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2. THE EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND OF BRITISH ARMY OFFICERS.
- Author
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Otley, C. B.
- Subjects
- *
ARMY officers , *EDUCATION , *PROFESSIONAL education , *ACADEMIC achievement , *QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
This paper presents an historical and statistical analysis of the pre-professional education of officers of various sectors and levels of the British Army between 1800 and 1971. 'Four eras' in the evolution of educational selectivity in the army commissioning system are identified: 1800-1849---educational criteria irrelevant; 1849-I 870-partial educational selectivity; 1870-1939-examination-dominated selection; 1941 onwards- `scientific' selection. In the light of this historical pattern, it was anticipated that the officer corps would show a heavy dependence on the elite sector of education, although also, over time, a reduction in this dependence. Examination of figures for membership of Woolwich (1855-1939), of Sandhurst (1890-1967), of the army elite (1870-1971), and of the officer corps as a whole (1969) verified these predictions. Officership proves to have been a virtual monopoly of the public schools-amongst whom the major boarding schools were predominant at least up to the Second World War, and even since then public school boys have predominated at every level of the army until quite recently. However, it is also clear that an irreversible decline in the role of the public schools has now set in, and that state sector schools are now taking over the major role in the supply of new officers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
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3. Learning for reality.
- Author
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Bendall E
- Subjects
- *
NURSE-patient relationships , *OCCUPATIONAL training , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper gives a brief description of a research project carried out to test the assumption that there is a relationship between a student nurse's description, on paper, of how she would care for a patient, and the actual observed behaviour. No relationship was found in more than two-thirds of subjects in 19 hospitals. The paper goes on to look at the possible reasons for this phenomenon and suggests alterations in the training programmes for nurses in England and Wales which could crate a greater correlation between the theory and practice of nursing. The views expressed are those of the author and not necessarily of any organization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. SUBSTANTIVE DOGS AND METHODOLOGICAL TAILS: A QUESTION OF FIT.
- Author
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Bechhofer, Frank
- Subjects
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EDUCATIONAL sociology , *COLLEGE students , *CONTENT analysis , *SOCIALIZATION , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper examines, with some reference to a content analysis of three British journals, the methodological orientation of current British sociology in order to argue that most graduate students as a consequence of their undergraduate socialization are unlikely to wish to take advantage of formal methodology courses at the graduate level, at least in so far as these are highly technical in content. Some of the implications of the argument for sociology in Britain generally, for undergraduate methods teaching and for the structure of graduate education are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
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5. The Cuts in British Higher Education: a symposium.
- Author
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Reid, Ivan, Brennan, John, Waton, Alan, and Deem, Rosemary
- Subjects
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EDUCATIONAL sociology , *HIGHER education , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *SOCIOLOGY , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This section presents several articles offering sociologists' views on cuts in British higher education as of 1984. John Brennan contributes a nation-wide view of the cuts in the public sector, outlines institutional policies and prejudices and suggests strategies for survival. His paper also shows that the distinctive ecology of public sector higher education poses both threats and opportunities for sociology. Meanwhile, Alan Waton provides a macro-view of the UGC action. Rosemary Deem writers of her experience as a County Councilor involved in working for the retention of courses in a public sector college and provides the only contribution with a happy ending. Also Ivan Reid discussed the problems and potentials of strategies for survival. According to Brennan, there never was a golden age for the polytechnics. He further said that they have experienced cuts and financial stringency over a long period of time. He also said that the effects have been gradual and have become almost taken for granted. Ivan Reid stated that it is difficult to establish whether sociology and sociology of education face threats over and above that posed to higher education in general. The intimate relationship of sociology of education with teacher education has meant that it has shared the fate of closures and cut-backs with the other disciplines of education and faced many of these well before the present situation.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
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6. Judging Teachers: the social and political contexts of teacher evaluation.
- Author
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Grace, Gerald
- Subjects
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EDUCATIONAL sociology , *TEACHERS , *POLITICAL science , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper argues that the assessment and evaluation of teachers in state provided schooling in Britain has never been simply a matter of technical competence. Judging teachers has always involved social, ideological and political considerations which have varied in different historical periods. An analysis is made of attempts to apply principles and procedures of assessment especially to teachers in urban working class schools. It is shown that these attempts have historically moved from a 'visible' strategy of direct imposition and surveillance to an 'invisible' strategy through the ethic of legitimated professionalism. Current developments in British schooling suggest, however, a possible return to more direct and visible procedures as 'teacher incompetence' is placed at the center of the education problem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
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7. Overrating inequality and ignoring the difference: a reply to Mahon.
