In this paper, I will build on the proposal that we need to pay attention to both of these frames through characterizing the metadiscourse surrounding learning in the home. I suggest that this metadiscourse is made up of several elements. I will show how a number of families — the subjects of a larger research project that investigates learning across time and contexts — adopt and use folk “ theories of learning,” and I will consider, in particular, how such theories relate to dominant discourses around learning in school. Second, I will explore how media technologies — and in particular, how the ways that they are purchased and how they are located in the home— also contribute to dominant conceptualizations of learning and at times almost ...
Elective Home Education is a legal, minority approach to the compulsory education of children. I rev...
In this paper the researcher discusses the findings of a small research project which explored ...
This paper considers the discursive construction of the educational ‘other’ through home education i...
The last 20 years has seen a global increase in studies investigating various aspects of Home Educat...
The paper presents findings from a large-scale mixed methods study of young people's uses of new tec...
This paper reports the findings of a study (funded by Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Wikeley et al 2006...
This paper reports the findings of a study (funded by Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Wikeley et al 2006...
Home education from the parents perspective is described through a phenomenological study. Twenty-ni...
Whilst often seen as a ‘different’ or ‘alternative’ approach to education (Bowers, 2017; Fraser, 199...
Elective Home Education is a legal, minority approach to the compulsory education of children. I rev...
A promising, yet relatively small, body of academic scholarship on UK home-education has emerged in ...
A promising, yet relatively small, body of academic scholarship on UK home-education has emerged in ...
A promising, yet relatively small, body of academic scholarship on UK home-education has emerged in ...
The challenges of conducting research in the home, especially with preschool children, mean that the...
Elective Home Education is a legal, minority approach to the compulsory education of children. I rev...
Elective Home Education is a legal, minority approach to the compulsory education of children. I rev...
In this paper the researcher discusses the findings of a small research project which explored ...
This paper considers the discursive construction of the educational ‘other’ through home education i...
The last 20 years has seen a global increase in studies investigating various aspects of Home Educat...
The paper presents findings from a large-scale mixed methods study of young people's uses of new tec...
This paper reports the findings of a study (funded by Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Wikeley et al 2006...
This paper reports the findings of a study (funded by Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Wikeley et al 2006...
Home education from the parents perspective is described through a phenomenological study. Twenty-ni...
Whilst often seen as a ‘different’ or ‘alternative’ approach to education (Bowers, 2017; Fraser, 199...
Elective Home Education is a legal, minority approach to the compulsory education of children. I rev...
A promising, yet relatively small, body of academic scholarship on UK home-education has emerged in ...
A promising, yet relatively small, body of academic scholarship on UK home-education has emerged in ...
A promising, yet relatively small, body of academic scholarship on UK home-education has emerged in ...
The challenges of conducting research in the home, especially with preschool children, mean that the...
Elective Home Education is a legal, minority approach to the compulsory education of children. I rev...
Elective Home Education is a legal, minority approach to the compulsory education of children. I rev...
In this paper the researcher discusses the findings of a small research project which explored ...
This paper considers the discursive construction of the educational ‘other’ through home education i...