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Top Cited Journal Articles
British Educational Research Journal (BERJ) is pleased to announce the top cited papers published between 2018 and 2019.
- The symbolic violence of setting: A Bourdieusian analysis of mixed methods data on secondary students’ views about setting
- Framing learning entanglement in innovative learning spaces: Connecting theory, design and practice
- Contract cheating in UK higher education: A covert investigation of essay mills
- Learning for democracy: The politics and practice of citizenship education
- The power of ‘evidence’: Reliable science or a set of blunt tools?
British Journal of Educational Technology (BJET) is pleased to announce the top cited papers published between 2018 and 2019.
- A systematic review of research on the flipped learning method in engineering education
- Which students benefit most from a flipped classroom approach to language learning?
- Using learning analytics to scale the provision of personalised feedback
- Mobile‐based collaborative learning in the fitness center: A case study on the development of English listening comprehension with a context‐aware application
- Mobile collaborative language learning: State of the art
Review of Education is pleased to announce the top cited papers published between 2018 and 2019.
- Home language, school language and children’s literacy attainments: A systematic review of evidence from low‐ and middle‐income countries
- Diversity and complexity: Becoming a teacher in England in 2015–2016
- Why do some teachers change and others don’t? A review of studies about factors influencing in‐service and pre‐service teachers’ change in classroom management
- Educating China on the move: A typology of contemporary Chinese higher education mobilities
- Secondary students’ proof constructions in mathematics: The role of written versus oral mode of argument representation
The Curriculum Journal is pleased to announce the top cited papers published between 2018 and 2019.
- ‘Complete freedom to choose within limits’ – teachers’ views of curricular autonomy, agency and control in Estonia, Finland and Germany
- Teachers’ conceptualization and enactment of twenty‐first century competences: exploring dimensions for new curricula
- Knowledge, power and powerful knowledge re‐visited
- Conflicting goals of educational action: a study of teacher agency from a transactional realism perspective
- Multiplicative reasoning: teaching primary pupils in ways that focus on functional relations
Thanks to our publisher, Wiley, these papers have all been made free until 1st March. BERA members will be able to access all of these articles once logged into their account.