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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results
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Damrow, Amy – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2014
This study uses an ecological framework to map one Japanese child's transition between elementary school life in the United States and Japan. I privilege the child's perspective while weaving in parent and teacher views, as well as observation and document data. Implicit and explicit expectations in the focal student's classrooms…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Differences, Elementary School Students, Parent Attitudes
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Cucchiara, Maia – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
There is an ample scholarly and popular literature describing the rise in "anxiety" among middle-class parents. This paper draws from a study of urban middle-class parents who were considering sending their children to public school. Focusing on one neighborhood and its school, it describes the impact of anxiety on the choice process. It further…
Descriptors: Parent Student Relationship, Middle Class, Parent Attitudes, Anxiety
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Finnan, Christine – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
Consistent with research conducted by George Spindler 60 years ago, teachers continue to perceive groups of students, typically students that differ from the teacher, as less capable of accomplishing meaningful tasks, belonging and contributing to social groups, and engaging actively in challenging work. The bias is especially great for students…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Grade 5, Classroom Research, Educational History
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
This article explores the ways in which a fifth-grade class of Greek Cypriot students and their teacher perceived and negotiated the meanings of empathy for the "other" in the context of ethnic conflict in Cyprus. The findings suggest that the process of engaging with empathy is full of fractures and failures, possibilities and impossibilities.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 5, Empathy, Teacher Student Relationship
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Juffermans, Kasper; Van Camp, Kirsten – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
Drawing on fieldwork in a primary school in rural Gambia, West Africa, this article foregrounds the notion of voice as analytical heuristics for understanding language in education. Arguing for more attention to voices from the field and for critical reflection on the researcher's voice in research, the article addresses the ways in which school…
Descriptors: Stakeholders, Elementary Schools, Ethnography, Foreign Countries
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Mokkonen, Alicia Copp – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
This article investigates how two young newcomers navigate an institutional policy of "English only" in a Finnish primary school and how this policy impacts opportunities for voice. From a discourse analytic and sociolinguistic perspective, the analysis takes an ethnographic path to a focal event of language conflict in the classroom. The analysis…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Foreign Countries, Multilingualism, Language Arts
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Naraian, Srikala – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2011
Within inclusive education research, the call to foster participation stems from a generalized vision for promoting democratic practices within classrooms, prompting the concern for eliciting student "voices." In this ethnographic study, I explore the utility of "voice" as a workable construct in securing participation within inclusive classrooms.…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Participation, Ethnography, Grade 1
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Lucero, Audrey – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2010
This article discusses findings from a case study of one elementary bilingual paraeducator, highlighting how the recognition of situated cultural capital enabled her to move from traditional to constructive marginality. I argue that her actions, the actions of others, and conditions within the school enabled her to use culturally relevant funds of…
Descriptors: Language Minorities, Minority Group Children, Paraprofessional Personnel, Case Studies
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Paradise, Ruth; de Haan, Mariette – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2009
This article describes Mazahua children's participation in learning interactions that take place when they collaborate with more knowledgeable others in everyday activities in family and community settings. During these interactions they coordinate their actions with those of other participants, switching between the roles of "knowledgeable…
Descriptors: Social Organizations, Teaching Methods, Learning Activities, Grade 6
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Schaffer, Rebecca; Skinner, Debra G. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2009
This article addresses how preadolescents produce and perform race through an ethnographic study of 8- to 11-year-old students in four fourth grade classrooms in the southeastern United States. Although Asian, Latino, and white students tended to avoid explicit talk of race, many white students constructed black students as disruptive…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Ethnography, Classrooms, Grade 4
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Woronov, T. E. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2008
Critics of education in China call for increasing students' "creativity" as key to improving the nation's education. This article examines the idea of children's "creativity" in Beijing, associated with an education reform movement called "Education for Quality." On the basis of ethnographic research in three elementary schools in Beijing, I argue…
Descriptors: Creativity, Ethnography, Ideology, Educational Change
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Smardon, Regina – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2008
In this article, I explore the meaning of disability within the everyday lives of Clear River third-grade students. The concept of a disability narrative is developed to explain how expert disability labels shape the experience of academic performance and failure. Previous studies of disability labeling have neglected the life of the label after…
Descriptors: Labeling (of Persons), Special Education, Disabilities, Grade 3
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Wolcott, Harry F. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2007
Prompted by a recent review in American Anthropologist, I interviewed two people who played central roles in the training and dissemination of MACOS, a social studies curriculum unit designed for the fifth grade during the era of intensive curriculum reform beginning in the sixties. The article briefly discusses both how MACOS came to be and what…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Educational Change, Curriculum Development, Social Studies
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Menard-Warwick, Julia – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2007
Situating parental involvement in education within a sociohistorical context, this case study of a Nicaraguan immigrant household in California contrasts the perspectives of two sisters-in-law who shared a home and whose daughters attended the same urban elementary school. Although the two women were involved in their daughters' schooling in…
Descriptors: Daughters, Parent School Relationship, Immigrants, Community Resources
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Kaomea, Julie – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2005
This article uses a Native Hawaiian example to raise difficult questions about the role and responsibility of non-Indigenous educators in teaching and supporting Indigenous studies. It challenges educators and educational researchers to think closely about how they might serve as allies in Indigenous struggles for self-determination.
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Hawaiians, Self Determination, Culturally Relevant Education
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