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Rushton, Nicky – Cambridge University Press & Assessment, 2022
In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic led to many changes to education in England. Schools closed to almost all students starting March 20th, 2020, and the government cancelled most assessments including GCSEs, A levels and many vocational qualifications. The interruptions to schooling and assessment continued during the 2020-21 and 2021-22 academic…
Descriptors: Exit Examinations, Secondary School Students, College Entrance Examinations, Foreign Countries
Achtaridou, Elpida; Mason, Emily; Behailu, Adam; Stiell, Bernadette; Willis, Ben; Coldwell, Mike – UK Department for Education, 2022
The Department for Education (DfE) commissioned Ipsos MORI, in partnership with Sheffield Hallam University (SHU) and the Centre for Education and Youth (CfEY), to carry out research among primary and secondary schools to understand how they have responded to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and what further support they believe they need…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Elementary Secondary Education, Futures (of Society)
Lynch, Sarah; Lucas, Megan; Davies, Elizabeth; Sahasranaman, Aarti; Schwendel, Gemma – UK Department for Education, 2022
The National Tutoring Programme (NTP), introduced in the academic year 2020-21, is an important part of the Government's COVID-19 recovery response, supporting schools to respond to the disruption to education caused by the pandemic and subsequent school closures, offering targeted tuition support to disadvantaged pupils who have been hit hardest…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing, Coping
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Archer, Louise; Francis, Becky; Moote, Julie; Watson, Emma; Henderson, Morag; Holmegaard, Henriette; MacLeod, Emily – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2023
There are international concerns about decreasing rates of chemistry degree enrolment. This article seeks to understand students' reasons for not/choosing to pursue a chemistry degree, drawing on (i) open-ended survey responses from a sample of 506 students in England aged 21-22 who had studied advanced level ("A level") chemistry at age…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Majors (Students), Advanced Students, Student Attitudes
UK Department for Education, 2022
Ensuring that the education system works for pupils from all backgrounds is key to the Department of Education's aims. This document collates and contextualises available evidence on outcomes by ethnicity across the post-16 education system in England. Doing so allows for a rounded view of the data in proper context, and overall trends to emerge.…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Racial Differences, Minority Group Students, White Students
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Agasisti, Tommaso; Maragkou, Konstantina – Education Economics, 2023
We use detailed survey data linked to administrative records from secondary schools in England to investigate potential channels contributing to the socio-economic gap in post-compulsory educational aspirations. We investigate the role of experiences and attitudes including the provision of information, advice and guidance (IAG), bullying…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Academic Aspiration, Social Differences, Student Experience
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Darren Cogavin – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2023
This article examines the teach-outs organised by staff and students at Lancaster University during the 2021-22 UCU strike. Guided by a critical discourse analysis of blog posts co-produced by staff and students during the strike and teach-outs, this article will examine how the teach-outs developed an education programme critiquing the neoliberal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Higher Education, Teacher Strikes
Sharp, Caroline; Skipp, Amy – National Foundation for Educational Research, 2022
The COVID-19 pandemic has had profound effects on education in both mainstream and special schools. Education in England was considerably disrupted during the 2020/1 and 2021/22 school years. There were two periods of partial school closure when most pupils stayed at home (March-May 2020 and January-March 2021). Schools were asked to prioritise…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Regular and Special Education Relationship, Educational Environment
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O'Connor, Una; Courtney, Caroline; Mulhall, Peter; Taggart, Laurence – European Journal of Special Needs Education, 2023
Administrative data sets can play a key role in informing and influencing education provision. To date, longitudinal analysis of special educational needs (SEN) in Northern Ireland (NI) has not been a visible feature of policy discourse, even though the number of these pupils has increased at a rate that is proportionally higher than the general…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Special Education, Students with Disabilities, Incidence
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Pearlman, Sara; Michaels, Dina – Support for Learning, 2019
In England, eliciting the views, feelings and aspirations of young people with special education needs is central to the Special Education Reforms of 2015. However, there is little guidance on how to do this with young people who have intellectual and communication difficulties. In this research project, a questionnaire was developed and used as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Students with Disabilities, Special Education, Intellectual Disability
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Wheater, Rebecca; Rose, Susan; Ager, Robert; Liht, Jose; Styles, Ben; Twist, Liz – Education Endowment Foundation, 2022
This is a longitudinal study that follows the youngest school-age children affected by the COVID-19 pandemic over time to understand the long-term impact of the partial school closure on pupils' attainment (reading and maths) and social skills, and on the gap between the attainment of disadvantaged and non-disadvantaged children. The research,…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing, Academic Achievement
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Sturrock, Soo – Research Papers in Education, 2022
As the global neo-liberal reform movement in education continues to evolve, so does the simultaneous transfiguration of the profile and status of primary school teachers in England. Reform continues to delineate the aims and purpose of primary education in increasingly essentialist terms. This paper explores English primary school teachers'…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Educational Change, Neoliberalism, School Administration
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Wilcox, Kim – European Educational Research Journal, 2021
Education policies can be understood as discursive strategies often used to foreground political ideologies and shape pedagogic practice. This chapter focuses on the ways in which the notion of 'teaching excellence' has received a renewed focus in the context of the introduction of a Teaching Excellence and Student Outcomes Framework for higher…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Policy, Outcomes of Education, Teacher Effectiveness
Clark, Gregory; Cummins, Neil – Cato Institute, 2021
There has been clamor and dismay at the expected future economic and social costs for children affected by school closures from COVID-19. A New York Times editorial, for example, stated: "A learning reversal of this magnitude could hobble an entire generation." However, the nearly universal belief in the substantial social and economic…
Descriptors: Compulsory Education, Foreign Countries, Educational History, Educational Change
Clark, Christina; Picton, Irene; Riad, Lara; Teravainen-Goff, Anne – National Literacy Trust, 2021
Research has shown that book ownership has a significant impact on life outcomes. In 2019, we found that that children who reported that they had a book of their own were not only more engaged with reading but also six times more likely to read above the level expected for their age than children who did not own a book (22% vs. 3.6%). We included…
Descriptors: Books, Ownership, Socioeconomic Status, Reading Attitudes
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