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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 151 to 165 of 335 results
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Lynn, John A., II – Academic Questions, 2008
Military history faces a dire fate. Fewer and fewer colleges and universities today regard the historical study of military institutions and practices a worthy social, and therefore scholarly, charge. John Lynn enters this debate, examining the state of military history, which he defines in terms of three genres: popular, applied, and academic.…
Descriptors: College Students, Military Service, Military Schools, World History
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Moyar, Mark – Academic Questions, 2008
Although the Vietnam War ended more than thirty years ago, historians remain as divided on what happened as the American people were during the war. Mark Moyar maps the ongoing battle between "orthodox" and "revisionist" Vietnam War historians: the first group, those who depict Vietnam as a bad war that the United States should not have fought,…
Descriptors: Asian History, War, Foreign Countries, Historians
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Strauss, Barry – Academic Questions, 2008
Unlike Westerners today, the Greeks and Romans put military training at the heart of their educational system. Examining the ancients' preoccupation with the inculcation of soldierly skills and disciplines, Professor Strauss asks whether we can find profit in their example. (Contains 7 footnotes.)
Descriptors: Military Schools, Military Training, World History, War
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Bateman, Robert L. – Academic Questions, 2008
America has always felt ambivalent towards its armed forces. During national emergencies it has shown them support, but during longer eras of calm this has often turned to distrust and scorn. LTC Robert Bateman examines the underpinnings of this uneasy and complex relationship, which has been mirrored and expressed most intensely (sometimes in…
Descriptors: Campuses, Armed Forces, Military Personnel, Military Schools
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Academic Questions, 2008
The American Sociological Association, the Modern Language Association, the American Historical Society, the American Psychological Association, and the American Anthropological Association have taken official stands on questions pertaining to America's current military involvement in Iraq. Here are their resolutions. (Contains 2 footnotes.)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, War, Military Service
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Stoesz, David – Academic Questions, 2008
Social work should be founded on a powerful network of diverse practitioners applying the social sciences to advance social welfare today. Instead, social work education operates under the guise of identity politics, reserving its highest appointments for the politically correct and members of under-represented groups, with little concern for…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Social Work, Politics, Minority Groups
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Egger, John B. – Academic Questions, 2008
"Service-learning" has been adopted by many colleges and universities as a way of instilling in students an ethic of community service. Its advocates typically distinguish it from simple volunteering, which lacks an academic component, and from internships, in which students acquire practical skills. The author argues that the rationales for…
Descriptors: Service Learning, College Students, Citizenship Education, Political Issues
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Bauerlein, Mark; Munson, Lynne; Prehoda, Lauren; Stotsky, Sandra; Greene, Jay P.; O'Connor, Erin – Academic Questions, 2008
Americans are reading less; comprehension is eroding. And where reading intersects with academic achievement and participation in civic matters and cultural activities, the results are dire. Thus concludes the new National Endowment for the Arts study, "To Read or Not To Read: A Question of National Consequence". A divergent group of experts…
Descriptors: Cultural Activities, Reading Attitudes, Reading Habits, Reading Motivation
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London, Herbert; Draper, Mark – Academic Questions, 2008
Higher education today fails to exploit the power of emergent educational technology. If it did, the authors contend that "everyone on the planet would already have access to a top-quality college education for pennies a day acquired in less than half the traditional four years." The authors envision a college education that replaces the lecture…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Technology, Learning Experience, Educational Innovation
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Connerly, Ward – Academic Questions, 2008
In his keynote address at "Race and Gender Preferences at the Crossroads," a January 2008 conference organized by the California Association of Scholars, Ward Connerly confidently asserts that the era of explicit race preferences will soon be "deader than a doornail." However, it is up to those who remember (in the words of John F. Kennedy) that…
Descriptors: Racial Differences, Civil Rights, Selective Admission, Student Diversity
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Ellis, John M. – Academic Questions, 2008
"The first law of unintended consequences is that you can never know what they will be or how far they will reach." Professor Ellis examines the injuries American higher education has sustained through the unintended consequences of diversity. (Contains 4 footnotes.)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Affirmative Action, Excellence in Education, Educational Policy
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Cohen, Carl – Academic Questions, 2008
Professor Cohen describes the arduous path to the passage of Proposition 2 in Michigan in 2006. In considering the reasons for its victory, he shows how claims (sometimes well-intended) "for" preferences rest on truly bad arguments. (Contains 8 footnotes.)
Descriptors: State Legislation, Court Litigation, Selective Admission, Affirmative Action
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Wood, Peter – Academic Questions, 2008
Advocates of preferences generally claim the moral high ground, insisting that we need them to advance the common social good. To oppose preferences, therefore, is "to act immorally." Preference's champions view them as weapons against hierarchy and oppression. Their foes stress individual identity and autonomy. The outcome of the debate will…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Political Attitudes, Social Justice, Social History
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Geshekter, Charles L. – Academic Questions, 2008
In 1996, Californians overwhelmingly approved Proposition 209, which prohibited all state agencies from discriminating on the basis of race, ethnicity, or gender in university admissions, public employment, or competition for a state contract. Opponents of Proposition 209 predicted dire consequences for California's ethnic minorities and women if…
Descriptors: Employment, Females, State Agencies, Minority Groups
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Clegg, Roger – Academic Questions, 2008
Are we facing the end of racial preferences in America? Mr. Clegg thinks we probably are, and examines the role demographics, law, attraction, and vision may play in their demise. What makes preferences still attractive to so many people? Do most Americans share a vision that includes the continued use of racial preferences? Mr. Clegg offers a…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Racial Factors, Selective Admission, Ethnic Diversity
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