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Dive into the research topics where Isabel Menezes is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabel Menezes.


Disability & Society | 2013

Disability, embodiment and ableism: stories of resistance

Ema Loja; Maria Emília Costa; Bill Hughes; Isabel Menezes

Non-disabled responses to visible impairment embody either social invisibility or over-attentiveness. The subjective and inter-subjective experiences of impaired bodies and intersubjective encounters within society are important aspects of disablement and the construction of a disabled identity. Impairment is read by and influences the social structure of ableism. This paper attempts to understand how ableist discourses about impaired bodies have impacted on and been resisted by disabled people and how embodiment is related to identity. In pursuit of these aims, a qualitative study was conducted with seven people who have visible physical impairments. The results indicate that disabled embodiment is produced and experienced within an ableist context that mobilizes the charitable gaze and the medical model to signify impaired bodies at the expense of the recognition of disabled identity. In order to deconstruct ableism and to recognize and respect the value of the disabled identity, a politics of recognition is required.


Compare | 2001

Teacher and Student Attitudes to Affective Education: A European Collaborative Research Project.

Arja Puurula; Sean Neill; Lisa Vasileiou; Chris Husbands; Peter Lang; Yaacov J. Katz; Shlomo Romi; Isabel Menezes; Lennart Vriens

This article reports on the outcomes of a comparative research project examining teacher and student attitudes to affective education across Europe. Affective education is defined as the aspect of the educational process that is concerned with the feelings, values, beliefs, attitudes and emotional well-being of learners. The article begins with a consideration of some of the conceptual issues in affective education and its diversity across Europe as a basis for stressing the relevance of cross-cultural comparisons. It then offers a general picture of the findings of the present research project, draws a number of tentative conclusions from this and ends with a reference to issues requiring further research in comparative work on affective education.


Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education | 2011

Development and validation of a theoretically based, multidimensional questionnaire of student evaluation of university teaching

Marina Serra de Lemos; Cristina Queirós; Pedro Teixeira; Isabel Menezes

The authors describe the development and validation of a multidimensional instrument of students’ evaluation of university teaching (the Pedagogical Questionnaire of the University of Porto). The goal was to develop an instrument based on a sound psychometric analysis and simultaneously supported by the learning theory. Based on the data from 4875 questionnaires, the present study examined the fit of the proposed multidimensional model of university teaching to the whole sample and to various specific university programmes of study using confirmatory factor analysis (AMOS 5.0). Results clearly supported the applicability of the proposed model for the whole university and across programmes of study, demonstrating the validity and reliability of the instrument in evaluating several distinct dimensions of the quality of university teaching.


Journal of Moral Education | 2014

Children and adolescents as political actors: Collective visions of politics and citizenship

Teresa Silva Dias; Isabel Menezes

This article presents a case study on the political thought and citizenship conceptions of children and adolescents. Considering children and adolescents as reflexive citizens and partners in community development processes, it is our purpose to understand the development of political thought, and particularly how children conceive the exercise of citizenship and participation. Participants were 97 children of a primary and middle secondary (basic) school, aged 5 to 14 years, organized into age groups of 12 children each. Focus group discussions were used as participatory research methodology which involves children as active collaborators, a method that appears to be a good alternative to the traditional individual interviews used in previous research. Results point to the existence of a developmental process of political thought that begins before the start of formal schooling, and a parallel evolution of the conception of social organization and the concepts of citizenship and participation.


Journal of Moral Education | 1996

Personal and Social Education in Portugal

Bártolo Paiva Campos; Isabel Menezes

Abstract Personal and social education has increasingly become a central concern in formal education, mainly due to the fact that the “traditional” school organisation is not fulfilling its duties in preparing youngsters for active participation in society. In Portugal the last decades have been characterised by a rapid social change that had a profound impact on the educational system. A review of the major transformations in Portuguese education is presented, with a special emphasis on the Education Act (1986). The role of the school in preparing students for the experiences, opportunities and responsibilities of adult life is translated in an area of personal and social education that assumes four curricular strategies: cross‐curricular dissemination; a non‐disciplinary curricular space for project development (school area); a specific discipline of one hour per week‐‐personal and social development‐‐alternative to moral and religious education; and extracurricular activities.


