20 results
Search Results
2. Creativity as a pastoral concern.
- Author
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Trotman, Dave
- Subjects
- *
CREATIVE ability , *PASTORAL care , *EDUCATION , *CURRICULUM , *YOUNG adults , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
In this paper, the author considers the contribution of creativity to pastoral care in education. Since its advent in English schools in the early 1970s, pastoral care has placed the affective realm and individual enrichment centre stage in both its curriculum aims and teaching approaches. These principles have, however, had much to contend with over the past 50 years; from the obtrusive effects of state intervention in schools, to the challenges confronting young people growing up in increasingly complex societies. For many teachers and practitioners, engaging young people in creative pursuits has come to be regarded as a necessary counterpoint to increasingly performative school cultures and an essential means to enabling vibrant forms of positive self-expression. The power of creative activities has received new impetus as a pastoral concern in light of two national trends. The first as creative arts provision in the curriculum in English state secondary schools declines as a consequence of Government qualification reforms, and second as an increasing number of young people are referred to Alternative Educational Provision with mental health issues. As a consequence, many pastoral educators have turned or, indeed, returned to creativity and creative practices as a primary means of supporting and enriching the lives of young people, particularly for those who now struggle in contemporary school environments. In light of these developments and drawing on research and practice in the field of creativity and pastoral care, this paper aims to cast further light on creativity in pastoral education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Post-racial pedagogy - challenges and possibilities.
- Author
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Singh, Gurnam
- Subjects
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RACE discrimination in education , *DISCRIMINATION in education , *SCHOOL rules & regulations , *SECONDARY education , *SECONDARY school students , *PREVENTION - Abstract
Against the backdrop of ongoing discussions about how best to conceptualise, confront and ultimately eradicate racism, this paper seeks to critically examine the relevance of ‘post-racial’ thinking, both in a general sense, but also in relation to education. The argument is framed around a concern that multi-cultural, and to a lesser extent, anti-racist approaches have become hostage to the very same essentialising practices around ‘race’ thinking that they seek to challenge. This is best illustrated in the plethora of racial, ethnic, geographic, national and religious categories that are currently deployed my many educational institutions in the furtherance of ‘equality and diversity’ policy objectives. In setting out some of the underpinning ideas and controversies linked with the idea of ‘post-racial’, the paper offers some tentative suggestions as to how a ‘post-racial pedagogy’ could be manifested in pedagogical practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. TELLING STORIES ABOUT COMPREHENSIVE EDUCATION: HIDDEN HISTORIES OF POLITICS, POLICY AND PRACTICE IN POST-WAR ENGLAND.
- Author
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Martin, Jane
- Subjects
- *
COMPREHENSIVE school reform , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCABILITY , *MERITOCRACY , *INTELLECT , *HISTORY of education - Abstract
This article re-visits contestation and critique over the nationwide introduction of comprehensive secondary schools in post-war England. In so doing, it considers the contribution of scholar-activist Caroline Benn (1926–2000) and a network of progressive educators who were challenging ideas about fixed ability or potential and aspiring to build a better, more inclusive education system fit for the times. The recent availability of Benn's personal papers opens an opportunity for a deeper understanding of the politics of comprehensive education, to consider the meaning and significance of the policy as our historical perspective lengthens, notably the question of whether legislation was needed to implement so major a reform and foster cultural change in a society characterized by substantial inequalities in income, status and power. It will be argued that we need to challenge contemporary political narratives that seek to normalize academic selection as a force for social justice and high attainment and maintain a belief in the myth of meritocracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Identity projects in complementary and mainstream schools: the views of Albanian and Bulgarian students in England.