- Author
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Murphy, J.
- Subjects
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EQUALITY , *EDUCATION , *CLASS differences , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
In a previous paper published in "British Journal of Sociology," the author made the claim that despite decades of intensive investigation, not a single researcher had ever shown that class difference in education was indeed unfair and unjust. It was a charge that was underwritten by a simple, if technical, argument, which drew attention to what, in logic, would have to be shown if such a difference was to be regarded as an inequality, rather than as just another difference in a differentiated society. In this case, it was suggested that, other things being equal, the researcher would have to meet one of two conditions. He would have to show that the different classes were similarly disposed to education or, alternatively, if there were evidence, as in Great Britain, of considerable working-class indifference to education, he would need to demonstrate that such indifference was itself the result of structural or cultural inequality. Only then, it was argued, could the researcher be said to have reasonably shown that class difference in education was unfair; for only then could the researcher be reasonably sure that such a difference was not, after all, just another difference.
- Published
- 1986
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8. THE POLITICAL CONSTRUCTION OF MASS SCHOOLING: EUROPEAN ORIGINS AND WORLDWIDE INSTITUTIONALIZATION.
- Author
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Ramirez, Francisco O. and Boli, John
- Subjects
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POLITICAL development , *INSTITUTIONALIZED persons , *EDUCATION , *SCHOOL administration , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This paper examines the origins of state educational systems in Europe in the nineteenth century and the institutionalization of mass education throughout the world in the twentieth century. We offer a theoretical interpretation of mass state-sponsored schooling that emphasizes the role of education in the nation-building efforts of states competing with one another within the European interstate system. We show that political, economic, and cultural developments in Europe led to a model of the legitimate national society that became highly institutionalized in the European (and later, world) cultural frame. This model made the construction of a mass educational system a major and indispensable component of every modern state's activity. We discuss the usefulness of this perspective for understanding recent cross-national studies of education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
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9. QUALITY ASSURANCE EDUCATION AND TRAINING IN THE U.K.
- Author
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Oakland, John S. and Grayson, Ric
- Subjects
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QUALITY assurance , *QUALITY control , *EMPLOYEE training , *GUIDELINES , *INDUSTRIAL management , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper deals with the part that education and training plays in the achievement of quality. The initial section examines the role of the Government sponsored Directory of Quality Training and Education in the U.K. and the aims of the National Quality Campaign. It assesses how successful the courses outlined in the Directory might be in providing sufficient stimulus for a change in attitude towards quality within industry particulraly with regard to satisfying the identified aims of the campaign. The conclusions that are drawn as a result indicate that there are several problems that need to be resolved before progress can be assured. The final section details what progress has already been made in the pursuit of improved quality and looks at various alternative methods of education and training that have been proposed to aid the process of change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
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10. ENGINEERING EDUCATION IN BRITAIN AND JAPAN: SOME REFLECTIONS ON THE USE OF `THE BEST PRACTICE' MODELS IN INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON.
- Author
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McCormick, Kevin
- Subjects
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ENGINEERING , *GRADUATES , *INDUSTRIALIZATION , *EDUCATION - Abstract
International comparisons of engineering graduate numbers are frequently used as indices of industrial development and measures of the responsiveness of the educational system to industrial requirements. Such comparisons make implicit assumptions about quality by assuming that like institutions or like qualifications are being compared. In this paper the concept of 'best practice' engineering education is derived from engineering manpower reports of German engineering education in order to address issues of both quantity and quality in comparing engineering education in Britain and Japan. Japan is found to have associated engineering education with relatively more prestigious institutions and to have attracted a higher proportion of more able male pupils to broad based engineering education compared to Britain. Yet there are some interesting differences between the model of 'best practice' engineering education based on Germany and Japanese practice, particularly in curricula, which underline the importance of the division of labour between education and employment in the education and training of engineers. Examining the responsiveness of educational systems through propositions derived from a model of 'best practice' rather than through simple output statistics underlines the importance of different patterns of institutional development, the role of the state, educational and occupational selection, and status within the curriculum for understanding the variety of contemporary engineering education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
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11. Education, Training and Economic Performance.
