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Showing 1 to 15 of 110 results Save | Export
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Watson, Kevin; Williams, Steven – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2018
The Common Core State Standards (CCSS) Initiative was initially met with great enthusiasm from politicians and education experts. However, as states began rolling out the standards, backlash against the Common Core became widespread, and several states ended up pulling out of the initiative. To explore and better understand why there was such a…
Descriptors: Common Core State Standards, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Negative Attitudes
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Lee, Catherine – Management in Education, 2023
There are an estimated 50,000 LGBT teachers in English schools. In common with all workplaces, under the Equality Act 2010, schools have a responsibility to protect Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) teachers from harassment in the workplace. From September 2020, for the first time, schools in England have been required to teach…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Minority Group Teachers, Foreign Countries, Teaching Conditions
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Markey, Patrick M.; Ferguson, Christopher J. – American Journal of Play, 2017
In this excerpt from their new book, "Moral Combat: Why the War on Violent Video Games Is Wrong" (BenBella Books, 2017), the authors present an argument in defense of video games while dispelling the myth that such games lead to real-world violence. The authors define and examine moral panics and provide guidelines for identifying and…
Descriptors: Video Games, Violence, Fear, Moral Issues
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Rodwell, Grant – Issues in Educational Research, 2017
With a proposed Australian national history curriculum, many Australians began to question what historical content would be taught in the nation's schools and colleges. While pressure for a national history curriculum had been building for many years, the final impetus came from a moral panic that gripped Australian society during late 2005,…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, History Instruction, Historiography, Foreign Countries
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Carly-Ann Haney; Christine A. Walsh – Canadian Journal of Action Research, 2023
Community-based participatory research (CBPR) is an overarching methodology taken up across various disciplines. Rather than a specific approach, CBPR encompasses varied action-based methodologies. While many disciplines use CBPR methodologies in their work, Fat Studies has yet to broadly create research that uses CBPR methodologies. Fat Studies…
Descriptors: Participatory Research, Obesity, Action Research, Social Justice
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Marbang, Phattra; McKinzie, Ashleigh E.; Eller, Jackie; Leggett, Ida F. – Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Education, 2020
This qualitative study utilizes seventeen F-1 international students' experiences in the U.S. Specifically, we examine the aspects of immigration regulations and policies regarding F-1 international students and the students' reactions to those policies--from becoming a legal alien, to maintaining lawful status, to job planning after graduation.…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Student Attitudes, Educational Experience, Immigration
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Madfis, Eric; Hirschfield, Paul; Addington, Lynn A. – School Psychology Review, 2021
A dramatic transformation of school safety practices in American public schools has occurred during the last four decades. Scholars have argued that exaggerated fears and moral panics over youth violence, changing perceptions and responses to various risks in schools and society, and broader neoliberal political agendas expanded the…
Descriptors: School Security, School Safety, Public Schools, Crime
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Tufan, Mumin – Educational Research and Reviews, 2018
The main focus areas of this research are pointing out the public perceptions and beliefs about male preschool teachers, fear of child sexual molestation, moral panic, and power relations in the society. The sample of the study composed of one white, female preschool teacher with a single interview transcript, working in the city of Tempe,…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Early Childhood Education, Males, Preschool Teachers
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Joseph-Salisbury, Remi – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2021
In the context of a racialized moral panic around serious youth violence, we have seen a resurgence of calls to increase the presence of police in English schools in recent years. As well as a lack of popular and political opposition, there is a dearth of critical academic consideration of the placement of police in schools, and even less from a…
Descriptors: Police School Relationship, Critical Theory, Race, Secondary School Teachers
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Charteris, Jennifer; Gregory, Sue – Gender and Education, 2020
Snapchat, released in 2011, is embedded in the youth culture of advanced capitalist societies. Theorising Snapchat from a socio-material ontology, we explore the application's capacity to evoke the gendered politics of networked affect. Dipping into the conceptual toolbox of Deleuzoguattarian philosophy, we map how affect is distributed through…
Descriptors: Social Media, Photography, Computer Mediated Communication, Sexuality
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Rappleye, Jeremy; Komatsu, Hikaru – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2020
Herein we examine the dominant image of East Asian schools as marked by a darker side of widespread bullying, leading to high rates of youth suicide. First outlining the substantial literature on bullying in the English language, we turn to show how -- paradoxically -- the rates of bullying and suicide are no higher, or in nearly all cases, lower…
Descriptors: Bullying, Suicide, Foreign Countries, International Assessment
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Macfarlane, Bruce – Oxford Review of Education, 2020
Myths about students in higher education pervade both popular and academic literature. Such folklore thrives due to the belated development of systematic enquiry into higher education as a field of academic study, the neglect of an historical perspective, and an over-reliance on opinion-based scholarship and interview data drawn from University…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, College Students, Educational Research, Academic Standards
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Yelderman, Logan A.; Wood, Steve; Summers, Alicia – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2022
Background: Media reports of child deaths as a result of abuse and neglect can influence how children move throughout the foster care system. Using the theoretical frameworks of moral panics and street level bureaucracy, the current study examined how news reports of violent child abuse and neglect cases relate to foster care children with…
Descriptors: Death, Children, Child Abuse, Foster Care
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Bialystok, Lauren; Wright, Jessica – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2019
Scholars of sexuality have argued that 'moral panics' about sexuality often stand in for broader conflicts over nationality and belonging. Canada has spent decades cultivating a national image founded on multiculturalism and democratic equality. The Ontario sexuality education curriculum introduced in 2015 drew audible condemnation from a variety…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sex Education, Dissent, Activism
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Tsaliki, Liza – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2015
In an attempt to resist moral panics over children's media consumption, and especially girls' consumption of hyper-sexualised popular media, this paper aims to offer a more positive account of popular culture and young children's, especially girls', engagement with it. By adopting a historical approach to modern childhood and the moral panics…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Females, Sexuality, Qualitative Research
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