- Author
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Tereshchenko, Antonina and Archer, Louise
- Subjects
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EAST Europeans , *ETHNIC schools , *CULTURAL pluralism , *IMMIGRANT students , *IMMIGRANTS , *ALBANIANS , *BULGARIANS , *TEENAGERS , *CHILDREN , *MIDDLE school education , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper contributes to the literature on complementary schools as sites of learning and social and cultural identification. We draw on a small-scale multi-method qualitative study conducted in Albanian and Bulgarian community schools in London to explore the agendas of ‘new’ Eastern European complementary schools with respect to learning and heritage and their impact on migrant students’ identities and experiences with education in the UK. Findings demonstrate that different models of complementary schooling and students’ experiences of mainstream education affected students’ views in different ways. The paper explores how the ‘hard’ and ‘boring’ culture of Bulgarian complementary school resulted in students’ expressions of greater liking for learning in mainstream school and valuing of its multiethnic context. It further examines how practices in another complementary school and students’ wider social experiences resulted in a stronger sense of Albanian heritage identity in students, but in more problematic views of UK cultural diversity. In elaborating these themes we seek to draw some implications for policy and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. School ethnic diversity and White students’ civic attitudes in England.
- Author
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Janmaat, Jan Germen
- Subjects
- *
STUDENTS , *SECONDARY education , *DIVERSITY in education , *IMMIGRANTS , *SOCIAL aspects of trust , *EDUCATION - Abstract
The current paper focuses on White British students in lower secondary education and investigates the effect of school ethnic diversity on their levels of trust and inclusive attitudes towards immigrants. Use is made of panel data of the Citizenship Education Longitudinal Study (CELS) to explore these relationships. Ethnic diversity is measured with the proportion of students in a grade identifying with a minority. In agreement with contact theory, the paper initially finds a positive relation between diversity and inclusive attitudes on immigrants. However, this link disappears once controls for social background, gender and prior levels of the outcome are included in the model. This indicates that students with particular pre-enrollment characteristics have self-selected in diverse schools and that inclusive attitudes have stabilized before secondary education. Diversity further appears to have a negative impact on trust, irrespective of the number of controls added to the model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Student–adult mentoring relationships: experiences from a Scottish school-based programme.
- Author
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Mtika, Peter and Payne, Frances
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER-student relationships , *MENTORING , *EDUCATION , *MENTORS , *HIGH school students , *HIGH school student attitudes , *SECONDARY education , *SERVICES for students - Abstract
Background: This article reports on a mentoring programme which was implemented in selected Scottish secondary schools with the view to supporting students with school work, transition to further education/higher education, careers, and interpersonal skills. Mentoring students can enhance their academic, social, career and other outcomes. Mentoring relationships, when properly implemented, have been found also to yield positive results for mentors. Purpose: This paper is an investigation into a school-based mentoring programme which was implemented in 6 selected Scottish secondary schools. In so doing, we hope to contribute to an evolving framework for designing and implementing successful school-based mentoring. Sample: The sample for this study included 10 students aged between 16 and 17 years old in the second year of a broader 2-year business/education project, which aimed to promote student uptake of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) careers after secondary school. There were 11 mentors, who were drawn mainly from the science, health and the education sectors. Design and method: Methodologically, this study was qualitative interpretivist in nature. Data collection involved focus group discussion and individual semi-structured interviews. Results: The findings show mentee and mentor preparation, clarity of expectations, mentee–mentor matching, mentee motivation, appropriateness of meeting spaces and power relations, modes of communication including the use of social media, and the role of schools as essential conditions which influenced the quality of mentoring relationships. Conclusion: The findings suggest that mentoring programmes involving students in school and ‘external’ adult mentors need to consider a range of factors to achieve success when designing and implementing mentoring. This paper raises important issues for example, communication using social media, which have implications for practice in business sector and school partnerships involved in school-based mentoring. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The effects of setting on classroom teaching and student learning in mainstream mathematics, English and science lessons: a critical review of the literature in England.
