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Are local students disadvantaged? Understanding institutional, local and national sense of belonging in higher education British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-07-22 Mi Young Ahn, Howard H. Davis
Research on inequality in higher education (HE) is often dominated by class-based assumptions about traditional and non-traditional students. This binary distinction emphasising students’ socio-economic status tends to oversimply the complexity of educational inequality, neglecting crucial factors which affect the perception of social position. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the understanding
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Representation of indigenous languages employing a religious screen for the discursive construction of students' postcolonial national identities: A curious case of ‘internal colonisation’ and ‘cultural invasion’ in Pakistani schools British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-07-21 M. Habib Qazi, Choudhary Z. Javid, Inayat U. Khattak
This study problematises the discourses of Pakistan's national curriculum textbooks to investigate how they represent Pakistan's indigenous languages/cultures through the prism of religion to constitute secondary school students' particular postcolonial linguistic identities. It also draws on the perspectives of 12 teachers and 424 students to record their responses. Taking insights from Paulo Freire's
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The meanings, risk factors and consequences of religious extremism: The perceptions of Islamic education teachers from Israel British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-07-16 Najwan Saada
This multiple case study examines the attitudes of 14 Islamic education teachers from Israel towards the meaning, causes and consequences of religious extremism among students in their Arab and Muslim-majority middle and high schools. These teachers define religious extremism as belief in absolute religious truth, inflexibility in religious interpretation, or strict adherence to Islamic teachings.
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Capturing variations in how spelling is taught in primary school classrooms in England British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-07-14 Rosanne Esposito, Elisabeth Herbert, Emma Sumner
Mastering spelling is important for children to progress in writing. The National Curriculum in England details spelling lists linked to each year group in primary education. Assessment practices also emphasise the importance of teaching spelling. However, to date, little is known about how teachers feel about teaching spelling nor the instructional methods that they use in primary schools in England
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‘In most supermarkets food does not cost £3 per day …’ The impact of the school food voucher scheme during COVID-19 British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-07-14 Gurpinder Singh Lalli
Households with children eligible for Free School Meals are at risk of food insecurity. This paper reports on a rapid-response study that investigated the impact of the school food voucher scheme during the COVID-19 crisis on young people, families and schools. It pays close attention to the reliance of the state on the goodwill of society and its citizens in feeding those most in need. The Capabilities
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A health(y) subject? Examining discourses of health in physical education curricula across the UK British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-07-13 Shirley Gray, Oliver Hooper, Stephanie Hardley, Rachel Sandford, David Aldous, Julie Stirrup, Nicola Carse, Anna S. Bryant
In this paper, we present the findings from our critical analysis of the health discourses evident with physical education (PE) curricula in each UK home nation—England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. We carried out a critical discourse analysis of those curriculum documents that talk directly to PE teachers about how to organise, enact and assess PE curricula in schools. The results from our
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Where should phonics teaching start? ‘satpin’ and its origins, rivals and implications British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-07-12 Gill Cochrane, Greg Brooks
Children who enter school not yet reading need some systematic phonics to get them started, but cannot be expected to cope with the whole alphabet or more than a subset of phoneme–grapheme correspondences and grapheme–phoneme correspondences at that stage. So phonics schemes necessarily adopt some sequence for the introduction of graphemes and phonemes. The Letters and Sounds scheme began with satpin
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Politics of evidence: Think tanks and the Academies Act British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-07-05 Jaakko Kauko
Previous research has identified political ideology as central in the landmark Academies Act (2010). This article further analyses how politics of evidence played its part in the policy process by focusing on long-term structural changes and preferences among policymakers. The article draws on policymaker interviews after the reform, a mapping of think tanks and a document analysis. The analysis shows
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Black and minority ethnic student teachers' stories as empirical documents of hidden oppressions: Using the personal to turn towards the structural British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-07-01 Diane Warner
Racism, as a covert but pervasive presence in teacher education in England, remains a major structural issue and its effects on student teachers who are Black and Asian are real and troubling. Their personal stories reveal multiple challenges and present empirical evidence that can usefully be analysed to examine their experience of daily micro-aggressions and overt racisms in their teacher education
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Educators' positive practices with refugee pupils at two schools in England British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-06-30 Caitlin M. Prentice
Extensive evidence indicates that education is an integral part of the settling in process for refugee and asylum-seeking children. Furthermore, it has been suggested that positive teaching practice with refugee pupils should be asset-based and holistic in nature. The present study examines educators' positive practices with refugee pupils and explores factors that shape these practices. Data were
