2%), 'Could not get time off school/college or work' (60.8%), 'Learnt about diabetes from other sources' (55.5%) and 'Feel able to cope on own' (52.9%). Conclusions Greater emphasis is required on communication with young people about the benefits of SDE. In addition, efforts need to be directed to making diabetes education more accessible without losing the quality of structured programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Queen Victoria in Ireland, 1853.
- Author
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Hone, Joseph
- Subjects
ROYAL visitors ,IRELAND description & travel ,HISTORY of exhibitions ,GREAT Britain-Ireland relations ,EDUCATION ,HISTORY ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY of education - Abstract
The article discusses the visit of Queen Victoria of Great Britain to Ireland in 1853, during which she visited the Irish cities of Cork, Dublin, and Belfast. It comments that the occasion of her visit was the Industrial Exhibition held in Dublin that year, and examines her relations with the Exhibition's chief promoter, William Dargan. Other topics explored by the author include relations between Great Britain and Ireland, relations between Catholics and Protestants in Ireland, and the Irish education system.
- Published
- 1953
24. A comparative study of educational provision for children with neurogenetic syndromes: parent and teacher survey.
- Author
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Reilly, C., Senior, J., and Murtagh, L.
- Subjects
NEUROGENETICS ,SPECIAL education ,FRAGILE X syndrome ,COMPARATIVE education ,TEACHER attitudes ,PRADER-Willi syndrome ,CHILDREN ,EDUCATIONAL standards ,BRITISH education system ,EDUCATION ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,COMPARATIVE studies ,FISHER exact test ,MAINSTREAMING in special education ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,PARENTS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SEX distribution ,STATISTICS ,TEACHERS ,WILLIAMS syndrome ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis ,PARENT attitudes ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,DIGEORGE syndrome ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background A number of neurogenetic syndromes have a high association with special educational needs including fragile X syndrome (FXS), Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS), Williams syndrome (WS) and Velo-Cardio-Facial syndrome (VCFS). There is a paucity of research on educational provision for children affected by these syndromes. Method Parents (n =381) and teachers (n= 204) of school-aged children with one of the four syndromes in the UK and Ireland were surveyed in a range of areas concerning the child's educational provision. Areas surveyed included school placement, views on the needs of children with the syndromes, desired changes to current provision and perceived teacher knowledge. Results School placement in mainstream settings decreased with age in all of the syndromes. Males with the syndromes were more likely to be in specialised educational settings with the exception of WS. Teachers reported limited input on initial or subsequent training for all of the syndromes. The majority of teachers did not view the needs of children with syndromes as different from other children with intellectual disability (ID) although there were significant differences between the syndromes. Changes deemed necessary to provision by parents and teachers differed between the syndromes indicating the existence of perceptions of syndrome specific needs. The lowest perceived level of teacher knowledge was in the VCFS group. Conclusion The majority of teachers of children with neurogenetic syndromes report limited knowledge of the syndromes, but also a lack of belief that the children's needs are different from the majority of children with ID. Differences between the syndromes in some areas of provision suggest that a child's syndrome does impact on educational provision in some areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Seeking the Voices of American Indian and Irish Schoolchildren (1820s-1920s): Autobiographical Reminiscence as Historical Source.
- Author
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Coleman, Michael C.
- Subjects
SCHOOL children -- Social aspects ,EDUCATION of Native Americans ,EDUCATION ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,NATIVE American history ,HISTORY of education - Abstract
During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries (ca. 1820s-1920s) the US and British governments utilized elementary education as a tool of assimilation. Huge numbers of Indian and Irish children confronted educational systems designed to separate them from local cultural values. Much top-down official evidence is available for scholars seeking to understand the nature of these campaigns. However, the problem of finding the voices of those at the receiving end--and of attempting to discover pupil agency, as the recent paradigm in childhood research advocates--is especially severe for historians. Unlike anthropologists or sociologists, historians cannot observe or interview as children those whom they study. Occasionally evidence survives of pupils' voices of long ago. But often the historian must rely heavily on autobiographical reminiscences recorded decades later. This article suggests that by employing five critical tests we can use autobiography to gain some sense of narrators' earlier experiences as schoolchildren and of them as active agents in their own lives. Indeed, we often have little else to provide historical perspectives on assimilationist schooling "from the bottom up." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Attitudes of final-year dental students to bleaching of vital and non-vital teeth in Cardiff, Cork, and Malmö.
- Author
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HATHERELL, S., LYNCH, C. D., BURKE, F. M., ERICSON, D., and GILMOUR, A. S. M.
- Subjects
CLINICAL competence ,COMPUTER software ,CONFIDENCE ,DENTAL students ,COSMETIC dentistry ,STUDENT attitudes ,TOOTH whitening ,DATA analysis - Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine attitudes of final-year dental students in Cardiff, Cork and Malmö towards tooth whitening. Following receipt of ethical approval, pre-piloted questionnaires were distributed to final-year dental students in Cork, Cardiff, and Malmö as close as possible to graduation. The questionnaire sought information relating to various opinions and attitudes towards the use of bleaching techniques including safety of bleaching, confidence in the provision of bleaching, recommendations to patients, teaching received, awareness of restrictions on the use of bleaching products and management of simulated clinical scenarios. Eighty three per cent ( n = 116) of questionnaires were returned. Cork dental students had the most didactic teaching (2-h vital, 1-h non-vital bleaching) compared to Cardiff or Malmö students (0 h each). More Cork students regarded bleaching as safe (76%, n = 28) than Cardiff (70%, n = 32) or Malmö (36%, n = 12) students. More than 50% of Cork students feel they know enough about bleaching to provide it in practice, significantly more than Cardiff (<25%) or Malmö (<25%) students. The majority of students would provide vital bleaching after qualification (100% ( n = 37) Cork; 82% ( n = 27) Malmö; 76% ( n = 35) Cardiff). In simulated clinical scenarios, more Cork students would propose bleaching treatments (89% n = 33) than Malmö (64% n = 21) or Cardiff (48% n = 22) students. Variations exist in the attitudes and approaches of three European dental schools towards bleaching. Dental students need to be best prepared to meet the needs of their future patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. '[An] historic culture ... rapidly, universally, and thoroughly restored'? British influence on Irish education since 1922.
