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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 151 to 165 of 913 results
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Sullivan, Alice; Heath, Anthony; Rothon, Catherine – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
The Labour government elected in 1997, which lost power in 2010, was the longest serving Labour administration Britain has ever had. This period saw an enormous expansion of further and higher education, and an increase in the proportion of students achieving school-level qualifications. But have inequalities diminished as a result? We examine the…
Descriptors: Social Class, Educational Attainment, Foreign Countries, Equal Education
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Schneider, Silke L.; Tieben, Nicole – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
The German secondary education system is highly stratified. However, the higher tracks have expanded vastly over the last decades, leading to substantial changes in the distribution of students across the different tracks. Following the German re-unification, the school structure itself has also changed to some degree. Furthermore, several smaller…
Descriptors: Secondary Education, Track System (Education), Educational Change, Foreign Countries
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Hannum, Emily; An, Xuehui; Cherng, Hua-Yu Sebastian – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Despite the important role played by examinations in educational stratification and mobility in China, to our knowledge there is no literature in English that investigates the impact of exams on educational attainment with empirical data. We address this gap with an investigation of how examinations shape opportunities for children of the rural…
Descriptors: Economic Status, Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Attainment, Tests
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Kariya, Takehiko – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Any moves towards substantive equality in education must negotiate the contradictions between equality and efficiency. Equality of education comes about through both the widening of opportunity and the maintenance of educational quality, but in the context of limited resources, educational policy rarely serves both ends simultaneously. Regardless…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Equal Education, Educational Quality, Foreign Countries
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Alexandersson, Mikael – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
This article describes and analyses some crucial aspects in the latest reforms of Swedish upper secondary education. For decades Sweden stood out as a special case in several respects, in particular the integration of different tracks in upper secondary education; offering second chances to dropouts, and success in terms of equality and…
Descriptors: School Restructuring, Secondary Education, Dropouts, Foreign Countries
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Mastekaasa, Arne – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
This paper examines whether graduates of high academic quality (as measured by their university or university college Grade Point Average or GPA) are recruited to and remain in school jobs. Extensive data from Norwegian administrative registers are used. The analyses show that graduates from specialised and concurrent general teacher programmes go…
Descriptors: Grade Point Average, College Graduates, Foreign Countries, Economic Factors
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Keddie, Amanda; Mills, Martin; Pendergast, Donna – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
This paper presents interview data from a case study of "Lemontyne College"; a large government school situated in a "master planned community" (MPC) in Australia. The paper draws on Ball's (2003) theorising of performativity and fabrication to analyse this school's take up of the status-oriented corporate discourses of performance, competition…
Descriptors: Manufacturing, Social Change, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
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Tight, Malcolm – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
This article explores the changing attitudes towards student accommodation in higher education in the United Kingdom since the end of the Second World War. In the first part of this period there was a firm assumption, in universities and teacher training colleges, that the accommodation of students in or close to their university or college,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Attitude Change, Residential Patterns
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West, Anne; Barham, Eleanor; Hind, Audrey – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
The distribution of pupils amongst schools is fundamental to concerns about equality of educational opportunity and it is for this reason that the process by which pupils are admitted to schools is of significance. This paper focuses on admissions criteria and practices used by English secondary schools in 2001 and 2008 in light of changes to…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Opportunities, Admission (School)
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Basit, Tehmina N.; Santoro, Ninetta – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
This article brings together the findings of two separate studies in Britain and Australia that sought to examine the experiences of teachers of ethnic difference. Drawing on qualitative data, we examine how early-career and mid-career minority ethnic teachers in Britain and Australia, respectively, understand and take up the role of "cultural…
Descriptors: Role Models, Student Diversity, Foreign Countries, Minority Groups
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Kelchtermans, Geert; Piot, Liesbeth; Ballet, Katrijn – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Based on a secondary analysis of studies on Flemish primary schools, the article argues that the metaphor of the gatekeeper, on the threshold between the outside-school and the inside-school world, is a powerful frame to capture some of the particular complexities of principals' emotional experience of themselves and their working conditions. More…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Schools, Principals, Figurative Language
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Thomas, Gary – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Arguments for the value of case study are vitiated by assumptions about the need for generalisation in the warrant of social scientific inquiry--and little generalisation is legitimate from case study, although an argument exists for the role of the case in the establishment of a form of generalisation in a certain kind of theory, a line of…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Social Sciences, Generalization, Case Studies
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Shapira-Lishchinsky, Orly – Oxford Review of Education, 2010
This article explores a cross-occupational approach for dealing with ethical dilemmas by comparing teaching and nursing. Findings indicate more shared patterns of ethical dilemmas (such as caring for needs for others versus following formal codes) than dilemmas specific to teaching (e.g., advancing universal values versus advancing knowledge) or…
Descriptors: Ethics, Teaching (Occupation), Nursing, Correlation
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Hillyard, Sam – Oxford Review of Education, 2010
The paper sets out to examine the role that ethnographic work can and should play in the development of sociological theory, focusing on the case study of differentiation-polarisation theory. It provides a detailed discussion of the work of Hargreaves (1967), Lacey (1970) and Ball (1981) and assesses the degree to which their work was ethnographic…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Role, Social Theories, Educational Sociology
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Simm, Rebecca; Roen, Katrina; Daiches, Anna – Oxford Review of Education, 2010
There is evidence suggesting that self harm among young people is beginning earlier, in childhood and adolescent years. This paper reports on a qualitative study of primary school staff responses to self harm among children. Some studies with adolescents show self harm presents challenges to education professionals who may lack training or…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Foreign Countries, Self Destructive Behavior, Intervention
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