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Early detection of risk of reading difficulties using a working memory assessment battery British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-06-30 Susan J. Atkinson, Colin R. Martin
Research suggests a role for aspects of the working memory system in reading. While much of the evidence points to a role for working memory capacity and the phonological loop, more recent work indicates a role for the central executive component, although findings remain unclear. There is an identified need for a reliable screening measure for risk of reading difficulties in children who are pre-readers
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An ecological perspective of student engagement through digital technology: Practical application and implications British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-06-29 Dennis Gabriel Pepple
Research into how student engagement can be influenced through digital technology has continued to be at the forefront of higher education debates. This is due to the technological advancements and the recent disruptions caused by the Covid-19 lockdown, which have made it imperative for universities to adopt blended and online learning. Drawing on secondary data analysis of comments posted by 283 post-graduate
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Exploring cumulative disadvantage in early school leaving and planned post-school pathways among those identified with special educational needs in Irish primary schools British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-06-17 Eamonn Carroll, Selina McCoy, Georgiana Mihut
Reflecting the neglect of childhood disability in social stratification research, there is a notable dearth of research on the mechanisms underpinning disability differentials in educational outcomes. Drawing on rich longitudinal data collected at 9, 13 and 17 years as part of Ireland's ‘Growing Up in Ireland’ study, we look at the impact of special educational needs (SEN) identification in primary
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Putting climate change at the heart of education: Is England's strategy a placebo for policy? British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-06-14 Lynda Dunlop, Elizabeth A. C. Rushton
In this paper we present an analysis of the sustainability and climate change strategy for education and children's services systems in England, produced by the Department for Education. Using critical discourse analysis, we juxtapose qualitative data collected from >200 youth teachers and teacher educators in the context of co-creating a manifesto for education and environmental sustainability. Through
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Student mobility: Extent, impacts and predictors of a range of movement types for secondary school students in England British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-05-18 Lucy Prior, George Leckie
Moving school is a major event for students, with potential impacts on both student and school performance. Students can experience a diversity of move types, including variation in timing, origin and destination, though this complexity is not always acknowledged in studies or educational policies, which tend towards binary distinctions of movers versus non-movers. However, it is crucial to understand
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Ability as legitimation of tracking: Teachers' representations of students in vocational and academic tracks British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-05-15 Aina Tarabini, Marta Curran, Alba Castejón
The division of educational systems into different tracks—academic and vocational—represents one of the key elements in explaining social stratification and inequalities. Previous research identifies teachers' expectations as a critical factor to understand the relationship between tracking and social inequality. This paper discusses how ability is represented in teachers' discourses and whether and
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Queer feminist interruptions to internationalising UK higher education British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-22 Jamie J. Hagen
This paper considers queer feminist interruptions as a way to halt, reverse and rethink internationalisation in UK higher education (HE). These points of intervention are situated within the queer development studies literature, which provides a framework for understanding internationalisation practices alongside other strategies of Western extraction, critical of claims that internationalisation is
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Motility, viscosity and field: A portrayal of migrant teachers' professional mobility and ethical conflicts in American and Australian faith-based schools British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-22 Ilana Finefter-Rosenbluh
International migration is attaining new records, diversifying nations' cultural–social landscapes. The number of international migrants is estimated to be about 272 million globally, with nearly two-thirds being labour migrants, surpassing historic projections. Concomitantly, migrant teachers are becoming more prevalent in educational markets; spaces that may serve as institutional vehicles promoting
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SATs, sets and allegations of bias: The allocation of 11-year-old students to mathematics sets in some English schools in 2015. A response to Connolly et al., 2019 British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-18 Roger Gomm
This is a methodological critique of research by the Best Practice in Grouping Students (BPGS) project claiming teacher bias in allocating students to first-year secondary school mathematics teaching sets (British Educational Research Journal, 45(4), 873–879). The research assumes that bias could be shown by non-random relationships between ‘misallocations’ to sets and memberships of gender, ethnic
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How do homeschoolers approach creative arts learning and how can they be supported? Developing a flexible framework for homeschool contexts British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-15 Katie M. Burke
