Sophie Morlaix
University of Burgundy
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Sophie Morlaix.
School Effectiveness and School Improvement | 2003
Denis Meuret; Sophie Morlaix
This study uses data from an European Project on school self-evaluation. A hundred and one schools experimented with self-evaluation and reported on what they did and what were the outcomes of the process. It is therefore possible to look at which characteristics of the process are associated with a positive appreciation of its effects. This analysis is conducted by confronting 2 general models of self-evaluation, named here the “technical” and the “participating” models. The 2 models are presented, then their ability to explain the success of a process of self-evaluation is compared. The explaining power of both models appears to show similarities, a result which makes it relevant to look at their optimal combination.
International Review of Education | 2003
Emmanuel Boudard; Sophie Morlaix
This article addresses the main predictors of adult education, using statistical methods different from those generally used by social science researchers. Its aim is twofold. First, it seeks to explain in a simple and comprehensible manner the methodological value of these methods (in relation to the use of structural models); secondly, it demonstrates the concrete usefulness of these methods on the basis of a recent piece of research on the data from the International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS).
Journal of Curriculum Studies | 2010
Sophie Morlaix
The subject of this article is the structure and evolution of skills developed by pupils at primary level. Starting from an analysis of the panel data provided by the French Ministry of Education, the main object of this paper is an original measurement of skills using structural models. The findings of this research raise two complementary issues. The first issue concerns the cross‐curricular nature of skills suggesting a logic of disciplinary interdependence. The acquisition of a skill may be strongly correlated to the acquisition of other skills belonging to the same subject area or to other subject areas. The notion of a set of skills is used to account for the connections between the different aspects of acquired skills. The second issue concerns the evolution of skills over time. Here the aim will be to identify the kinds of skills that are the most predictive of subsequent educational success. This issue is highly relevant for educational policy‐making. It is hoped that the results presented in this paper will improve one’s understanding of the ways in which schools might provide pupils with the best chances of success in the earliest stages of their educational career.
Revue Francaise De Sociologie | 2006
Denis Meuret; Sophie Morlaix
Revue Francaise De Psychanalyse | 2008
Pierre Barrouillet; Valérie Camos; Sophie Morlaix; Bruno Suchaut
Revue Francaise De Psychanalyse | 2012
Sophie Morlaix; Bruno Suchaut
Questions vives recherches en éducation | 2012
Amélie Duguet; Sophie Morlaix
Archive | 2009
Sophie Morlaix
Archive | 2012
Sophie Morlaix; Bruno Suchaut
Archive | 2006
Sophie Morlaix; Bruno Suchaut