- Author
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Mardle, George, Woodhall, Maureen, and Bray, Mark
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ECONOMIC policy , *EDUCATION , *INTERNATIONAL competition , *STUDENTS - Abstract
This article examines the special issue of the Oxford Review of Economic Policy journal entitled Education, Training and Economic Performance. In a speech to the annual conference of the Association of Colleges of Further and Higher Education in London on February 15, 1989, Kenneth Baker, British Secretary of State for Educational and Science, speaking on Further Education a new strategy, talked about the problems of sludge speak, which dominates the rhetoric of further education and has to be translated into everyday language. If one examines the sludge speak of his speech and the vision of further education he has, then it is clear that in everyday language people might conclude, in polite phraseology, that is a real mess. This series of papers from the Oxford Review of Economic Policy provides a clear set of well-argued articles which students of the field should find more than useful in their essays and dissertation work. The special issue begins with a historical review of education, training and economic performance and quotes a lecture in 1852 on Industrial Instruction on the Continent which argued that improvements in technical education were urgently required if British manufacturers were to maintain their lead over foreign competitors.
- Published
- 1989
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12. A point to the people: Teachers, policies and unemployment.
- Author
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Walker, John
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *UNEMPLOYED people - Abstract
Evaluates the development of educational training in relation to unemployment in Great Britain. Lack of theoretical writing on adult education of empirical studies; Funding of schemes for unemployed adults by the Employment Service; Examination of papers published by the Manpower Services Commission; Growth of rate unemployed adults.
- Published
- 1990
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13. British Endodontic Society proposals for recruitment of instructors for 'hands-on' courses for general dental practitioners.
- Author
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Hoskinson, A. E.
- Subjects
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ENDODONTICS , *DENTISTRY , *DENTISTS , *CURRICULUM , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper addresses the problem of the insufficient number of instructors available for `hands-on' endodontic courses for dental practitioners throughout the UK. The Council of the British Endodontic Society proposes the setting up of regional endodontic study clubs. Subsequently, some study club members will be encouraged to present `hands-on' courses to other practitioners in their region. It is hoped that Area Representatives of the Council, who will organize the study clubs, will be found among the university teachers of endodontics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
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14. Restructuring Teacher Education in Australia.
- Author
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Bartlett, Leo, Knight, John, and Lingard, Bob
- Subjects
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TEACHER training , *OCCUPATIONAL training , *EDUCATION , *QUALITY assurance - Abstract
Debate on teacher quality and quality in teaching and teacher education has been as vigorous in Australia as it has been in the UK and the USA In Australia, however, reform in teacher education has been subsumed within a national metapolicy of corporate federalism which is an amalgam of beliefs or discourses including neo-corporatism, economic rationalism, corporate managerialism and human capital The paper analyses the most recent document on reform of teacher education in Australia (the Ebbeck Report) and shows how its policy formulation is influenced by the discourse of corporate federalism It also shows how micro-economic reform in this sector is related to reforms in other sectors of education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
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15. Assumptions in People's Talk about AIDS.
- Author
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Willig, Carla
- Subjects
- *
AIDS , *AIDS awareness , *HEALTH education , *MEDICAL communication , *ADVERTISING campaigns , *HEALTH risk communication , *SOCIAL psychology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research - Abstract
Government AIDS education campaigns are based on a number of tacit assumptions. They presuppose that an increase in knowledge of HIV transmission routes will produce behavior change in and of itself. In addition, the major slogans used in nationwide media campaigns make three further assumptions: 1. there are objective facts that are undisputably true, 2. such facts can be assessed via scientific inquiry, and 3. individual freedom of behavioral choice. Research reported in this paper aims to assess to what extent a consensus with regard to these assumptions can be expected among ‘the general public’. The material presented in this paper is based on a series of depth interviews with 12 representative individuals. Qualitative analysis of interview transcripts via the identification of fundamental assumptions about the world in respondents' discourse revealed a concern with emotional and psychological factors which is not matched by national AIDS slogans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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16. Education Markets, Choice and Social Class: the market as a class strategy in the UK and the USA [1].
- Author
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Ball, Stephen J.
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *CHOICE (Psychology) , *SOCIAL classes - Abstract
The market alternative in education is gaining ground in policy-making circles on both sides of the Atlantic. Parental choice and school competition are seen as ways of achieving reform and raising standards while at the same time reducing State intervention into education planning. This paper interrogates the arguments made for markets and against public monopoly schooling,, and it is argued that on both counts of advocates are partial and flawed. The failure to address the bases and effects of inequalities of the market are given particular attention. It is argued that markets in education provide the possibility for the pursuit of class advantage and generate a differentiated and stratified system of schooling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
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17. Historians welcome new openness.
- Author
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Ince, Martin
- Subjects
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ARCHIVES , *EDUCATION ,BRITISH history - Abstract
Reports on the reaction of historians to the White Paper on open government. Victory in the battle to get access to key documents in modern British history; Release of documents whenever possible; Right of appeal to a committee headed by the Lord Chancellor; Problems in finding enough civil servants to review documents for release.