Research has identified that creative arts education in homeschooling contexts presents unique challenges. A range of factors contribute to this, including a dearth of home-education-specific support. As such, the development of supporting resources that target the unique needs and approaches of homeschooling parents has previously been recommended. This paper reports on part of a larger Design-Based
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Playful punctuation in primary children’s writing British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-12 Andrew Burrell, Roger Beard
The writing of three attainment groups of 10- to 11-year-old children was used to investigate their use of ludic (playful) punctuation in the composition of an advertisement for a new dessert. Framed within a consideration of language play in general, and children’s use of punctuation in particular, the investigation revealed the ways in which primary children use playful punctuation in order to achieve
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Implications of the genomic revolution for education research and policy British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-12 Tim T. Morris, Stephanie von Hinke, Lindsey Pike, Neil R. Ingram, George Davey Smith, Marcus R. Munafò, Neil M. Davies
Research at the intersection of social science and genomics, ‘sociogenomics’, is transforming our understanding of the interplay between genomics, individual outcomes and society. It has interesting and maybe unexpected implications for education research and policy. Here we review the growing sociogenomics literature and discuss its implications for educational researchers and policymakers. We cover
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Teacher and youth priorities for education for environmental sustainability: A co-created manifesto British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Lynda Dunlop, Elizabeth A. C. Rushton, Lucy Atkinson, Jacquie Ayre, Andrea Bullivant, Jane Essex, Laura Price, Amanda Smith, Maisy Summer, Joshua E. Stubbs, Maria Turkenburg-van Diepen, Lucy Wood
What would it mean to put environmental sustainability at the heart of education? This article describes a process of inclusive, participatory manifesto-making to identify young people's (aged 16–18 years) and teachers' priorities for education for environmental sustainability across the UK. Drawing on analysis of qualitative data from over 200 teachers and young people who participated in futures
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‘The participation group means that I'm low ability’: students’ perspectives on the enactment of ‘mixed-ability’ grouping in secondary school physical education British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Shaun D. Wilkinson, Dawn Penney
Mixed-ability grouping is widespread in primary schools and in several subject areas in secondary schools in England. Notwithstanding, there is scant research on mixed-ability grouping in the education literature, particularly in terms of its impact on students’ experiences. The research reported in this paper employs enactment theory to provide original insights into the diverse practices and complex
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Parental expectations of children’s higher education participation in Australia British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-05 Alfred M. Dockery, Paul Koshy, Ian W. Li
The role of parental expectations in determining children's higher education participation is important in understanding both participation and potential policy responses. Using a nationally representative longitudinal survey of Australian households, providing repeat observations on expectations for individual children, this study extends the literature in several respects. First, it examines the
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Does study abroad affect student academic achievement? British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-02 Chiamaka Nwosu
The numbers of UK students choosing to study abroad for a period has increased steadily over the years, with many students citing academic, professional, linguistic and cultural reasons as their key motivations. However, while there is an abundance of literature on the advantage of study abroad (SA) for linguistic learning, there is less known about the academic impact of studying abroad. In addition
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How epistemic reflexivity enables teacher educators’ teaching for diversity: Exploring a pedagogical framework for critical thinking British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-02 Jo Lunn Brownlee, Terri Bourke, Leonie Rowan, Mary Ryan, Peter Churchward, Sue Walker, Lyra L’Estrange, Anita Berge, Eva Johansson
Recent research points to the importance of teacher educators teaching for diversity in initial teacher education programmes. Teaching for diversity is an approach to teacher education in which an understanding of specialist literature and a focus on critical thinking supports a social justice agenda as opposed to merely using different tips and tricks to prepare future teachers for teaching diverse
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A critical exploration of inclusion policies of elite UK universities British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-04-02 George Koutsouris, Lauren Stentiford, Brahm Norwich
Inclusion is seen as an ethical obligation, grounded in notions of equity and social justice for all groups and at all stages of education, with higher education (HE) representing a distinctive space where the inclusion agenda is becoming more influential. However, inclusion is also increasingly recognised as an ambiguous concept that might have lost its critical edge and is in many cases reduced to
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Enacting whole-school relationships and sexuality education in England: Context matters British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-30 Sara Bragg, Ruth Ponsford, Rebecca Meiksin, Maria Lohan, G.J. Melendez-Torres, Alison Hadley, Honor Young, Christine Anne Barter, Bruce Taylor, Chris Bonell
Evidence from intervention evaluations suggests that achieving meaningful and lasting social, behavioural and attitudinal change from relationships, sex and health education (RSHE) in schools requires more than just a curriculum. Whole-school approaches appear particularly promising since they work at multiple levels. For instance, they may: engage with carers, communities and local services; address
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It’s all about the story: Personal narratives in children’s literature about refugees British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Mary Tomsic, Matthew D. Zbaracki
