Results 141 to 150 of about 39,809 (291)
Abstract Grounded in principles of epistemic justice, this article examines the educational impacts of Zambia's COVID‐19 school closures on Indigenous girls in two districts and highlights community‐led pathways for resilience. National responses prioritised broadcast and digital delivery but presupposed access to electricity, digital devices and ...
Marcellus Forh Mbah +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract As England embarks on its first comprehensive curriculum review in fifteen years, this paper offers critical insights from schools that sustained arts‐rich provision despite a policy landscape hostile to creative subjects. Drawing on data from the Researching Arts‐rich Primary Schools (RAPS) project—a mixed‐methods study of 76 arts‐rich ...
Pat Thomson, Christine Hall
wiley +1 more source
Linguistic Perspectives on the Development of Intercultural Competence in Telecollaboration.
This item submitted to IUPUI ScholarWorks as part of the OASIS Project. Article reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Permission granted through posted policies on copyright owner’s website
Belz, Julie A. (Julie Anne)
core +1 more source
Cultural and linguistic competence in chiropractic university students: Insights from a cross-sectional study. [PDF]
Ismail F, Wessels M.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract This paper explores how history teachers in secondary education in England (a) see their role as assessors and (b) how they make decisions about assessing a difficult history: learning about the Holocaust. Assessment literacy (AL) is recognised as a potentially valuable aspect of good teaching and central to supporting students' learning ...
Mary Richardson +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract This article examines how national education in Hong Kong functions as a contested arena in which state and non‐state actors struggle over the meaning of citizenship, identity and schooling. Using inductive frame analysis of 319 news articles (2020–2025) from five Chinese‐ and English‐language outlets, it identifies diagnostic, prognostic and ...
Jason Cong Lin
wiley +1 more source
THE CONCEPT OF LINGUISTIC COMPETENCE AND ITS COMPONENTS
Linguistic competence, a foundational concept in the field of theoretical and applied linguistics, refers to a speaker's unconscious knowledge of their native language and their ability to produce and understand an infinite number of sentences, including
Ergasheva Rano
core
Abstract The intersection of economic conditions and early years education has long been debated, particularly where financial constraints shape educational practice and professional realities. Türkiye, characterised by high inflation and structural vulnerabilities in purchasing power parity, provides a critical context for examining how economic ...
Ebru Aydın, Şerif Yüksel
wiley +1 more source
Negotiating ethnolinguistic identity in a multilingual society: social meaning and linguistic choice in Namibian German. [PDF]
Sauermann A, Schulte B, Wiese H.
europepmc +1 more source
'Bachelor' vs. 'water': defending variable epistemic demands on linguistic competence
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Philosophy, 2021.This dissertation articulates and defends a view about linguistic competence called 'variabilism'. According to variabilism, the epistemic demands of full linguistic competence vary
Soysal, Zeynep, Kwak, John Y.
core