- Published
- 1993
18. How to Keep a Good Woman Down: an investigation of the role of institutional factors in the process of discrimination against women academics.
- Author
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Bagilhole, Barbara
- Subjects
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WOMEN educators , *SEX discrimination , *EDUCATION , *WOMEN'S studies , *EDUCATIONAL sociology - Abstract
Women constitute a very small minority of the full time academic staff in British universities and are concentrated in the lower grades. Statistical evidence points to the fact that an important reason for this is that discrimination exists within the academic profession. However, there is very little empirical information on the nature of this discrimination and the institutional processes that serve to maintain it. The study reported here seeks to identify and illuminate these processes through the experiences and perceptions of women academies themselves. A total of 43 women were interviewed at length using a semi-structured interview schedule, exploring issues such as recruitment and selection, probation, career development, appraisal, positions of power and the roles of women academics. It is suggested, in this paper, that we can begin to understand some of the factors which limit women's access to and success within the profession by examining the evidence of women who have survived within the system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
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19. Answer the questionnaire, it's pay-risible.
- Author
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Wragg, Ted
- Subjects
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EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATION , *WIT & humor - Abstract
Presents a questionnaire which makes fun of the British government's education policy for 1993. Rule on opting out under the 1993 Education Act; Title of the government's White Paper; Objectives of the Dearing Committee; Rules on sex education; Truancy figures for 1994; Policy on training; Meaning of OFSTED; Role of the lay inspector; Health hazards facing head teachers; More.
- Published
- 1993
20. Sociological Analysis and Education Management: the social context of the self-managing school.
- Author
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Angus, Lawrence
- Subjects
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EDUCATIONAL sociology , *PERIODICALS , *SOCIAL sciences , *EDUCATIONAL change , *EDUCATION - Abstract
In this paper I take issue with the claim of Ozga (1992) that because of the poor quality of many recent texts on education management, and their lack of a sociological perspective, they are not proper material for analysis in the British Journal of Sociology of Education. I argue that sociological analysis of such texts is an urgent priority because they have gained credibility among education practitioners and provide a spurious legitimacy to new right policy directions. This general argument is illustrated by focussing on four specific limitations of one of the most popular current texts on education management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
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21. Aiming higher than Dearing?
- Author
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Spours, Ken and Young, Michael
- Subjects
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EDUCATION - Abstract
Provides information on the Sir Ron Dearing's report and the 1991 White Paper, Education and Training for the 21st Century. Information on the proposals launched by the Labour Party called `Aiming Higher'; Key weaknesses of Sir Ron Dearing's proposal; Issues discussed in Dearing's report; Overall view of Great Britain's educational system.
- Published
- 1996
22. More delegation, but no more money.
- Author
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Merrick, Neil
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *POLITICAL science - Abstract
Reports that the proposals for extending local management included in Great Britain Government's White Paper in June, 1996 could lead to bitter arguments between heads and local education authorities. Reference to arguments being over whether sufficient money is currently delegated to schools; Question that will be at the heart of the debate; Details on the potential school budget; Focus on Local Education Authority. INSET: Potential schools budget..
- Published
- 1996
23. Workforce skills under fire.
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EDUCATION , *EMPLOYMENT & education , *PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
Reveals the findings of a skills audit for Britain's Competitiveness White Paper indicating the lack of basic skills in its workforce. Comparisons with other European countries that has been criticized as meaningless and mere distractions by leading educationists; Comments by Professor Alan Smithers of Brunel University; Impact on the general elections.
- Published
- 1996
24. A new way up the ladder.
- Author
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Carlton, Elaine
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Reports on the response of education officials in Hertfordshire, England to the British government's two White Papers that set national targets for education and training to improve competitiveness. Evaluation of performance of local schools; County council projections showing how students were likely to perform at A-level.
- Published
- 1996
25. When even the winners are losers: evaluating the experiences of top set` students.
- Author
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Boaler, Jo
- Subjects
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BRITISH students , *UNDERACHIEVEMENT , *EDUCATION - Abstract
In this paper I present some of the results of a three-year case study of a mathematics department in a UK school that taught in setted` groups. Interviews, observations, questionnaires, and assessment data are used to show the way in which high ability students, particularly girls, underachieved and became disaffected as a result of being in the top set`. Various qualitative and quantitative results of the case study are used to show the way in which top sets can diminish, rather than enhance, achievement for high ability students. It is also suggested that the gender inequalities in mathematics achievement that continue to prevail among the top five per cent of students may partly be caused by features of top set` learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Poorer students may be left in cold.