Stories are one way that experiences, ideas and culture are shared with children in educational settings. Commercially published books are the standard means in schools for sharing stories. Qualitative content analysis was carried out on 30 personal narrative-based children's picture books. While the range of stories told in books is vast, our research focuses on refugee stories for children in light
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School playgroups: Which features of provision matter? British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Susan Edwards, Karen McLean, Jacinta Bartlett, Andrea Nolan, Maria Evangelou, Michael Henderson, Helen Skouteris, Joanne Tarasuik
This paper identifies the shared features of provision in exemplar school playgroups defined using the social capital concepts of bonding and bridging relationships. Relationships promote capabilities amongst people, with play a known capability for advancing children's developmental and educational outcomes. By attending to the bonding and bridging relationships in each school playgroup, exemplar
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A critical consideration of ‘mental health and wellbeing’ in education: Thinking about school aims in terms of wellbeing British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Brahm Norwich, Darren Moore, Lauren Stentiford, Dave Hall
This paper examines ideas about mental health, wellbeing and school education to illustrate important issues in the relationship between mental health and education. The Covid crisis has amplified the pre-existing mental health problems of children and young people in England and recognition of the opportunities in schools to address these. The paper gives an overview of child and adolescent mental
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Boarding schools: A longitudinal examination of Australian Indigenous and non-Indigenous boarders’ and non-boarders’ wellbeing British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-26 Anthony Dillon, Rhonda G. Craven, Jiesi Guo, Alexander S. Yeung, Janet Mooney, Alicia Franklin, Rob Brockman
Improving educational outcomes for Indigenous Australian students is a key strategy to helping Indigenous people reach their full potential. This has resulted in well-intentioned efforts by Australian educators and governments to ensure Indigenous children have positive school experiences. However, Indigenous students still lag behind their non-Indigenous counterparts in educational outcomes. This
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How teachers understand and strategize about emerging conflicts British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-26 Kristoffer Larsson, Ilse Hakvoort, Agneta Lundström
This article concerns what have been variously called mild misbehaviours, minor distractions or emerging conflicts, i.e. situations of mild tension between the teacher and pupils in the classroom. The article responds to calls for further studies on the link between how teachers understand these emerging conflicts and the strategies they suggest to handle them. We carried out two studies on primary
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The role of achievement, gender, SES, location and policy in explaining the Indigenous gap in high-school completion British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-25 Melissa Schellekens, Joseph Ciarrochi, Anthony Dillon, Baljinder Sahdra, Robert Brockman, Janet Mooney, Philip Parker
Internationally, there is a gap in high-school completion rates for Indigenous and non-Indigenous students. In Australia, gap estimates are commonly based on lag indicators, precluding examination of underlying mechanisms. Using two longitudinal representative samples of Australian youth, we explored differences in high-school completion between Australian Indigenous and non-Indigenous rates, and whether
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The sensorium and fleshy schools British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-22 Damien Page, Kay Sidebottom
As places of learning, schools inevitably foreground cognition. Neglected in schools and in the literature is the body, often an inconvenience or barrier to learning rather than a site of perception and understanding. Where the body is considered, it is primarily concerned with pedagogy and children rather than analysing the broad range of embodied experience: teachers' sensuous experience is side-lined;
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School closures and educational attainment in Ethiopia: Can extra classes help children to catch up? British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-22 Fiona Carmichael, Christian K. Darko, Shireen Kanji, Nicholas Vasilakos
School closures impact children's attainment adversely, but understanding the effects of closures on children's attainment in lower-income countries is still limited. Addressing this deficit, this study examines how past school closures have impacted children's educational attainment in Ethiopia. The study uses individual student-level data from the Young Lives School Survey and standardised test scores
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Bundled or unbundled? A multi-text corpus-assisted discourse analysis of the relationship between teaching and research in UK universities British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-21 Adam Matthews, Ben Kotzee
Creating and disseminating knowledge through research and teaching has long been regarded as the hallmark of the modern university. However, new university business models have called into question the ‘bundling’ of teaching and research, and sustained research on the relationship between teaching and research has found little evidence of an insoluble connection between the two activities. In this
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Research-informed teaching: The case of Musical Futures British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Anna Mariguddi, Tim Cain
Drawing on descriptions of research-into-practice initiatives, this article presents a new framework to aid understanding of how research findings influence educational practice at scale. The framework focuses upon five areas: trustworthiness of the findings and generalisability; implications and instructions for practice; support for implementation; fidelity of the implementation; and accountability