- Author
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Wilkinson, Shaun D. and Penney, Dawn
- Subjects
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ABILITY grouping (Education) , *CLASSROOM dynamics , *LITERATURE reviews , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *EDUCATION , *MATHEMATICS education , *ENGLISH language education , *SCHOOL children , *TEENAGERS , *ELEMENTARY education , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
In England and Wales government pressures to raise attainment has led many schools to implement structured “ability” grouping in the form of setting. The introduction of selective grouping has been justified with the assumption that the differentiation of students by “ability” advances students’ motivation, social skills, independence and academic success in national tests and examinations because students are “better engaged in their own learning”. This paper critically engages with this assumption. Drawing upon qualitative research conducted in primary and secondary mathematics, science and English setted classrooms in England the aim of this literature review is to consider how teachers’ pedagogic practices with low, middle and high “ability” sets facilitates and/or constrains students’ learning and potential achievement. We also explore why, despite strenuous criticism and moves towards egalitarianism in schools, the segregation of students on the basis of “ability” continues to be a common feature in schools in England and Wales. This literature review draws attention to a number of substantive issues including (but not restricted to) fixed and permanent grouping; the potential misplacement of students to sets and a culture of stereotyping where learners within a set are taught as a single homogenous unit. We conclude the paper by suggesting foci for future research in the hope of eliciting renewed critical interest in and investigation of setting by “ability” in a broader range of subjects of the curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. 'Being' in the coaching world: new insights on youth performance coaching from an interpretative phenomenological approach.
- Author
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Cronin, Colum and Armour, Kathleen M.
- Subjects
- *
SPORTS research , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *COACHING (Athletics) , *LIFEWORLD , *ESSENTIALISM (Philosophy) , *YOUNG adults , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Since Heidegger's influential text; Being and time (1927/2005), the phenomenological question of what it means to 'be' has generated a vast body of work. This paper reports data from a phenomenological study that investigated what it means to 'be' a youth performance coach. An overview of the interpretive phenomenological methods used is followed by presentation of coaches and data. Data analysis resulted in the identification of three constituent 'essences' of youth performance coaching: (i) care; (ii) a commitment to educate athletes authentically for corporeal challenges to come; and (iii) working with others to achieve a specialised corporeal excellence. The three identified essences manifest themselves in a broad lifeworld that includes settings on and off the field of play (FOP). Given the very different insights into the practice of coaching that emerge from this study, we argue it would be useful for future studies of coaching practice and coach education to extend their focus to take into account coaches' wider lives both on and off the FOP. We also argue for further exploration of coaching by drawing on phenomenological concepts such as care and relationality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Schools That Work for Everyone: the Green Paper.
- Author
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Waterman, Chris
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *SECONDARY education , *CHILDREN , *SCHOOLS - Abstract
The author comments on the British government's ambition to create an education system that offers all children, whatever their background, with schooling that will aid them attain their potential. He says that the intention that selective schools should sponsor a non-selective school, or that an independent school would give greater benefit to ordinary families by setting up a free school is not probably to expand the number of good school places available to all families.
- Published
- 2016
11. EPI calls for rigorous "back-up" assessments to be taken by pupils instead of mocks, and used if summer exams are cancelled again.
- Subjects
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GENERAL Certificate of Secondary Education , *HIGH school exams , *A-level examinations , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *EDUCATION , *TEENAGERS , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
The article focuses on the recommendations of Education Policy Institute (EPI) on how the government should proceed with testing and examinations for the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) and A-level exams in England in 2021. Some of the recommendations include providing greater optionality in exam papers so that students would have a better chance of answering questions, allowing some grade inflation and also forming a back-up plan for exams in the case of cancellation.
- Published
- 2020
12. When and why do initially high-achieving poor children fall behind?
- Author
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Crawford, Claire, Macmillan, Lindsey, and Vignoles, Anna
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement , *LOW-income students , *CHILDREN of the rich , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SCHOOL children , *TEENAGERS , *ELEMENTARY education , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATION - Abstract
In this paper, we examine the trajectories of initially higher- and lower-achieving children from lower and higher socio-economic status families from primary school through to university in England for the first time. We also explore what explains these trajectories. This enables us to provide new insights into when and why the performance of children with similar initial achievement diverges on the basis of their socio-economic background. Our results indicate that pupils from poor backgrounds who are higher achievers in primary school fall behind their better-off but lower-achieving peers during secondary school. This suggests that secondary school may be a critical period to intervene to prevent poor children from falling behind their richer peers. Our analysis suggests that there is less divergence in performance between pupils from different socio-economic backgrounds who attend the same schools. This result is particularly strong for children with low initial achievement. While we remain cautious about the implications of these findings, they provide suggestive evidence that schools (or the sorting of pupils into schools) play an important role in explaining why the test scores of richer and poorer children diverge over time. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Seeing disadvantage in schools: exploring student teachers’ perceptions of poverty and disadvantage using visual pedagogy.
