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Featured researches published by Laura Lundy.


British Educational Research Journal | 2007

‘Voice’ is not enough: conceptualising Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child

Laura Lundy

This article provides a childrens rights critique of the concept of ‘pupil voice’. The analysis is founded on Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which gives children the right to have their views given due weight in all matters affecting them. Drawing on research conducted on behalf of the Northern Ireland Commissioner for Children and Young People, the article assesses some of the barriers to the meaningful and effective implementation of the right within education. It is argued that the phrases which are commonly used as abbreviations for Article 12, such as ‘pupil voice’, have the potential to diminish its impact as they provide an imperfect summary of the full extent of the obligation. The article proposes a new model, which has four key elements, for conceptualising Article 12—Space, Voice, Audience and Influence.


Childhood | 2012

Children’s rights and research processes: Assisting children to (in)formed views

Laura Lundy; Lesley McEvoy

Acknowledging children as rights-holders has significant implications for research processes. What is distinctive about a children’s rights informed approach to research is a focus not only on safe, inclusive and engaging opportunities for children to express their views but also on deliberate strategies to assist children in the formation of their views. The article reflects on a body of work with children as co-researchers and as participants and demonstrates that building capacity on the substantive research issues enables children to contribute more confidently. It concludes with a conceptualization of this approach integrating relevant international children’s rights standards.


Early Education and Development | 2011

Working With Young Children as Co-Researchers: An Approach Informed by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child

Laura Lundy; Lesley McEvoy; Bronagh Byrne

Research Findings: Under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC), children have the right to express their views on all matters affecting them and to have those views given due weight. This right applies in the context of research; however, examples of young children being engaged as co-researchers remain rare. Practice or Policy: This article examines the implications of adopting an explicit UNCRC-informed approach to engaging children as co-researchers. It draws on a research project that sought to ascertain young childrens views on after-school programs and that involved a university-based research team working along with 2 groups of co-researchers; each composed of 4 children aged 4 to 5. The article discusses the contribution made by children to the development of the research questions and choice of methods and their involvement in the interpretation of the data and dissemination of the findings. It suggests that, although there are limits to what young children can and will want to do in the context of adult-led research studies, an explicit UNCRC-informed approach requires the adoption of supportive strategies that can assist children to engage in a meaningful way, with consequent benefits for the research findings and outputs.


Educational Action Research | 2007

Consulting pupils in Assessment for Learning classrooms: the twists and turns of working with students as co‐researchers

Ruth Leitch; Stephanie Mitchell; Laura Lundy; Oscar Odena; Despina Galanouli; Peter Clough

Research literature on students as researchers demonstrates a spectrum of constructive ways in which students are being actively engaged in school and classroom action inquiries. Any identified tensions lie in the degree to which students themselves are genuinely engaged as action researchers. Increasingly, externally driven agendas for change and improvement are appropriating action research as means to facilitate teachers in developing new skills and tailor‐making national initiatives. According students appropriately democratic roles in such research processes are a lot less evident. This paper illustrates and discusses some of the difficulties, tensions and positive outcomes of engaging with students as co‐researchers at Key Stage 3 within a nationally funded project that intersects an action research policy framework supporting the introduction of Assessment for Learning throughout Northern Ireland. Issues discussed include student research advisory groups, students as data gatherers and students acting as co‐interpreters of video‐taped and image‐based classroom data.


Effective Education | 2009

Developing outcomes for educational services: a children’s rights‐based approach

Laura Lundy; Lesley McEvoy

This article provides a rationale for and insight into an explicit children’s rights‐based approach to the identification of outcomes for proposed educational interventions. It presents a critical reflection on a research project which sought to integrate international children’s rights standards into the design of services through a children’s rights audit of potential outcomes and the meaningful engagement of children in the research and service design processes. While children are involved increasingly as co‐researchers in qualitative studies, it is less common for this to occur in quantitative studies. This article offers some additional insight into children’s participation in the interpretation of data from a large‐scale baseline survey. The article concludes with an argument that international children’s rights law provides not just a legal imperative but also a comprehensive framework with which to assert the case for increased recognition of children as salient stakeholders in all aspects of serv...


