Charlotte Struyve
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
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Publication
Featured researches published by Charlotte Struyve.
Journal of Professional Capital and Community | 2016
Charlotte Struyve; Alan Daly; Machteld Vandecandelaere; Chloé Meredith; Karin Hannes; Bieke De Fraine
Purpose – The number of early career teachers leaving the profession continues to be an ongoing issue across the globe. This pressing concern has resulted in increased attention to the instructional and psychological conditions necessary to retain early career educators. However, less formal attention has been paid to the social infrastructure in which early career teachers find themselves. The purpose of this paper is to foreground the role of social capital and its effect on job attitudes and educators’ intention to leave the profession. Design/methodology/approach – Data were collected from 736 teachers within ten secondary schools in Flanders (Belgium). Using social network and multilevel moderated mediation analysis techniques, the relationships between teachers’ social connectedness, job attitudes, and the intention to leave the profession for both novice and experienced teachers were analyzed. Findings – Findings indicate that being socially connected to other educators within the school is associa...
Social Networks | 2017
Chloé Meredith; Wim Van Den Noortgate; Charlotte Struyve; Sarah Gielen; Eva Kyndt
Abstract In this study, we investigate information seeking interactions in secondary schools from a multilevel network approach. Based on network-related theories, we examine the facilitating role of formal subunits. We apply exponential random graph models for multilevel networks and summarize our findings by using a meta-analysis technique. Our results indicate that formal subunits (e.g. subject departments) can, to some extent, facilitate interactions, in loosely coupled organizations (e.g. secondary schools). Finally, this study shows that a multilevel network approach can provide a more informative representation of information seeking ties in knowledge-intensive organizations.
Journal of Education Policy | 2014
Charlotte Struyve; Maarten Simons; Anneleen Verckens
Central to this article is a case study of one particular governmental instrument in Flanders, the educational magazine ‘Klasse voor Ouders’ (Klasse for Parents). This popular magazine aims to provide information for and communication with parents as one of the target groups in the educational field. Despite the claimed formal and neutral character, in this study, we assume that ‘Klasse voor Ouders’ plays a larger role by contributing to the (re-)organisation of the public debate. We suggest that through the ‘order of discourse’ and thus, through what is said and written, an educational reality is created in which parents and the government are ‘positioned’ and are asked to reflect on themselves and to act in a well-defined way. By means of a critical discourse analysis in line with Fairclough, we illustrate how parents are understood as having a continuous ‘drive’ for improving the quality of their own parenting practice while the government is positioned as in charge of and in control for creating a kind of ‘parental learning community’.
Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research | 2018
Charlotte Struyve; Karin Hannes; Chloé Meredith; Machteld Vandecandelaere; Sarah Gielen; Bieke De Fraine
ABSTRACT Special needs care has taken on a substantial evolution within education. Special educational needs coordinators (SENCOs) are no longer considered to provide individual guidance to students but to support and professionalize regular teachers in fulfilling special needs care in their classroom. In doing so, they act as teacher leaders. Many concerns are raised about how teacher leadership may interfere with the existing working relationships in schools. In this study, we use Positioning Theory as a theoretical approach to obtain an in-depth understanding of how the position of the SENCO and the responsibilities attached to this position are negotiated within the school. The findings illustrate that SENCOs received the legitimacy to act as teacher leaders when their expertise was recognized, when teachers perceived their task as first-line helpers, and when school principals were willing to release power.
Journal of Educational Change | 2014
Charlotte Struyve; Chloé Meredith; Sarah Gielen
Front Learning Research | 2017
Chloé Meredith; Nienke M. Moolenaar; Charlotte Struyve; Machteld Vandecandelaere; Sarah Gielen; Eva Kyndt
Archive | 2016
Chloé Meredith; Machteld Vandecandelaere; Charlotte Struyve; Eva Kyndt; Sarah Gielen
Archive | 2016
Charlotte Struyve; Alan Daly; Machteld Vandecandelaere; Chloé Meredith; Karin Hannes; Bieke De Fraine
Archive | 2016
Charlotte Struyve; Karin Hannes; Chloé Meredith; Bieke De Fraine; Sarah Gielen
Archive | 2016
Charlotte Struyve; Machteld Vandecandelaere; Chloé Meredith; Bieke De Fraine; Karin Hannes; Sarah Gielen