- Author
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White, M. L. and Murray, Jean
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER education , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *POVERTY , *SOCIAL classes , *COLLEGE students , *TEENAGERS , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper describes exploratory research into the development of innovative visual pedagogies for investigating how pre-service student-teachers articulate their views about the effects of poverty on educational attainment. Social class emerges as the strongest factor in poverty and educational disadvantage in the UK. The resulting issues are often awkward for students to discuss and conventional pedagogies may not have effective ‘reach’ here. Findings from this study showed that the visual methods deployed gave students pedagogically well-structured spaces for the expression and exchange of a diversity of views about poverty and social class, engaging them in both heated discussions and prolonged ‘silences’. However, the pedagogies did not challenge the stereotypical deficit models of ‘the poor’ which some students expressed. Nevertheless, we argue that reconfigured versions of these visual pedagogies have considerable potential for innovative social justice work in teacher education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Playing out loud: Videogame references as resources in friend interaction for managing frames, epistemics, and group identity.
- Author
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Sierra, Sylvia
- Subjects
- *
VIDEO games , *EPISTEMICS , *GROUP identity , *BOYS , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This study examines how friends in their mid-twenties appropriate texts from videogames they have played to serve particular functions in their everyday face-to-face conversations. Speakers use references to the videogames Papers, Please and The Oregon Trail to shift the epistemic territories of conversations when they encounter interactional dilemmas. These epistemic shifts simultaneously rekey formerly problematic talk (on topics like rent, money, and injuries) to lighter, humorous talk, reframing these issues as being part of a lived videogame experience. Overlapping game frames are laminated upon real-life frames, and are strengthened by embedded frames containing constructed dialogue. This study contributes to understanding how epistemic shifts relying on intertextual ties can shift frames during interactional dilemmas in everyday conversation, which is ultimately conducive to group identity construction. (Intertextuality, framing, epistemics, identity, interactional sociolinguistics, discourse analysis, humor, videogames)* [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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15. Using a “Literacy across the curriculum” intervention using self-regulation.
- Author
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Bentham, Jo, Davies, Peter, and Galbraith, David
- Subjects
- *
LITERACY , *CURRICULUM , *SELF regulation , *SCHOOLS , *NEW business enterprises , *TEENAGERS , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper describes an exploratory trial conducted with 14–15 year-old students in English state schools who were studying business start-ups as part of a course in “Business Studies”. The intervention uses a “Story Grammar” strategy to improve students’ reasoning by increasing the frequency and complexity of their use of “connectives” such as “when”, “if” and “because”. The analysis reports positive effects of the intervention on students’ understanding as judged by the use of a standard examination style mark scheme, and the number and complexity of connectives used by students in their extended writing. By reporting effects on immediate target variables we are able to examine the causation with precision. Effects are reported through standardt-tests and effect size. We also discuss the design of the experiment and comment on its practicability as a model for investigating effects of classroom interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Music theatre: at the crest of music education's third wave.
- Author
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Legg, Robert and Green, Alex
- Subjects
- *
MUSIC education , *MUSIC theater , *CURRICULUM , *EDUCATIONAL ideologies , *SECONDARY education , *HERMENEUTICS - Abstract
In the United Kingdom, curricular music education has seen two main waves of development and is in the process of shaping a third. Ideas from the second wave have maintained theoretical dominance to the present day, despite the concerns expressed by some about their practical implementation. This paper suggests that problems with the implementation of second-wave ideas have been caused by hermeneutic complexities inherent to the word ‘music’ as well as by an ongoing ideological debate about the proper purpose of music education. It is proposed here that by approaching musical learning in the emergent third wave through the sub-discipline of ‘music theatre’ – and by conceiving that term in its broadest sense – this interpretive difficulty can be avoided whilst many practical advantages may be reaped. The notion of music theatre as a key component of music education's third wave is explored alongside its theoretical prerequisites, and a number of questions are identified for further consideration. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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17. Pupil Mobility: Using Students' Voices to Explore their Experiences of Changing Schools.