Power and Education | 2012

Education and Citizenship: Redemption or Disempowerment? A Study of Portuguese-Speaking Migrant (and Non-Migrant) Youth in Portugal

Norberto Ribeiro; Carla Malafaia Almeida; Maria Fernandes-Jesus; Tiago Neves; Pedro Ferreira; Isabel Menezes

The institution of the European Union has had important implications on educational policies throughout Europe, with a growing emphasis on ‘Citizenship Education’ since the mid-1990s. This can be interpreted as a response to phenomena such as the rise of ethnocentrism and xenophobia and of political disaffection of both older and younger citizens. Departing from Weilers notion of educational reform as compensatory legitimation, this article analyses the case of migrant youth in Portugal, which is particularly interesting for two reasons. The first is that migrant policies in Portugal have been extremely well evaluated by international agencies, in terms of their potential for the inclusion of migrants. The second is the fact that the migrant groups considered here, Angolans and Brazilians, both have Portuguese as their first language, hence not facing a ‘classical’ barrier to social inclusion. The research presents Portuguese data collected under the European project, Processes Influencing Democratic Ownership and Participation (PIDOP), and confronts the vision of policy makers, national and migrant youths, their parents, and their teachers. On the whole, results suggest that there is a huge gap between educational policy and the real life of schools that partly explains the (dis)empowerment of both migrant and national youth. However, in looking at this process, we must also recognise the complex role of generational factors, cultural capital, and political structures (both in the home and host contexts) in explaining youth civic and political engagement and participation.


Disability & Society | 2011

Views of disability in Portugal: ‘fado’ or citizenship?

Ema Loja; Emília Quelhas Costa; Isabel Menezes

Disability research in Portugal is scarce and often lacks the perspective of disabled people. This paper tries to bring insights from leaders of disability associations about the community of disabled people in Portugal, the barriers to their politicization and links with disabled identity. It seems that most disabled people get trapped in a tragic paradigmatic vicious cycle due to a system-induced disempowerment which is sustained by a dominant individual and remediation model that extends to families, society, policies and politicians. The disabled associative movement has been unable to reach the majority of disabled people. Suggestions are thus made in order to transform this social reality by disseminating politically aware alternative disability paradigms and the possibility of a positive disabled identity, as well as by generating societal involvement in disability as a public matter.


Human Affairs | 2012

The many faces of hermes: The quality of participation experiences and political attitudes of migrant and non-migrant youth

Maria Fernandes-Jesus; Carla Malafaia; Pedro Ferreira; Elvira Cicognani; Isabel Menezes

This paper intends to explore whether and how the quality of participation experiences is associated with political efficacy and the disposition of migrant and non-migrant young people to becoming involved. The sample includes 1010 young people of Portuguese, Angolan and Brazilian origin, aged between 15 and 29 years old. The results reveal that the quality of participation experiences is related to political efficacy and dispositions to becoming involved, but different groups seem to react differently to different forms of political action.


Citizenship, Social and Economics Education | 2012

The Values of Empowerment and Citizenship and the Experience of Children and Adolescents with a Chronic Disease

Sofia Pais; Margarida Guedes; Isabel Menezes

In spite of becoming progressively common, chronic diseases are quite invisible in modern societies, as these silent diseases are relatively absent from public socio-political debates. As a consequence, social agents and institutions seem to reveal significant difficulties in coping with the singularities of children and adolescents with a chronic disease and their parents. This article stresses the importance of recognising children and adolescents with a chronic disease as citizens who have both special needs and special rights, and emphasises the important role of support associations as mediators among various actors in the health sphere (private, public, political, medical institutions …). This research focuses on the empowerment, well-being and participation behind the experience of chronic conditions as perceived by children and adolescents with chronic illnesses, their families, and health and educational professionals. The data collected includes interviews, focus group discussions, questionnaires and a family narrative. The results suggest that there is a strong need for alternative discourses about citizenship and participation in the life experiences of people with a chronic disease, especially because the quality of their life contexts appears to be a determinant factor for well-being and empowerment.


Addictive Behaviors | 2016

Validation of the drinking motives questionnaire - revised in six European countries

Maria Fernandes-Jesus; Franca Beccaria; Jakob Demant; Lena Fleig; Isabel Menezes; Urte Scholz; Richard O. de Visser; Richard Cooke

Highlights •This paper assesses the validity of the DMQ-R (Cooper, 1994) among university students in six different European countries. •Results provide support for similar DMQ-R factor structures across countries. •Drinking motives have similar meanings among European university students.

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