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Editorial: A case for diversity in educational research and educational practice British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-02-23 Gert Biesta, Emma Wainwright, David Aldridge
In this editorial we explore how diversity might matter for educational research and educational practice. We highlight that diversity constitutes a value in itself and can be valued for its consequences. We suggest that valuing diversity doesn't mean that any diversity is simply acceptable. Diversity, so we argue, requires a criterion, and we suggest that democracy may be a relevant criterion for
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Professional noticing of coordinated mathematical thinking British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-02-21 Tye G. Campbell, Sheunghyun Yeo
Over the past three decades, research and policy in many geographic regions has promoted a shift from direct, lecture-oriented mathematics instruction to inquiry-based, dialogic forms of instruction. While theory and research support dialogic instructional approaches, some have noted that the complexities of dialogic teaching make it difficult for teachers to implement. One mechanism by which teachers
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What is the evidence on the impact of Pupil Premium funding on school intakes and attainment by age 16 in England? British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-01-31 Stephen Gorard
The use of targeted additional funding for school-age education, intended to improve student attainment, is a widespread phenomenon internationally. It is slightly rarer that the funding is used to improve attainment specifically for the most disadvantaged students – often via trying to attract teachers to poorer areas, or encouraging families to send their children to school. It is even rarer that
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Racism and the future of antiracism in education: A critical analysis of the Sewell Report British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-01-19 Leon Tikly
This article provides an analysis and critique of the education component of the 2021 Sewell Report on Race and Ethnic Disparities. Discussion focuses on the report’s spurious claims to objectivity, the erasure of racism and the inadequacy of its recommendations. It is suggested, however, that despite its many flaws, the Sewell Report poses challenges for those who have traditionally been aligned with
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The impact of test language on PISA scores. New evidence from Wales British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-01-19 John Jerrim, Luis Alejandro Lopez-Agudo, Oscar David Marcenaro-Gutierrez
In this paper we investigate the link between the language in which pupils take the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) test and the scores they achieve in this assessment, focusing upon the case of Wales. Using five rounds of PISA data and an instrumental variable approach, we show how pupils who took the test in Welsh score around 0.3 standard deviations (30 PISA test points) lower
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The role of the teacher's culture in classroom management: A case study of primary schools in French Polynesia British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2022-01-19 Amélie Alletru, Isabelle Vinatier
Polynesian Languages and Culture (PLC) lessons in primary schools focus on, among other things, passing on Tahitian legends and linguistic content that is specific to the Polynesian languages (Reo mā'ohi). A co-analysis of the PLC teachers' culture of origin conducted with the teachers to identify the dimensions of their actual activity revealed a strong connivance between the teaching object and the
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The contested relationships between educational research, theory and practice: Introduction to a special section British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-12-01 Gert Biesta,David Aldridge
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The mental health of adolescents in England: How does it vary during their time at school? British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-11-04 John Jerrim
The wellbeing of young people has become an important education policy issue, with suggestions that mental health problems amongst young people have increased in recent years. Experiences at school are thought to be a key factor contributing to mental ill-health amongst adolescents. Yet surprisingly, little is known about how mental health outcomes vary across school year groups, independent of the
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Relative age and the Early Years Foundation Stage Profile: How do birth month and peer group age composition determine attribution of a ‘Good Level of Development’—and what does this tell us about how ‘good’ the Early Years Foundation Stage Profile is? British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-11-01 Tammy Campbell
The Early Years Foundation Stage Profile (EYFSP) is a statutory, summative teacher assessment against nationally prescribed criteria. It is completed for all children in state education in England in summer of the reception year, when September-born children are nearly 6 and summer-born children are turning 5. This research uses quantitative descriptive and regression analyses of de-identified National
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Whose ‘voice’ is it anyway? The paradoxes of the participatory narrative British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-10-20 Marianna Papadopoulou, Ewa Sidorenko
This study discusses some of the paradoxes found in the rhetoric of participatory research. Research-with-children views them as competent and agentic and as social actors, as citizens with opinions that must be listened to and given due weight. This image of the child as a social actor fails to acknowledge the structural, contextual and relational conditions that can afford or restrict opportunities
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Practitioners’ perspectives and needs: Developing skills to support unaccompanied asylum-seeking children (UASCs) in experiencing ‘belonging’ in English educational spaces British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-10-14 Catherine Ward
This article builds on Yuval-Davis’s (2006, 2007, 2011) theories of belonging, in order to relay how practitioners can support unaccompanied asylum-seeking children (UASCs) in developing a positive sense of belonging in educational spaces in England. To do so, the article synthesises literature surrounding theories of belonging, UASCs’ educational access in England and practices supporting UASCs’ educational
