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Featured researches published by Sarah Minty.


Pedagogy, Culture and Society | 2014

School-Based Curriculum Development in Scotland: Curriculum Policy and Enactment.

Mark Priestley; Sarah Minty; Michelle Eager

Recent worldwide trends in curriculum policy have re-emphasised the role of teachers in school-based curriculum development. Scotland’s Curriculum for Excellence is typical of these trends, stressing that teachers are agents of change. This paper draws upon empirical data to explore school-based curriculum development in response to Curriculum for Excellence. We focus on two case studies – secondary schools within a single Scottish local education authority. In the paper we argue that the nature and extent of innovation in schools is dependent upon teachers being able to make sense of often complex and confusing curriculum policy, including the articulation of a clear vision about what such policy means for education within each school.


Drugs-education Prevention and Policy | 2009

Bridging the gap between evidence and practice: A multi-perspective examination of real-world drug education

Martine Stead; Robert Stradling; Morag MacNeil; Anne Marie MacKintosh; Sarah Minty; Laura McDermott; Douglas Eadie

Aims: The study examined normative school drug-education practice in Scotland and the extent to which it reflected the evidence base for effective drug education. Methods: Current guidance in Scotland was compared with systematic review evidence on drug-education effectiveness; a survey was mailed to primary, secondary and special schools (928 questionnaires returned); and 100 drug-education lessons were systematically observed across 40 schools. Findings: Nearly all schools provided drug education but modes of delivery and learning approaches did not always reflect the evidence base. There was a strong reliance on information provision and more limited use of social influences, resistance and normative approaches. Teaching was reasonably interactive, particularly with teachers who had been trained. Although drug education was provided across all school years, there was limited linkage and some duplication of content for different age groups. The rationale for resource use was not always clear, and some resources were inappropriate for pupils. Conclusions: Recommendations for closing the gap between evidence and practice include: guidance that emphasizes more strongly the weight of evidence behind recommendations; training in effective approaches; greater continuity and integration of drug education across the whole curriculum; a review of resources; and better guidance on using external visitors.


Journal of Vocational Education & Training | 2013

The literacy practices for assessment in the vocational curriculum – the case of Hospitality

Richard Edwards; Sarah Minty; Kate Miller

This article explores two case studies of the literacy practices of assessment in the vocational curriculum. Previous studies have identified learning in the vocational curriculum as being assessment-driven and that subjects often associated with limited levels of literacy actually require multiple literacy practices from students. Drawing upon studies of the literacy practices of assessment in the teaching of Hospitality, the study explores the academic and occupational forms of reading and writing required of students. These literacy practices are often invisible to both students and staff and yet are central to the success of students in relation to attainment. The article suggests that vocational subjects may actually be more demanding in the range of literacies required for assessment than is often considered to be the case.


British Educational Research Journal | 2011

Exploring the impact of supplementary schools on Black and Minority Ethnic pupils’ mainstream attainment

Uvanney Maylor; Anthea Rose; Sarah Minty; Alistair Ross; Tözün Issa; Kuyok Abol Kuyok

This paper reports findings from a study commissioned by the (then) Department for Children, Schools and Families. The research mapped the provision, and explored the impact, of supplementary schools and aimed specifically to develop further understanding as to how supplementary schools might raise the attainment of Black and Minority Ethnic pupils. Drawing on a national survey and case study data from 12 supplementary schools, we highlight a range of perceived impacts identified by teachers, pupils and parents and problematise the concept of impact. We identify the unique contribution and impact that supplementary schools make to the mainstream school attainment of pupils from diverse (linguistic, cultural, ethnic) backgrounds. We suggest that there is much to be learnt by the mainstream school sector about the difference supplementary school education makes to minority ethnic children, while questioning whether mainstream indicators of impact should be applied to supplementary schools.


The Political Quarterly | 2015

Higher Education and the Referendum on Scottish Independence

Sheila Riddell; Sarah Minty; Elisabet Weedon; Lucy Hunter Blackburn

During the course of the referendum campaign, the Scottish government argued that free tuition for Scottish and EU students symbolised Scotlands preference for universal services and was intrinsically fairer than the ‘marketised’ systems operating in the rest of the UK. Invoking principles of both social justice and pragmatism, three distinct critiques of the Scottish governments higher education policy were mounted and adopted by different policy actors for different political purposes. Following a discussion of these arguments, this article concludes that a more nuanced discussion of higher education policy in Scotland is required, focusing not just on the absence of tuition fees but also on the distribution of debt and allocation of funds across the entire education system. We also note that the focus on tuition fees policy suggests that higher education systems across the UK are set on a process of divergence, whereas there are strong pressures towards policy convergence in areas such as research policy and internationalisation.


Journal of Vocational Education & Training | 2018

Modularisation approaches in Initial Vocational Education: evidence for policy convergence in Europe?

Matthias Pilz; Junmin Li; Roy Canning; Sarah Minty

Abstract One response to challenges of national vocational training systems has been a move towards greater flexibility within vocational training systems. This article focuses on an investigation of modularisation as a tool for achieving this flexibility. Many European countries have introduced modular forms into their vocational training system. We investigate whether the global trends set out are producing policy convergence in modularisation in differing countries. This study selects seven European countries to make a detailed analysis and entailed an analysis of each country’s Initial Vocational Education and Training programmes. The methodology involved both primary and secondary data collection. The findings demonstrate policy convergence that can be attributed to similar challenges at national level. Modularisation in some countries takes a ‘radical’ form. Other countries have followed a mixed approach. It is clear that no two countries have adopted the same form of modularisation, although some countries have cited common challenges in the modularisation process.


Curriculum Journal | 2013

Swimming against the tide: a case study of an integrated social studies department

Ashley Fenwick; Sarah Minty; Mark Priestley

A recent trend in developed countries’ school curricula has been the transition from disciplinary to generic forms of knowledge, resulting in an emphasis on interdisciplinary organisation and more active forms of learning. Subject specialists are increasingly expected to demonstrate how their subject interconnects and equips pupils with key life skills. Such a change requires a major cultural shift and has been controversial, particularly in Scotland where Curriculum for Excellence, the latest curriculum reform, has seen this debate re-emerge. A detailed empirical case study of one secondary school Social Studies department that has already negotiated these shifts is presented. The case study provides insights into how school and department structures and cultures conducive to a more integrated approach have been developed. Leadership, increased opportunities for teachers to exercise greater autonomy in their work, sources of impetus and support for innovation, and the co-construction of meaning through dialogue are important themes in this process. This case study connects with current policy and provides an insight into strategies that other schools might employ when seeking to embed integrative practices. The department is identified as a significant locus for innovation and one which appears to challenge the norm.


Archive | 2018

Introduction: Higher Education Funding and Access in International Perspective

Sheila Riddell; Sarah Minty; Elisabet Weedon; Susan Whittaker

This book explores the way in which the twin pressures of globalisation and localisation play out in higher education across the developed world, often reflected in more specific debates on fees regimes, access and culture.


Archive | 2014

Working paper 7

Sarah Minty


Drug and Alcohol Review | 2007

Implementation evaluation of the Blueprint multi-component drug prevention programme: fidelity of school component delivery

Martine Stead; Robert Stradling; Morag MacNeil; Anne Marie MacKintosh; Sarah Minty

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Alistair Ross

London Metropolitan University

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Jane Brown

University of Edinburgh

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Kuyok Abol Kuyok

London Metropolitan University

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