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Jill Koyama – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2024
The Arizona state legislature has aimed to pass a series of bills banning those in schools from teaching topics associated with inclusion, social justice, and equity. Since 2020, the legislature has targeted teaching 'critical race theory' (CRT), often (mis)using the term to refer to any ideas related to systemic discrimination and racial…
Descriptors: Critical Race Theory, Public Schools, State Legislation, Educational Legislation
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Paolo Landri – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2024
In the latest two decades, there has been an increasing number of publications in education studies drawing on Actor-Network Theory (ANT). However, the uptake of ANT in education studies was not immediate, and the investigations on educational leadership through ANT have been rare. With the aim of promoting the study of educational leadership…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Educational Research, Instructional Leadership, Ecology
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Annelies Kamp – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2024
This article takes up an ANTian sensibility to explore the enactment of a policy for educational collaboration in one region in the South Island of Aotearoa New Zealand (New Zealand). The case offers potential for considering the benefits of a sociology of associations (Latour 2005/2007): a Treaty-based bicultural nation, school atomisation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Educational Change, Seismology
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Ruth Unsworth – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2024
In this paper, I argue that power promised to England's teachers by the 2010 'Importance of Teaching' white paper has rather played out as a reformulation of methods of policymaking to more indirect modes of government control. I trace the growth of government control in English schools, promised front-line power in 2010 and a rise in…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Power Structure, Educational Policy, Policy Formation
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Ida Martinez Lunde – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2024
This article explores how responses to a generic skills framework are materialised in Irish schools, and the main aim is to shed light on multiple dimensions of policy enactment. The Key Skills Framework (KSF) was introduced as part of a curricular reform in Irish lower secondary schools -- a reform that has met substantial resistance locally and…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Public Sector, Private Sector, Partnerships in Education
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Anna D. Beck – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2024
Global policy discourse promotes teachers as leaders of educational change who should have a voice in policy formation. 'Teaching Scotland's Future', a major teacher education reform in Scotland, feeds off this vision. Taking an Actor-Network Theory inspired Critical Policy Analysis approach, I unpack the participation of human and non-human…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Policy, Educational Administration, Teacher Role
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Hoskins, Kate – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
What impact did the 1988 Education Reform Act (1988 ERA) have on higher education from the perspectives of professors working in the sector at the time? How did it reshape the sector's structures? How did it contribute to the conditions that have unleashed the so called 'undergraduate monster'? These questions are addressed in this paper. I draw…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Policy, Educational Legislation, Foreign Countries
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LoBue, Ann – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
This paper explores ideas about the role of the school principal embedded in New York State education policy. Many public schools across the state fail to deliver equitable opportunities and outcomes for an increasingly diverse student population and improving school leadership offers the potential for substantial returns. Drawing on concepts of…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Equal Education, Principals, Educational Policy
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Thomson, Pat; Greany, Toby; Cousin, Susan; Martindale, Nick – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
The work of school leaders during lockdown has been emotionally charged and emotionally draining, affecting immediate well-being and longer term career plans. To communicate the emotions that we were told about and which were obvious during interviews with serving headteachers, we turned to arts-informed methods. We used poems made from…
Descriptors: Poetry, Art, Instructional Leadership, Teacher Attitudes
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Thornton, Margaret E. – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
The implementation of gifted programmes in the 1970s provided a way for school divisions to circumvent many of the aims of desegregated schooling as called for in "Brown v. Board of Education." This study examines the implementation of one such system in a Southern school district that saw schools close rather than integrate in the years…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Gifted Education, Program Implementation, School Segregation
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Wheeldon, Anita Louise; Whitty, Stephen Jonathan; van der?Hoorn, Bronte – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
If centralising university services is regarded as operationally ineffective, why do managerialised universities continue to organise themselves this way? We investigate an occurrence of this paradox at a regional Australian university, where professional staff services were centralised for a period of 7 years. They were separated from academics…
Descriptors: Centralization, College Administration, Foreign Countries, Regional Schools
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Strnadová, Iva; Eacott, Scott; Danker, Joanne; Dowse, Leanne; Lenne, Brydan; Alonzo, Dennis; Tso, Michelle; Loblinzk, Julie – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
Schools for specific purposes (SSP) are and have been a significant feature of the education ecosystem since the roll out of mass schooling in Australia and elsewhere. SSPs serve some of the most vulnerable and disadvantaged communities. While their social and emotional worth to their communities (students, educators, families) is rarely…
Descriptors: Leadership, Special Schools, Foreign Countries, Inclusion
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Dor-Haim, Peleg – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
In the course of the COVID-19 crisis, teachers and students experienced a prolonged separation from vital social needs, such as social interaction, and therefore many of them felt a sense of loneliness. However, while some teachers may perceive school as a place that provides comfort and support, others may be suspicious of it and feel neglected.…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, COVID-19, Pandemics, Social Isolation
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McDermid, Paulie; Winton, Sue – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
The establishment of the Commission on Private Schools in Ontario in 1984 renewed long-standing debate over public funding of the Canadian province's public schools. Engaging Maarten Hajer's discourse coalition approach and argumentative discourse analysis, we demonstrate how actors with disparate -- sometimes even competing -- goals and values…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Equity (Finance), Private Schools, Public Schools
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Lee, Yoonmi – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
This paper examines the formation of the teachers' movement in South Korea, focusing on the publication of the short-lived magazine "Minjung Gyoyuk" (People's Education) in 1985. Progressive teachers published this magazine to systematically critique the education practises of the time and seek a new direction for education under…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Empowerment, Politics of Education, Educational Development
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