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Year 3 student career choices: Exploring societal changes in constructions of masculinity and femininity in career choice justifications British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-10-12 Laura Scholes, Sarah McDonald
This article reports on a survey of 332 Year 3 students from 14 Australian schools. We are interested in exploring Year 3 primary school student aspirations and what this data shows us about any societal changes, or not. This study is timely as it reports on contemporary data within an Australian educational context marked by significant investment in improving equitable gendered participation, particularly
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Refugee education: Introduction to the special section British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-07-30 Ahlam Lee
This special section focuses on education in relation to diverse refugee groups by exploring and engaging interdisciplinary perspectives. A collection of nine articles articulates the plight of refugees in the resettlement context at the nexus of conflicts with host citizens, pre-migration trauma and post-migration stress, and educational opportunities for survival and upward social mobility. Refugees
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Children’s epistemic reasoning about social inclusion of aggressive peers in a culturally diverse school British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-08-09 Laura Scholes, Elizabeth Wallace, Sue Walker, Jo Lunn Brownlee, Veronica Lawson
Moral reasoning in values education can promote a democratic way of life. It involves addressing behaviour expectations in responses to violence or bullying. There is increasing interest in how children make moral judgments about social inclusion within diverse cultural settings. Critical research highlights the relationship between epistemic cognition (views about the nature of knowledge and knowing)
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Clarification for: Right-wing populism and education: Introduction to the special section by Hussain and Yunus (2021) British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-08-06
The Guest Editors of the ‘Right-wing populism and education: Interrogating politics, policy and pedagogic resistance’ special section published in the April 2021 issue would like to point out that education is a devolved responsibility for each of the four UK nations; and that there are important differences in politics and education policy among England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. References
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Empowering children to speak up and act on social justice issues: The use of folktales and collaborative storytelling as tools of social imagination British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-08-05 Christina Hajisoteriou, Petros Panaou, Panayiotis Angelides
Over the last decade, various organisations, scholars and educators across the globe have been arguing for the need to foster dialogue between and with children regarding the world they want to have, in terms of both justice and sustainability. Research has shown that stories and storytelling have a world-making and world-changing character that may trigger children’s social imagination on social justice
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Preservice teacher perceptions of preparedness for teaching: Insights from survey research exploring the links between teacher professional standards and agency British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-08-04 Linda-Dianne Willis, Sadia Shaukat, Samantha Low-Choy
In this article we explore the use of teacher professional standards in an initial teacher education programme and preservice teacher perceptions of their preparedness for teaching using a survey of 54 first- and second-year preservice teachers in a graduate-entry programme. The survey asked the preservice teachers to respond to 16 questions based on professional standards as well as their knowledge
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Conditions for mental health in education: Towards relational practice British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-07-31 Tom Billington, Sarah Gibson, Penny Fogg, Jamal Lahmar, Harriet Cameron
There are concerns globally about the emotional wellbeing and mental health of young people and in this paper a critical orientation comprises both theoretical and empirical data sources. The case is made that (1) the medical model of mental health – that of problem identification, diagnosis and medical treatment at the level of the individual – is not appropriate for the vast majority of children
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Pressures and influences on school leaders navigating policy development during the COVID-19 pandemic British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-07-30 Peter Fotheringham, Thomas Harriott, Grace Healy, Gabrielle Arenge, Elaine Wilson
The pressures and influences experienced by school leaders as school policymakers, during the first responses to COVID-19 pandemic, made their task of interpreting, translating and implementing school guidance both difficult and stressful. During COVID-19 pandemic, school leaders faced challenges to prioritise and balance ever-changing government policy advice with the limitations of school buildings
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People and practice: defining education as an academic discipline British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-07-28 Dominic Wyse,Chris Brown,Sandy Oliver,Ximena Pobleté
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Autistic young people’s experiences of transitioning to adulthood following the Children and Families Act 2014 British Educational Research Journal (IF 2.133) Pub Date : 2021-07-21 Laura Crane, Jade Davies, Anne Fritz, Sarah O’Brien, Alison Worsley, Anna Remington
Changes to special educational needs and disability (SEND) legislation in England were implemented in 2014. Here, we evaluate the impact of these changes from the perspective of 80 autistic young people aged 16–25 years. Using an online survey and/or interviews, we examined young people’s views on three key principles of the SEND reforms: the help and support provided to them; whether they were given