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Peer Assessment and Video Feedback for Fostering Self, Co, and Shared Regulation of Learning in a Higher Education Language Classroom
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In: ISSN: 2504-284X ; Frontiers in Education ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03651135 ; Frontiers in Education , Frontiers, 2022, 7, ⟨10.3389/feduc.2022.732094⟩ (2022)
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Towards an international lexicon
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In: ISSN: 1863-9690 ; EISSN: 1863-9704 ; ZDM ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03625972 ; ZDM, Springer Verlag, 2022, ⟨10.1007/s11858-022-01349-3⟩ (2022)
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Focus groups as a tool to reveal causes of resistance or openness to non-binary gender norms among kindergarten teachers
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In: 11th European Feminist Research Conference: Social change in a feminist perspective ; https://hal.univ-lorraine.fr/hal-03573494 ; 11th European Feminist Research Conference: Social change in a feminist perspective, University of Milano, Bicocca, Jun 2022, Milan, Italy ; https://11efrc.unimib.it/ (2022)
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Exploring elementary teachers’ facilitation of discussion in developing students’ mathematical agency
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Perceptions and attitudes of music department chairs and faculty regarding global competence in North Carolina Community College music programs
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The Complex, Dynamic and Co-adaptive Relationship between Pronunciation Teachers’ Cognitions, Pedagogical Practices and Wider Contexts: A Case from Vietnamese Tertiary Education
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A phenomenological study exploring GEAR UP students’ perceptions of post-secondary preparedness.
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Indigenous Language Revitalization: Success, Sustainability, and the Future of Human Culture
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In: Capstone Showcase (2022)
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‘Twenty hearts beating as none’: primary education in Ireland, 1899-1922
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Duggan, Michael. - : Dublin City University. School of History and Geography, 2022
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In: Duggan, Michael (2022) ‘Twenty hearts beating as none’: primary education in Ireland, 1899-1922. PhD thesis, Dublin City University. (2022)
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Abstract:
At the dawn of the twentieth century, the Irish national school system catered for the educational needs of almost 800,000 children in 8,500 schools. Despite its manifest numerical success and its agency in the near elimination of illiteracy, issues such as clerical management, the payment by results system, inferior school conditions, the proliferation of small schools, the restricted curriculum, the teaching of Irish and the reorganisation of the inspectorate generated a confluence of challenging circumstances for all participants. This was the scenario presented to Dr William Starkie, academic and classical scholar, who was appointed Resident Commissioner of Education in 1899. This study charts the fortunes of the national school system from 1899 to 1922, a period roughly coinciding with the tenure of Dr W.J.M. Starkie as Resident Commissioner of National Education. This commenced with an active programme of curricular and administrative reform that served to modernise primary education in Ireland, which had lagged behind systems elsewhere. Parallel with this programme of change, there were strong intimations that the British government harboured plans to reform Irish education and its administration along the de facto lines recently pursued in England. As the primary education system in Ireland had evolved into a denominational one, financed by government but clerically managed, the various Churches were in the main generally satisfied. As a result, every suggestion that schools be financed by rates and under local control was stoutly resisted. Successive chief secretaries failed to progress this policy. Furthermore, Starkie’s energetic approach to administrative reform not only encountered opposition, it generated additional problems. The new system of pay, increments and promotion for teachers, introduced in tandem with the Revised Curriculum, and combined with a changed inspectoral remit proved problematic, with the result that although curricular reform was successfully introduced, progress was disrupted by financial and organisational issues. Two vice-regal inquiries, in 1913 and 1918, delved minutely into primary education provision under the National Board. These highlighted the scale of the deficiencies of the existing system and provided the impetus, had it been fully grasped, for further organisational and administrative change. The outbreak of the First World War in 1914 ensured the matter was put on the back burner for the duration, and when it was taken up again, in its immediate aftermath, it was too late. A final attempt was made in 1918 20 to address the structural deficiencies of the Irish educational system. Had this been achieved, it would have resulted in the replacement of the National Board, which was no longer fit for purpose, by a state Department of Education in the manner of that already in place in Great Britain. This was not possible in Ireland because of political and ideological developments that heralded the breakup of the Union. The rise of cultural nationalism, and with it the Gaelic League, had brought increasingly exigent calls for the introduction of a bilingual programme of education. These were addressed at first by curricular accommodation, but the 1916 Rising raised nationalist aspirations. When it came to education provision, nationalists and the Catholic Church increasingly found common cause in the late 1910s and, as a new political disposition beckoned, the alliance forged was a hallmark f or the future in which the churches and the Catholic Church in particular were permitted to retain their ascendant position in the provision of education and the state acceded to an essentially subordinate, administrative position.
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Keyword:
History; History of Primary education
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URL: http://doras.dcu.ie/26511/
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What Happens in English Class Doesn’t Stay in English Class: How College Writers Remember, Story, and Inhabit the Past in the Present
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Understanding the Learning Experiences of Highly Educated refugees from Iraq and Syria en route to Economic Integration in Luxembourg
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Teaching vocabulary to adolescents with language disorder: perspectives from teachers and speech and language therapists
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Teaching vocabulary to adolescents with language disorder: Perspectives from teachers and speech and language therapists
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National Languages, Multilingual Education, and the Self-proclaimed "Militants" for Change in Senegal
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Struggle Gives Birth to Solidarity: The Lived Experiences of Trans Spectrum College Students in Red States Since the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election
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The Paradox of Minzu Higher Education: Structural Inequity and Exclusion of Tibetans in China’s Tertiary Education
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Energy Conservation Theory for Second Language Acquisition (Ect-l2a): A Partial Validation of Kinetic Energy– Aptitude and Motivation
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Hybrid system and flipped classroom: digital lexiculturology in CFL ; Dispositif hybride et classe inversée : lexiculturologie numérique en CLE
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In: Journées d’études Enseignement en ligne de la langue et de la civilisation chinoises. ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03643992 ; Journées d’études Enseignement en ligne de la langue et de la civilisation chinoises., Jun 2022, Paris, France (2022)
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Interaction between orthographic and graphomotor constraints in learning to write
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In: ISSN: 0959-4752 ; Learning and Instruction ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03620980 ; Learning and Instruction, Elsevier, 2022, 80 (101622), pp.10.1016/j.learninstruc.2022.101622. ⟨10.1016/j.learninstruc.2022.101622⟩ (2022)
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Des corpus de textes pour développer le lexique des affects en FLE
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In: Séminaire Modern Language Center ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03630507 ; Séminaire Modern Language Center, King's College London, Mar 2022, London, Royaume-Uni ; https://www.kcl.ac.uk/modern-language-centre (2022)
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