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Shah, Saeeda – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2018
Islam underlines equality between women and men regarding their spiritual and intellectual potential. However, given interpretations of religious texts are often availed to suppress women in most Muslim societies, with serious implications for gender equality in the domestic and the professional spheres. This article draws on data from a study of…
Descriptors: Muslims, Women Faculty, College Faculty, Religious Factors
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Raby, Rebecca; Pomerantz, Shauna – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2015
Through the lens of post-structural agency, this article focuses on how self-identified smart girls strategically negotiate their academic identities within the gendered terrain of the school. Based on interviews with 51 smart high school girls in Canada, our analysis complicates current narrative of girls' easy achievement in school. Participants…
Descriptors: Females, Academic Achievement, Interviews, Student Attitudes
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Sin, I. Lin – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2013
This article explores the perceived role of UK international education as foreign cultural capital, obtained outside the UK, in facilitating middle-class social mobility. Drawing on interviews with students in Malaysia, it extends Bourdieu's concept of cultural capital to explain understandings of the rewards and limitations of undertaking UK…
Descriptors: Cultural Capital, Foreign Students, Social Mobility, International Education
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Allen, K.; Quinn, J.; Hollingworth, S.; Rose, A. – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2013
In this paper we explore how the "employable" student and "ideal" future creative worker is prefigured, constructed and experienced through higher education work placements in the creative sector, based on a recent small-scale qualitative study. Drawing on interview data with students, staff and employers, we identify the…
Descriptors: Employment Potential, Job Placement, Higher Education, Qualitative Research
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Byrne, Bridget; De Tona, Carla – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2012
This article, based on qualitative research in Greater Manchester, examines the experience of migrants in navigating the education system, and in particular in choosing secondary schools for their children. There has been extensive research on the process of choosing schools since the policy reforms of the 1980s, but none has examined how the…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, School Choice, Educational Change, Immigrants
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Connolly, Paul – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2008
This article provides a brief rejoinder to Gorard and Smith's reply to an article I published in a previous issue of British Journal of Sociology of Education. In that original article I provided a critical review of their quantitative research on gender and education in the United Kingdom. In their reply to this article, Gorard and Smith seem to…
Descriptors: Educational Sociology, Foreign Countries, Statistical Analysis, Gender Issues
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Booher-Jennings, Jennifer – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2008
Although high-stakes tests play an increasing role in students' schooling experiences, scholars have not examined these tests as sites for socialisation. Drawing on qualitative data collected at an American urban primary school, this study explores what educators teach students about motivation and effort through high-stakes testing, how students…
Descriptors: Hidden Curriculum, Testing, High Stakes Tests, Males
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Mendick, Heather – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2005
In this paper I address the question: How is it that people come to choose mathematics and in what ways is this process gendered? I draw on the findings of a qualitative research study involving interviews with 43 young people all studying mathematics in post-compulsory education in England. Working within a post-structuralist framework, I argue…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Masculinity, Qualitative Research, Higher Education