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Owen, music and inclusion

Published on: Author: Mark Murphy Leave a comment

By Oscar Odena. Robert Owen’s vision of education for all outlined the importance of arts education for personal development as well as for community cohesion. His vision of education comprised not just reading and writing but aesthetic appreciation, music and dancing, in order to achieve everybody’s holistic development and a sense of inclusion. His New… Continue reading

Exploring the impact of academy chains in England

Published on: Author: guwebteam 5 Comments
teenage school pupils

The Robert Owen Centre for Educational Change at the University of Glasgow has been working with colleagues at the University of Southampton to explore the impact of academy chains in England. This work builds on earlier work exploring the impact of federations on student outcomes (Chapman and Muijs, 2013) and qualitative studies of academy chains… Continue reading

Knowledge is the route to emancipation: Lawrence Stenhouse on teacher work

Published on: Author: Mark Murphy 1 Comment

[image (c) Todd Berman] By Clive Dimmock Since joining the Robert Owen Centre I am experiencing constant resonances with the work of a man I have admired for most of my 30-year university career. If you espouse these – teachers researching their own practice, action research, use of data to inform improved practice, the centrality… Continue reading

‘A truly postmodern condition’: The unintended side-effects of global education rankings

Published on: Author: Mark Murphy Leave a comment

[image (c) Rob Ketcherside] Post By Barbara Kehm When the invitation came (in January 2013) to give a presentation at the 5th International Conference on World Class Universities in Shanghai to celebrate 10 years of Shanghai Jiao Tong Academic Ranking of World Class Universities I felt very honoured. But I was also in a split… Continue reading

Learner-centred education, democracy, and the problem of educational change

Published on: Author: micheleschweisfurth Leave a comment

front Image (c) Mark Brannan By Michele Schweisfurth I was in New York last week, which was a very fine place to be in the autumn, or just about anytime for that matter.  I was there to attend an Open Society Foundations-sponsored meeting of some of us who have been researching learner-centred education as an… Continue reading

Education, justice and democracy: The struggle over ignorance and opportunity

Published on: Author: stephenball 2 Comments

[front image (c) Sebastien Wiertz] By Stephen Ball This is the name of a new report I wrote for CLASS, the Centre for Labour and Social studies, which was published in September 2013. Below is an edited extract from the report, the full version of which can be found here. Comments are welcome. Despite the… Continue reading

Does educational research matter? Response to BERA

Published on: Author: Mark Murphy 1 Comment

[front image (c) F. Jourde] This is the question posed in a recent briefing document produced by BERA (29th August 2013), entitled Why education research matters. The briefing document is designed to inform future funding decisions and details a range of case studies to illustrate the importance of education research and its success in impacting… Continue reading