Results 161 to 170 of about 285,770 (245)
Abstract With growing attention to student agency in academic and policy discourse, international education has become a prominent context for examining how students navigate new cultural, academic, linguistic and social environments. However, much of this discussion attributes student agency to the ‘international’ aspect, while overlooking the ...
Soyoung Lee
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Many nations experience recurring shortages of teachers in particular subjects, prompting concerns that pupils' education is suffering as a result. Researchers have responded by generating a sizable literature on the reasons for which people enter and exit the teaching profession.
Sam Sims +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The Adaption to Online Synchronous Teaching and Voice Fatigue: Acoustic and Clinical Data. [PDF]
Evgrafova K, Sokolova N, Shvalev N.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract This paper examines the implications of England's ‘golden thread’ policy framework for teacher education, which describes a state‐mandated, linear model of professional learning from initial teacher training and education through to continuing professional development.
Amanda Nuttall +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract This paper uses empirical data from a longitudinal qualitative study conducted with aspirant teachers in England to propose (re)definitions of the concepts of ‘status’ and ‘safety’ as a framework with which to understand and improve teacher recruitment.
Emily MacLeod
wiley +1 more source
Career motivations and perceptions of teaching of 16–19‐year‐olds in England and Wales
Abstract The current study provides an understanding of career‐related motivations of 16–19‐year‐olds in schools and A‐level colleges in England and Wales. The 672 participants (62% women) were asked to complete a modified version of the Motivations for Career Choice and the Persistence Research in Science and Engineering scales and provide comments on
Sophie Thompson‐Lee +4 more
wiley +1 more source
From Individual Expression to Group Polarization: A Study on Twitter's Emotional Diffusion Patterns in the German Election. [PDF]
Zhang Y, Zhou B, Hu Y, Zhai K.
europepmc +1 more source