- Author
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Thomson, Alan
- Subjects
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EDUCATION costs , *LOW-income students , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Reports on the impact of the increase tuition fees on British underprivileged students. Concerns on the proposed fees; Life-long Learning white paper basis of the increase; Composition of the decision-making body.
- Published
- 1997
27. Critical Mass and Pedagogic Continuity: Studies in academic habitus.
- Author
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Delamont, Sara, Parry, Odette, and Atkinson, Paul
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EDUCATION , *SOCIALIZATION , *GRADUATE education , *GRADUATE students , *RESEARCH teams , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence - Abstract
The paper is based on ethnographic work with doctoral students, their supervisors and postdoctoral researchers in three contrasting disciplines biochemistry, artificial intelligence and physical geography It explores how stability and continuity in scientific disciplines are sustained through socialisation processes of doctoral research It identities the inter-generational transmission of knowledge, skills and assumptions within the institutional setting of laboratory or the research group Working on `standardised packages' in such social contexts, doctoral students are enculturated into scientific work Despite setbacks and uncertainties in getting their research to `work' doctoral students express faith that their problems are `doable' Drawing on these empirical findings we suggest that these forms of pedagogic continuity are of more significance in the enculturation of doctoral students and the reproduction of scientific knowledge than the presence or absence of a `critical mass' of active researchers (as has been suggested by the recent Horns renew of postgraduate education in the UK) We therefore suggest that recent UK policy formation that has emphasized the notion of critical mass deserves critical scrutiny, and that there is need for perspectives more sensitive to disciplinary cultures and departmental organization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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28. The provision of education and opportunities for future employment for pregnant schoolgirls and schoolgirl mothers in the UK.
- Author
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Dawson, Nona
- Subjects
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TEENAGE pregnancy , *MOTHERHOOD , *TEENAGE mothers , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper will report on the results of three recent surveys into educational provision for pregnant schoolgirls and schoolgirl mothers: these surveys have examined the position in England and Wales, and for the first time, in Scotland and in Northern Ireland. As well as reporting what is currently available for young mothers in the UK, the paper will raise issues of entitlement to a full education for these young women, issues of equal opportunity and issues of access. It will seek to point to questions that need to be considered in terms of policy for young mothers and their children. The political debate in the UK has recently centred on the notion of these young women being a drain on the national purse. This paper will seek to address this notion, and will point to the need for access to credible courses leading to employment and childcare in order to increase the chances of these young women becoming taxpayers, and good parents. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Conductive Education and the Politics of Disablement.
- Author
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Read, Janet
- Subjects
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PRACTICAL politics , *SOCIOLOGY of disability , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *DISABILITIES , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Conductive Education has been characterized by some disabled academics as an intervention that is oppressive to disabled people. One of the most notable of these is Oliver. This paper describes the practice of Conductive Education and its development in the United Kingdom and explores why it came to be perceived by some from within the disabled people's movement as contrary to their interests. Oliver's position on Conductive Education is critiqued and located within the wider debate on the adequacy of the social model of disablement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Throwing Your Brains at it: higher education, markets and choice.
- Author
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Pugsley, Lesley
- Subjects
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HIGHER education research , *EDUCATION , *GOVERNMENT policy , *EDUCATION policy , *GRADUATE study in education , *EDUCATIONAL change , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SCHOOL children - Abstract
The article presents a research paper on the marketization of the higher education in Great Britain. The study highlights that the recent education policies formulated in the country has shown the trend of a shift towards marketization, which emphasizes the empowerment for consumers. It examines the relevance of this ethos in terms of the real choice within the higher education context. The samples for the research was collected focusing on the families who are engaged in the choosing process in the education. The study demonstrates the differential levels of market based competencies. It also examines the complexities and inequalities produced by the higher education market. It focused on lower sixth students and provides a longitudinal study of pupils who entered lower sixth, in the academic year 1995. The sixth form careers were considered to track the students the ways in which they engaged with the choice processes. The research site was an area around the region of Greater Cardiff, in south-east Wales.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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31. Multicultural Education through Meditation.
- Author
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Viarengo, Teresa and Lang, Peter
- Subjects
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MULTICULTURALISM , *LANGUAGE awareness in children , *SELF-perception in children , *CULTURAL studies , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper is based on the outcomes of a 6-month study in a multicultural inner-city primary school and involved twenty-four pupils representing seventeen nationalities. The object of the study was to explore how imagination and concentration might promote language awareness and cultural pluralism. Among other techniques, the children used meditation as a way of exploring themselves and others. The study suggested that the children were open to new ways of learning, imagination being for them a meaningful medium for making sense of their world. The results supported the idea that for these children meditation could be an instrument of self-knowledge and knowledge of others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. WEA gets behind `learning age' paper.
