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Jahreie, Josefine – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
This article offers new insights into our understanding of the formation, textual mediation, and reproduction of perceptions of children's 'school readiness' in kindergarten and its consequences for teachers' assessment of minority-language children's 'readiness'. Building on Danish Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) teachers' accounts of…
Descriptors: School Readiness, Kindergarten, Young Children, Language Minorities
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Kjer, Mikkel; Bengtsson, Tea; Nielsen, Chantal – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
Advancing the 'temporal turn' in the sociology of education, this article explores how a strong national discourse on the length of the school day influences pupils' articulations of their temporal experiences. The discourse of 'the long school day' emerged as part of a fierce debate on the implications of a Danish school reform passed in 2014. We…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Time on Task, Educational Change, Educational Policy
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Scholes, Laura – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2020
This paper considers whether societal changes are making space for some working-class boys to go against the grain and foster positive reader identities. Drawing on interviews with 30 Australian boys about their experiences at school, Nancy Fraser's social justice framework is used to explore their parity of participation as readers. Responses…
Descriptors: Males, Social Justice, Reading Instruction, Identification (Psychology)
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Maxwell, Claire; Yemini, Miri; Engel, Laura; Lee, Moosung – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2020
In this essay we develop the concept of 'cosmopolitan nationalism', offering a working definition and suggesting ways sociologists of education might draw on it in their future work. We show how it is a useful analytical lens through which to examine contemporary policies and practices that navigate global processes (ranking systems, mobility of…
Descriptors: Nationalism, Cross Cultural Studies, Equal Education, Educational Quality
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Pratt, Nick; Alderton, Julie – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2019
This article considers a recent policy initiative in assessment in English primary schools (ages 5-11 years) in which curriculum 'levels' used by teachers to judge pupils' attainment were suddenly removed. Previous work has largely focused on assessment of pupils, but we examine assessment as an activity through which teachers reproduce their…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Philosophy, Teacher Attitudes, Neoliberalism
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Lam, Beatrice Oi-yeung; Byun, Soo-yong; Lee, Moosung – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2019
Since the mid-1990s, important education policy changes, such as the growth of Direct Subsidy Scheme (DSS) schools and the reform of the medium of instruction (MOI) policy, have been made in Hong Kong. Little is known about their impact on school segregation and educational inequality. We address this issue using six successive cycles of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Educational Discrimination, Secondary Schools
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Teague, Laura – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2018
Whilst there has been increasing focus on the impact of neoliberal education policy on the curriculum covered in schools, as well as on teacher and student subjectivities, less research has been done on the possibility, or otherwise, for teachers to challenge curriculum constraints. Arguing that these curriculum constraints are not simply imposed…
Descriptors: Elementary School Curriculum, Ethnography, Educational Policy, Politics of Education
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Myers, Martin; Bhopal, Kalwant – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2017
This article examines how two primary schools in rural England with overwhelmingly White populations (of students and teachers) dealt with incidents of racist bullying in relation to their race equality policies. The data are drawn from in-depth interviews with parents, head teachers and teachers. The article draws on the work of Foucault to argue…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Racial Bias, Bullying, Rural Schools
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Scherer, Lexie – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2016
This paper examines the experiences of children learning to read in a multi-ethnic London primary school. The data are drawn from doctoral research, based on ethnographic fieldwork, with children aged six to seven years and ten to eleven years. Reading is revealed as a strongly emotional realm for children. The children are weak to resist teacher…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Reading Programs, Emergent Literacy, Ethnography
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Meshulam, Assaf; Apple, Michael W. – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2014
The article examines a US public elementary bilingual, multicultural school that attempts to interrupt the reproduction of existing relations of dominance and subordination across a variety of differences. The school's experiences illuminate the complex reality of schools as a site of struggle and compromise between at times contradictory…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Public Schools, Elementary Schools, Bilingualism
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David, Alex Hugh – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2010
Schools in areas of concentrated disadvantage tend to have below-average attainment, but there is no consensus on why. Mental and behavioural disorders in children are correlated with socio-economic disadvantage. This paper puts forward the hypothesis that the first phenomenon can at least partly be accounted for by the second phenomenon through…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Disadvantaged Schools, Mental Disorders, Behavior Disorders
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Grieshaber, Susan – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2010
This paper investigates what happened in one Australian primary school as part of the establishment, use and development of a computer laboratory over a period of two years. As part of a school renewal project, the computer laboratory was introduced as an "innovative" way to improve the skills of teachers and children in information and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Computer Centers, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
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Hempel-Jorgensen, Amelia – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2009
This paper examines the effect of school social class composition on pupil learner identities in British primary schools. In the current British education system, high-stakes testing has a pervasive effect on the pedagogical relationship between teachers and pupils. The data in this paper, from ethnographic research in a working-class school and a…
Descriptors: Discipline, Testing, Academic Achievement, Ethnography
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Tormey, Roland – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2006
Much recent sociological work on education makes reference to gender, sexual, ethnic, local and political "project" identities, yet there remains a need to bring the nation, and the state, back in; to also question the way in which "national" identities are constructed in a context of globalisation and localisation. Through an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Education, Global Approach, Nationalism