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124 results

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1. Do undergraduate general practice placements propagate the 'inverse care law'?

2. Capacity building in sexual health promotion: a longitudinal evaluation of a training-the-trainer programme in Ireland.

3. Patterns and paths towards privatisation in Ireland.

4. Wellbeing in the Irish Junior Cycle: the potential of Religious Education.

5. The demand for fee-paying secondary schools in the Republic of Ireland.

6. Dancing toward the light in the dark: COVID-19 changes and reflections on normal from Australia, Ireland and Mexico.

7. 'The million-dollar question' - exploring teachers and ETB staff understanding of characteristic spirit in publicly managed schools in Ireland.

8. Optimism despite disappointment: Irish traveller parents' reports of their own school experiences and their views on education.

9. A review of the role of school-related factors in the promotion of student social and emotional wellbeing at post-primary level.

10. The development of assessment policy in Ireland: a story of junior cycle reform.

11. The Irish Church Disestablishment Act (1869) and the general synod of the Church of Ireland (1871): the art and structure of educational reform.

12. Exploring the position of curriculum studies across the continuum of teacher education in Ireland.

13. The SENCO role in post-primary schools in Ireland: victims or agents of change?

14. Engaging with academic and institutional changes: physical education and sport pedagogy's interest and ability to 'survive and thrive'.

15. Developing Service User Skills in Co-Production of Research: Course Development and Evaluation.

16. Queer youth and mental health: What do educators need to know?

17. Predictability in high-stakes examinations: students’ perspectives on a perennial assessment dilemma.

18. Social care graduates’ judgements of their readiness and preparedness for practice.

19. 100 years of primary curriculum development and implementation in Ireland: a tale of a swinging pendulum.

20. A queer politics of emotion: reimagining sexualities and schooling.

21. Who are qualified to teach in second-level Irish-medium schools?

22. Taxing times: an educational intervention to enhance moral reasoning in tax.

23. 1831–2014: an opportunity to get it right this time? Some thoughts on the current debate on patronage and religious education in Irish primary schools.

24. ‘Thousands waiting at our gates’: moral character, legitimacy and social justice in Irish elite schools.

25. Bottom of the class? The leaving certificate applied programme and track placement in the Republic of Ireland.

26. Flexibility in higher education: an Irish perspective.

27. Influence of gender, single-sex and co-educational schooling on students’ enjoyment and achievement in mathematics.

28. Developing the characteristic spirit of publicly managed schools in a more secular and pluralist Ireland.

29. Superior educational attainment and strategies of land inheritance in post-famine Ireland: a case study.

30. Teaching citizenship in the faith school: qualitative evidence from separate schools in Northern Ireland.

31. Gaining access to support for children with special educational needs in the early years in Ireland: parental perspectives.

32. Early Implementation of a Family-Centred Practice Model in Child Welfare: Findings from an Irish Case Study.

33. Spoon-feeding to tongue-biting and beyond: factors that contributed to changes in Irish primary school teachers’ mathematics practice.

34. Combating educational disadvantage through early years and primary school investment.

35. Investment in edification: reflections on Irish education policy since independence.

36. The investment in education report 1965 – recollections and reminiscences.

37. Longitudinal study of levels of moral reasoning of undergraduate students in an Irish university: the influence of contextual factors.

38. ‘The problem of Trinity College Dublin’: a historical perspective on rationalisation in higher education in Ireland.

39. No longer ‘Catholic, White and Gaelic’: schools in Ireland coming to terms with cultural diversity.

40. Persistent absenteeism among Irish primary school pupils.

41. “To the very antipodes”: nineteenth-century Dominican Sister-teachers in Ireland and New Zealand.

42. An instrument to audit teachers' use of assessment for learning.

43. Investigating perceptions of the assessment process for pupils with special educational needs within an Irish context.

44. Faith of our fathers – lesbian, gay and bisexual teachers’ attitudes towards the teaching of religion in Irish denominational primary schools.

45. Children’s spirituality and the practice of meditation in Irish primary schools.

46. The Protestant working class in Belfast: education and civic erosion – an alternative analysis.

47. “Straw bonnets” to superior schooling: The “failure” of the charity school movement in the context of nineteenth-century Ireland – a reappraisal.

48. Contesting the Limond thesis on British influence in Irish education since 1922: a comparative perspective.

49. Student perceptions of predictability of examination requirements and relationship with outcomes in high-stakes tests in Ireland.

50. 'Come in with an open mind': changing attitudes towards mathematics in primary teacher education.