- Author
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Spencer, Diane
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *EDUCATION associations , *POLITICAL science - Abstract
Comments on the response of the Worker's Educational Association (WEA) to the Green Paper of the government in Great Britain. Redistribution of funds from research into higher education teaching and breaking down of institutional barriers to achieve the `learning age' that is outlined in the Green paper; Endorsement by the WEA of the findings of the Fryer report `Learning in the Twenty-First Century' which informed the government's thinking.
- Published
- 1998
33. Childcare demand to hot up.
- Subjects
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CHILD care , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Predicts a rise in the demand for childcare training courses as a result of Great Britain's childcare strategy. Plans for childcare reform launched in `The Green Paper' by David Blunkett, the Secretary of State for Education and Employment; Impact of this paper on childcare training.
- Published
- 1998
34. Social Policy Digest.
- Author
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Bennett, Fran
- Subjects
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SOCIAL policy , *MEDICAL care , *SOCIAL security , *EDUCATION , *HOUSING , *LABOR market - Abstract
The article presents information related to social policy. The topics included are social security and income maintenance, health care, education, housing and environment, personal social services, law and the treatment of the offender, unemployment and the labor market, race relations, voluntary sector, local government, gender and demography. A review of new research finds that income inequality in Great Britain narrowed slightly in the early to mid 1990's, but was still much greater than in any. previous post-war decade. The Green Paper on public health replaces twenty-seven targets with four with a similar Green Paper for Scotland. The government is consulting on a new regulatory regime for education and lay care. An advisory panel on sustainable development throws doubt on forecasts of 4.4 million new homes needed by 2016. A Bill guaranteeing help with residential care costs for people with limited assets had a third reading. The government released additional funding for the record prison population. Employment Service performance targets emphasize helping people disadvantaged in the labor market move from welfare to work.
- Published
- 1998
35. ‘Parenting teenagers‘ programmes: a UK perspective.
- Author
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Roker, Debi and Coleman, John
- Subjects
- *
PARENTING , *PARENTHOOD , *TEENAGERS , *EDUCATION - Abstract
The parenting of teenagers is an area of political and public debate at present, and many different forms of support are now available for this group of parents. There has been a particular increase in recent years in the number of group-based parenting programmes provided for parents of teenagers. This paper describes research which (i) surveyed the range and nature of ‘parenting teenagers’ courses currently available in the UK, and (ii) identified key characteristics of these courses, including aims, value bases, materials, methods, parents attending, outcomes, and evaluation. A number of key issues are identified, and recommendations for future practice, policy and research in this important area are made. Copyright © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Reforming higher specialist training in the United Kingdom – a step along the continuum of medical education.
- Author
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Calman, Temple, Naysmith, Cairncross, and Bennett
- Subjects
- *
CONTINUING medical education , *PHYSICIAN training , *EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
Objectives The requirement to align the arrangements for postgraduate training in the United Kingdom with those elsewhere in the European Community provided the opportunity to review and reform our arrangements for higher specialist training. This paper describes the case for change – the strengths and deficiencies of the traditional pattern of postgraduate medical training, demographic influences in the medical workforce and the need for a more structural or planned approach to training. Conclusions Over the past 5 years substantial progress has been made: the introduction of new regulatory arrangements and a new higher specialist training grade; the development of a managed and flexible system for delivering training to standards set by the Royal Colleges and which can accommodate the needs of those pursuing academic and research medicine; and the opportunity for trainees’ progress to be measured against published curricula. The significant programme of change has been underpinned by careful workforce planning and the publication of comprehensive guidance. Significant reform of higher specialist training has been achieved. This paper also makes the case for a more strategic approach to planning and developing␣medical education across the continuum, from entry to medical school until retirement, which can guide medical education and improve patient care into the next millennium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Green Paper is good news for good staff.
- Author
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Hall, Alan
- Subjects
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TEACHERS' salaries , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Weighs the plan of the government of Great Britain on the performance-related pay for teachers. Pros and cons of the proposal; Comparison on how teachers were paid in the early 1970s and 1990s; Reservations about the proposal.
- Published
- 1999
38. Every dragon has its day.
- Subjects
- *
FAIRY tales , *GENDER role in literature , *BRITISH education system , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Deals with the finding of a study in Great Britain that fairytales for young children that subvert traditional male and female roles may not be making the impact that authors or teachers intended. Reactions of the students of Janet Evans, a literacy consultant, to the story of `The Paper Bag Princess'; Importance for children to be aware of the genre they are reading.
