“…The exosystem includes the wider social structures that impact on the learner, such as educational institutions, the media, government, the world of work and social services, and the macrosystem encompasses the wider economic, social, legal, political and educational systems in which the other systems are located. This model was used, in conjunction with Schwab's (1973) framework of curriculum redevelopment, to develop a bioecological model of influences on student engagement, as the theoretical framework for a case study on flipped learning in secondary classrooms (Bond, 2019). The interconnected dimensions of curriculum, students, teachers and milieus (school, classrooms, family/parents, community) within Schwab's (1973) framework, as well as the inclusion of technology by Willis et al (2018) in their study of parent engagement with their child's learning, allowed the first author to visualise more easily the interconnected, fluid relationship between the external influences on student engagement.…”