Research Papers in Education | 2010

Revisioning assessment through a children’s rights approach: implications for policy, process and practice

Jannette Elwood; Laura Lundy

The linkage between the impact of assessment and compliance with children’s rights is a connection, which although seemingly obvious, is nonetheless rarely made, particularly by governments, which, as signatories to the relevant human rights treaties, have the primary responsibility for ensuring that educational practice is compatible with international children’s rights standards. While some jurisdictions are explicit about an adherence to children’s rights frameworks in general policy documentation, such a commitment rarely features when the focus is on assessment and testing. Thus, in spite of significant public and academic attention given to the consequences of assessment for children and governments committed to working within children’s rights standards, the two are rarely considered together. This paper examines the implications for the policy, process and practice of assessment in light of international human rights standards. Three key children’s rights principles and standards are used as a critical lens to examine assessment policy and practice: (1) best interests; (2) non‐discrimination; and (3) participation. The paper seeks new insights into the complexities of assessment practice from the critical perspective of children’s rights and argues that such standards not only provide a convenient benchmark for developing, implementing and evaluating assessment practices, but also acknowledge the significance of assessment in the delivery of children’s rights to, in and through education more generally.


The International Journal of Children's Rights | 2013

Incorporation of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child in Law: A Comparative Review

Laura Lundy; Ursula Kilkelly; Bronagh Byrne

Incorporation in law is recognised as key to the implementation of the UNCRC. This article considers the ways in which a variety of countries have chosen to incorporate the CRC, drawing on a study conducted by the authors for UNICEF-UK. It categorises the different approaches adopted into examples of direct incorporation (where the CRC forms part of domestic law) and indirect incorporation (where there are legal obligations which encourage its incorporation); and full incorporation (where the CRC has been wholly incorporated in law) and partial incorporation (where elements of the CRC have been incorporated). Drawing on evidence and interviews conducted during field visits in six of the countries studied, it concludes that children’s rights are better protected – at least in law if not also in practice – in countries that have given legal status to the CRC in a systematic way and have followed this up by establishing the necessary systems to support, monitor and enforce the implementation of CRC rights.


Oxford Review of Education | 2012

Children's rights and educational policy in Europe: the implementation of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child

Laura Lundy

This article aims to shed light on the impact of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) on education policy in Europe. The findings are based on a documentary analysis of the published reports of the Committee on the Rights of the Child (the Committee) on the implementation of the education rights in the CRC in every EU state. This included: a review of the state of childrens rights to education in Europe as perceived by the Committee; a summary of the Committees key recommendations for governments; and an assessment of whether the CRC can be considered to have influenced domestic education law and policies. The findings suggest that the CRC is having an impact on domestic education policy and that the child rights framework could be harnessed further by those seeking to influence government. The article concludes by reflecting on the factors which affect the processes of translating the CRC into policy and practice and explores the role that educationalists, both academic and practitioners, might play in its implementation.


British Educational Research Journal | 2012

Children’s perceptions of primary science assessment in England and Wales

Colette Murphy; Laura Lundy; Lesley Emerson; Karen Kerr

This study builds on and contributes to work on assessment of children in primary school, particularly in science. Previous research has examined primary science assessment from different standpoints, but no studies have specifically addressed childrens perspectives. This article provides additional insight into issues surrounding childrens assessment in primary school and how the assessment of science might develop in England after the science SATs (Standard Assessment Tests) were abolished in 2009. Some research suggests that primary science assessment via SATs is a major reason for the observed decline in childrens engagement with science in upper primary and lower secondary school. The analytic focus on engaging children as coresearchers to assist in the process of gathering informed views and interpreting findings from a large sample of childrens views enables another contribution. The study, based on a survey of 1000 children in primary and secondary schools in England and Wales, reveals that despite being assessed under two different regimes (high-stakes national tests in England and moderated teacher assessment in Wales), childrens views of science assessment are remarkably consistent. Most appreciate the usefulness of science assessment and value frequent, non-SATs testing for monitoring/improving science progress. There was a largely negative impact, however, of science assessment on childrens well-being, particularly due to stress. The paper demonstrates that children provide an important perspective on assessment and that including their views can improve policy-making in relation to primary science assessment.


The International Journal of Children's Rights | 2006

'Mainstreaming children's rights in, to and through education in a society emerging from conflict'.

Laura Lundy

The role and function of law in moving towards an inclusive society is not commonly understood. The reaches of law are far more subtle and pervasive than is readily apparent. Our choice of the right to education as a case study of the value and importance of law for fostering inclusive societal values is predicated on the recognition that although education is a key aspect of a childs life, children with disabilities are, more often than not, excluded from the benefits of education. Through the example of the right to education this chapter explores the role of law in fostering inclusive societal values. It explains international law, which is applicable in many countries, and examines a range of legal strategies available in the Australian legal system by way of exploring the type of law which may be used to support inclusion in education. Keywords:Australian law; fostering inclusive societal values; international law; right to education

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Bronagh Byrne

Queen's University Belfast

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Lesley McEvoy

Queen's University Belfast

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Lesley Emerson

Queen's University Belfast

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Peter Clough

Queen's University Belfast

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Ruth Leitch

Queen's University Belfast

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Carmel Kelly

Queen's University Belfast

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Despina Galanouli

Queen's University Belfast

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