- Published
- 1999
39. Professional and Educational Perspectives on Spirituality in Young Children.
- Author
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Sokanovic, Mary and Muller, Dave
- Subjects
- *
SPIRITUALITY , *SPIRITUAL formation , *CURRICULUM , *RELIGIOUS studies , *STANDARDS , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Spirituality is a concept which is hard to define, not least because it is not a neutral idea. How you understand it depends in part on your belief system. However, the quality of a school's contribution to spiritual development of its pupils is something included in OFSTED inspections. This paper describes an investigation which sought to answer the question, 'What are the professional perspectives of OFSTED inspectors and teachers with regard to the provision for spiritual growth of children in schools?' A small sample of inspectors and teachers were interviewed and asked to define spirituality. They were also asked what they looked for to indicate a spiritual dimension in children. The results showed a significant gap between the views and understandings of inspectors and teachers. The writers highlight the significance of these and make a number of suggestions about their implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Promotion, Persuasion and Class-taste: marketing (in) the UK post-compulsary sector.
- Author
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Maguire, Meg, Ball, Stephen J., and Macrae, Sheila
- Subjects
- *
POST-compulsory education , *EDUCATION , *TRAINING , *MARKETING - Abstract
Post-16 providers in the UK now offer a wide range of courses and training in order to respond to the expanded, diversified and 'non-traditional' post-16 market. School leavers are invited to 'choose' from a range of courses and pathways which are being provided in a variety of post-16 educational institutions. These providing institutions are in competition with one another and 'need' the students as their funds are contingent upon successful recruitment (and retention). As a result, many post-16 providers are turning to aspects of marketing in order to publicise their courses and maintain or increase their share of the market. This paper examines two major tactics in the promotion and marketing of post-16 provision--brochures and open days--in relation to issues such as access, targeting, response to 'difference' in the client group/market segment and 'professionalism' of approach. The paper argues that market tactics do semiotic 'work' as class-taste markers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Internet Insights.
- Author
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Saunders, Sam
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *WEBSITES , *COMPUTER network resources - Abstract
Provides updates on Web sites on education in Great Britain as of September 24, 1999. Abstracts of papers presented at the British Educational Research Association Conference; Research findings on the development of music among children.
- Published
- 1999
42. Putting the learning back into ILT.
- Author
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Gain, Meg and De Cicco, Eta
- Subjects
- *
UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *EDUCATION , *COMPUTER assisted instruction - Abstract
Describes how Further Education colleges are developing learning online in Great Britain. Proposals listed in the Green Paper `The Learning Age'; Overview of the holistic information and learning technology strategy; Support for students; Administration of the online education.
- Published
- 1999
43. Evidence to the British House of Commons Select Committee on the Inspection of Teacher...
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *TEACHER training - Abstract
This paper is a record of the evidence given by the Universities Council for the Education of Teachers to the House of Commons Select Committee on Education on the 11th November 1998 regarding the current OFSTED inspection process for initial teacher education courses in England and Wales. A series of important arguments are presented regarding the cost, timing, and frequency of OFSTED inspections and, in particular, the bias within and the effects of the inspection regime on the quality of the courses being inspected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Equipped for the 21st Century?: audio-visual resource standards and product demands from geography departments in the UK.
- Author
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McKendrick, John H. and Bowden, Annabel
- Subjects
- *
AUDIOVISUAL aids in geography education , *EARTH sciences , *HIGHER education - Abstract
Mass consumption of image-capture and image-(re)presentation technologies affords opportunities for improved teaching and learning in disciplines which utilise audio-visual data. This paper reports on a survey of geography departments in the UK in which baseline data were collected on the availability, use and opinion on the role of audio visual resources (AVRs) in teaching and learning. AVRs are regarded positively and, on the whole, hardware is readily available. However, the provision of software is uneven and there is considerable variation in the strategic commitment toward, and management of, AVRs. Furthermore, larger departments and those whose research was rated more favourably in the last Research Assessment Exercise were found to be better resourced. There are signs of an emerging resource gap with regard to more specialised AVR equipment. The findings are used to propose audio-visual resource standards and to identify audio-visual products for which there is market demand. There is demand for audio-visual products that support fieldwork activity and it is recommended that further investment is required in digital camcorders and PC-OHP projection units. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Educating for Citizenship.