- Author
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Limond, David
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL anthropology ,EDUCATION ,CIVIL service - Abstract
This piece concerns the relationship between Ireland and the United Kingdom over the course of some 170-180 years from the early/mid-1800s to the present. It is argued that, despite the expectations of nationalists such as Timothy Corcoran, writing in the immediate aftermath of independence, to whom it seemed both desirable and inevitable that Ireland 'historic [educational] culture' would be 'rapidly, universally, and thoroughly restored', the tendency for educational homogenisation present prior to independence has been continued, and even exacerbated, since. It is suggested that a 'post-colonial overhang' affects Irish policy-makers and bureaucrats in their educational policies and practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Mapping the terrain of female education in Ireland, 1830-1910.
- Author
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Raftery, Deirdre, Harford, Judith, and Parkes, SusanM.
- Subjects
WOMEN'S education ,IRISH people ,EDUCATION policy ,NINETEENTH century ,PROTESTANT women ,CATHOLIC women ,BRITISH politics & government - Abstract
Education for Irish women and girls developed significantly in the period 1830-1910. During this time, formal state-funded education systems were established in Ireland by the British government. Some of these systems included females from their inception and some attempted to exclude girls and women. This article charts the opening up of formal schooling and university to Irish girls and women, examining the points at which they were excluded, the alternative educational provision developed by Protestant women and Catholic religious, and the means whereby the case for female education was successfully made. Moving from the public/private paradigm which has dominated much of the discussion around women's education for the period in question, the article focuses on what was occurring in some political and social institutions of the period and identifies women's agency and autonomy within such institutions. Through 'mapping' this ground, the article notes women's success in gaining access to institutions previously dominated by men, and highlights areas that require sustained scrutiny by scholars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. International students of Speech and Language Therapy in the UK: do we meet their needs?
- Author
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Marshall, Julie, Goldbart, Juliet, and Evans, Ruth
- Subjects
SPEECH therapy education ,FOREIGN students ,FOREIGN study ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Background: Informal evidence suggests that many Speech and Language Therapy (SLT) students from outside of the UK and/or Republic of Ireland who come to the UK either do not return to their home country on qualification or do not practise as SLTs in the public sector. Many factors may contribute to this situation. Concern that it may result in part from a poor match between UK SLT education and the demands of the role in other countries led the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists (RCSLT) to fund a study of international SLT students' experiences of UK qualifying courses. Aims: To discover and describe the experiences, views and expectations of current and past international students studying SLT in the UK and past international students' experiences, views and expectations of practising as SLTS, both inside and outside the UK. To consider the implications of the findings for (1) international students planning to work as SLTs; (2) UK SLT students planning to practise outside the UK; and (3) all those involved in SLT education: educational institutions; supervising SLTs; RCSLT. Methods & Procedures: The study involved distributing 166 postal questionnaires (some directly to (ex)students and some to their Higher Education Institutes, or HEIs) and carrying out 23 interviews, with both current students and those qualifying since May 1994. Quantitative analysis was carried out using SPSS using descriptive statistics. Qualitative analysis used content and thematic analyses. Outcomes & Results: Seventy-one questionnaires were received from current and past students, representing a minimum response rate of 43%. (It was not possible to verify exactly how many questionnaires were distributed by HEIs.) The results describe the diverse range of respondents' experiences of studying and working in the UK, their views of working in their home countries and the UK, and their suggestions about strategies that might be adopted to support them further. The results revealed that students come from a wide diversity of countries, with resulting differences in their experiences. However, there were some commonalities in the perceived advantages and disadvantages of working at home and in the UK. Conclusions: The suggestions for change included practical ideas for change both before and after qualification as an SLT. These included courses about the organization of health, education and social services in the UK, adaptations of course delivery and course work to include cross-cultural/linguistic work and 'home-based' projects. Implications of the findings and strategies for home as well as international SLT students are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The status of information society studies in the information science curriculum.
- Author
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Duff, Alistair S.
- Subjects
INFORMATION society ,INFORMATION science ,CURRICULUM ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Argues for a central role for information society studies in degree programmes. Information society studies is an interdisciplinary specialism devoted to examination of the macrolevel role of information flows and technologies. The views of information science educators on information society studies are appraised. Reports the current status of information society instruction in the information science schools of the UK and Ireland. Investigation shows ten schools run modules on the information society, in some cases as options. The content, methods of instruction and assessment, and other relevant indicators of the condition of information society studies are reported and analysed. Features a discussion of the rationale for inclusion of this specialism in the information science curriculum, and concludes with a "civic" argument for core status, namely that information professionals have a duty to enter the public debate on important information society issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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