- Author
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Messiou, Kyriaki and Jones, Lisa
- Subjects
- *
HIGH school student attitudes , *TRANSFER of students , *PSYCHOLOGY of high school students , *STUDENT mobility , *STUDENT attitudes , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation in adolescence , *SECONDARY education , *TEENAGERS - Abstract
This article explores the ways in which students' voices can be used to analyse the process of moving schools, at a time outside of those that young people normally change schools. The paper is based on a study in a secondary school and uses qualitative data collected by researchers and student co-researchers. Two areas were raised by students as important about being at a new school: the perceived challenges and their perceptions of learning in a new environment. It is argued that to respond to issues that arise due to mobility, an engagement with students' views is necessary. Furthermore, this can facilitate policy-makers, school leaders and educators in providing more effective support for those young people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. 'I don't see how that makes me a gori (White girl)': The multiple and problematic identities of academically successful Pakistani students.
- Author
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Sultana, Anjam
- Subjects
- *
PAKISTANIS , *ACHIEVEMENT gap , *RACE discrimination in education , *SCHOOL environment , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *EDUCATION of minorities , *TEENAGERS , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATION ,RACE relations in Great Britain - Abstract
This paper reports on research that sought to explore how educational settings influence the educational experiences, identity development and academic attainment of students of Pakistani heritage, as they progress to higher education (HE). Research has highlighted the continued attainment gap that exists between White and minority ethnic students in Britain (Strand, 2014). Locally, in a West Midlands authority , public examination and National Curriculum assessment data in 2012, demonstrated, despite improvements, gaps in achievement for Pakistani students, who were identified as a group at risk of underachieving. The study focused on students at a Russell Group university, as much research showed that very few British Pakistani students managed to gain entry into more prestigious, pre-1992 universities (Bhatti, 2011; Gillborn, 2008). The research took a phenomenological approach to explore the lived experiences of five Pakistani students, through semi-structured interviews. Five superordinate themes were abstracted from interview data and one of these themes, 'multiple identities', is presented and discussed here and illuminates the complex and multiple ways in which educational institutions influence the educational experiences of Pakistani students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Counter-narratives of educational excellence: free schools, success, and community-based schooling.
- Author
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Gerrard, Jessica
- Subjects
- *
BRITISH education system , *HISTORY of education policy , *FREE schools , *PLACE-based education , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SOCIAL classes , *EDUCATIONAL objectives , *SOCIALISTS , *SCHOOL children , *TEENAGERS , *ELEMENTARY education , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATION ,BLACK British - Abstract
The notion of ‘competitive excellence’ is an enduring cornerstone of UK educational policy. Most recently, expanding and adapting New Labour’s Academy project with the introduction of free schools, the Coalition’s approach advances and embeds competitive market-based forms of community engagement in education. Responding to this policy paradigm, this paper draws upon history in order to open up the notion of excellence. Through examining alternative practices of achievement and success in histories of community education, I aim to disturb the unquestioned attachment of educational excellence to the ideals of competitive meritocracy. Comparing across two community educational movements – Socialist Sunday Schools (established 1892) and Black Saturday Schools (established 1968) – I explore how achievement and excellence have been mobilised to very different educational aims. In distinct times and circumstances, both of these community initiatives practiced versions of educational achievement that challenged dominant knowledge hierarchies and underlying assumptions of incapability. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Government abandons plans to ensure that selective schools help poorer children.
- Subjects
- *
POOR children , *SECONDARY schools , *SELECTIVE admission (School) , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATION - Abstract
The article reports that the British government has abandoned plans to help poor children attend selective schools (SS). Topics mentioned include the need for grammar schools (GS) to improve their admission for disadvantaged students, and the ideas proposed in the Department for Education's Green Paper entitled "Schools that Work for Everyone" including links between GS and non-selective schools.
- Published
- 2017
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