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Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
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Rosalind M. O. Pritchard – Irish Educational Studies, 2024
Many reasons exist for mergers in higher education. One of the most pervasive is the pursuit of resources, often expressed in terms of student numbers which give increased power within an education ecology. However, resource dependency is not the only rationale for merger; and history demonstrates that a multi-campus institution may disband as…
Descriptors: Competition, Multicampus Colleges, Organizational Change, Universities
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Skerritt, Craig – Irish Educational Studies, 2019
Symbolic of the rise of neoliberal principles in Irish education policy, there is now a move towards advancing school autonomy and decentralizing decision-making to individual schools, possibly emulating the academy model that has become widespread in England. Increasing the freedom and independence of schools may involve using private actors to…
Descriptors: Privatization, Institutional Autonomy, Neoliberalism, Politics of Education
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Nolan, Ann – Irish Educational Studies, 2018
While AIDS was neither the initial nor the sole factor, it had a profound impact on the development of school-based sex education policy and practice in 1980s Ireland. Attempts to introduce a national programme of sex education on foot of increasing rates of crisis pregnancy pre-date the AIDS era, but these efforts had been vociferously opposed by…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Sex Education, Secondary Education
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Barry, Frank – Irish Educational Studies, 2014
Most studies of the relationship between education and economic development focus on the line of causation running from the former to the latter. The present paper studies how the pattern of Irish development has influenced the structure of the Irish education system. The first section sets out the economic context of late industrialisation within…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economic Development, Postsecondary Education, Educational History
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O'Connor, Muiris – Irish Educational Studies, 2014
Beginning with a historical review of Irish education policy since the establishment of the Irish Free State in 1922, this paper focuses on the issue of investment in education through the lens of the "Investment in Education" report. Following this historical review, the author explores how the legacy of the past continues to define the…
Descriptors: Investment, Reflection, Educational Policy, Educational Change
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Breacháin, Annie Ó; O'Toole, Leah – Irish Educational Studies, 2013
In 1999, the primary curriculum was published in Ireland, with emphases on "breadth and balance", recognition of the role of language and the arts and commitment to each child's potential and holistic development. In 2011, the Irish government published a strategy aimed to improve standards of literacy and numeracy among children and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literacy, Numeracy, Politics of Education
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Walsh, John – Irish Educational Studies, 2011
The upgrading of higher technical education which began in the 1960s marked the most influential intervention by the Irish government in the third-level sector since the establishment of the independent Irish state. A series of reforming initiatives extended educational opportunity and transformed the status of technical education at higher level.…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Educational Opportunities, Technical Education
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Travers, Joseph – Irish Educational Studies, 2010
This paper critiques learning-support policy for mathematics in Irish primary schools. The key policy question addressed is how equitable the development of the learning-support service has been in addressing low achievement in mathematics in designated schools compared to non-designated schools. The core argument developed is that there is a link…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Mathematics Achievement, Low Achievement, Politics of Education
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Tormey, Roland – Irish Educational Studies, 2010
Educational disadvantage is an essentially contested, political concept. At the same time there is a "phoney consensus" surrounding the issue, i.e., policy debates on the topic often fail to reflect this contestation. This lack of awareness of the political context to the debate is evident in relation to the targets and measures set for…
Descriptors: Political Influences, Educational Policy, Educationally Disadvantaged, Politics of Education
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Kitching, Karl – Irish Educational Studies, 2010
This paper unearths the improvisational nature of Irish state exigencies and their central contribution to racialisation in and through schooling. The analysis unravels white-Irishness through gender and Traveller membership, in terms of its links to the state's early efforts at intelligibility and associated politics of desirable and viable…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Second Language Learning
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Thorburn, Malcolm; Jess, Mike; Atencio, Matthew – Irish Educational Studies, 2009
Various recent politically driven policy interventions have outlined the increased importance of school physical education programmes as a contributor towards realising active lifelong learning targets. This paper explains the origins of the new policy emphasis and describes some of the opportunities which now exist for reviewing many curriculum…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Lifelong Learning, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy
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Colton, Paul – Irish Educational Studies, 2009
In Ireland, where education at both primary and second level is overwhelmingly denominational in character, patronage is exercised, in the main, by religious patrons. This article is an introspective analysis of current legal issues as they face one patron and schools under his patronage; it looks at the intersection of civil law with Church law;…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Boards of Education, Legal Responsibility, School Law
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Seery, Aidan – Irish Educational Studies, 2008
A number of different languages or discourses are evident in contemporary Irish educational policy, debate and theory: the grammar of commodity and marketisation, the poetry of "Bildung" and culture, the prose of Christian formation and revelation together with the ubiquitous rhetoric of personal developmental psychology. These are among…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ideology, Connected Discourse, Developmental Psychology
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Buchanan, Nina K.; Fox, Robert A. – Irish Educational Studies, 2008
"Choice" and "freedom" as measured by the ability of parents to select their children's schools are deeply embedded in the national ethos of the United States of America. Wealthy American parents have always exercised school choice but minority and low-income students are often trapped in failing schools. This paper is based on…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, School Choice, Parent Role, Foreign Countries
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McDermott, Kevin; Henchy, Deirdre; Meade, Della; Golden, Kieran – Irish Educational Studies, 2007
How will the Second Level Support Service (SLSS), established to support curriculum reform and the professional development of teachers, sustain its own professional development and identity in a climate of change and uncertainty? How will the SLSS maintain its vision of continuous professional development in the midst of educational reform? This…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Focus Groups, Global Approach, Educational Change
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