- Author
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ALTON, DAVID
- Subjects
- *
CITIZENSHIP , *EDUCATION , *TEACHING , *DEMOCRACY ,BRITISH politics & government - Abstract
Two short paragraphs, 42 and 43, in the White Paper, Excellence in Schools, published in July 1997, announced the UK government's intention to educate for citizenship:Schools can help to ensure that young people feel that they have a stake in our society and the community in which they live by teaching them the nature of democracy and the duties, responsibilities and rights of citizens. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. What the papers say.
- Subjects
- *
BRITISH education system , *SCHOOLS , *BLACK children , *PARENT-child relationships , *STANDARDS , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Presents news concerning education in Great Britain, compiled as of March 31, 2000. Government's criticism of Summerhill's teaching standards; Failure of black children to secure good education; Inability of parents to cope with their children's homework.
- Published
- 2000
47. Sustainability: a new vision for the British planning system.
- Author
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Davoudi, Simin
- Subjects
- *
URBAN planning , *PLANNING , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper aims to explore the potential new directions in the British planning system by reviewing and linking together the current debates in three areas: the twin purposes of the post-war planning system, the twin discourses of sustainability and the implications for planning education. There is a general consensus that the sustainability agenda has provided the overdue and much needed 'vision' for planning. However, this paper argues that the different discourses of sustainability provide fundamentally distinctive development paths for the future of the planning system. Whilst the 'ecological modernization' approach to sustainability reinforces the technical and regulatory face of the system, the 'risk society' approach calls for a resurgence of its ideological and pro-active face. The former promotes a continuing role of planning as an apolitical, non-spatial, criteria-based corporatist activity. The latter provides the opportunity for a return to the planners' traditional concepts, emphasizing strategic thinking, a holistic approach, social responsiveness, political commitment, participative processes and reflexive institutions. As regards planning education, the paper argues that while the skills provided through a technically orientated professional training can fulfil the requirements of the ecological modernization path, research-orientated planning education based on critical social science can develop the students' intellectual and reflective capacities and the skills required for pursuing the risk society approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The National Grid for Learning: panacea or Panopticon?
- Author
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Selwyn, Neil
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATION , *RESEARCH , *INTERNET in education - Abstract
Although not fully established, the National Grid for Learning (NGfL) initiative is already being presented by both government and industry as offering students, teachers and school extensive freedom and autonomy in their day-to-day work. However, this paper argues that the official discursive construction of the NGfL in this way, as a ‘panacea’ to educational problems, obscures vital issues of power and control that may only become apparent once the initiative is fully integrated at the classroom level. Drawing initially on the work of Foucault, and then Poster’s more recent conception of the electronic ‘SuperPanopticon’, this paper re-examines the basis of the NGfL and its role in extending and reinforcing existing power configurations in education. The paper concludes by considering directions for future research into the NGfL, and educational use of the Internet in the light of this analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Teaching palliative care principles to UK nursing home care assistants.
- Author
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Dowding, Chris and Homer, Pam
- Subjects
- *
NURSES' aides , *NURSING home care , *PALLIATIVE treatment - Abstract
This paper describes the initiatives that led to a study day for Health Care Assistants in the UK, focusing on the principles and practice of palliative care for practitioners. Topics covered were ‘What is palliative care?’, ‘How can you help patients with pain’, ‘Needs of the dying patient’, ‘I don’t know what to say’, ‘Answering awkward questions’, and ‘Ways of relieving distressing symptoms’. Participants valued the study day and feedback showed that the Health Care Assistants, essentially assistants to qualified nursing staff with minimal or no training themselves, had many vocational and emotional needs that were not being met. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Learning together in medical and nursing training: aspirations and activity.
- Author
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Ross, Fiona and Southgate, Lesley
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL education , *GENERAL practitioners , *EDUCATION - Abstract
ContextPolicy documents about service innovation, education priorities and professional development exhort professions to learn together and work collaboratively. However, the literature suggests that the existence of shared learning in medical and nursing pre-qualifying education is patchy. AimThis paper does not claim to be research. It sets out to reflect on the trends and tensions in key policy directions, relating these to aspirations and a mapping of current intiatives in the sphere of medical and nursing pre-qualifying education. ApproachA limited national information gathering exercise was conducted during the planning phase of seminars hosted by the Centre for the Advancement of Interprofessional Education (CAIPE) in 1996 and 1997. This involved directly contacting all medical schools and departments of nursing and midwifery in geographical proximity, or with an institutional relationship. Information was sought on current or planned activity in shared learning, defined as medical and nursing students and/or working together. Emerging themesThere were a few examples of shared learning identified by the mapping exercise. The paper discusses these and draws on the consensus that emerged from the seminars on objectives and topics for shared learning. It concludes with a discussion of what makes for success or failure in such ventures with suggestions for future educational policy development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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