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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 1 to 15 of 31 results
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Su, Chien-Ling – Chinese Education and Society, 2014
The promotion of sex/gender equity education in Taiwan was initiated by a women's movement group, the Awakening Foundation in the late 1980s. In 1997, it became a policy in education. The passage of the Gender Equity Education Act in 2004 was a major milestone. At present, although gender equity education has been essentially…
Descriptors: Nongovernmental Organizations, Public Agencies, Gender Issues, Sex Education
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Shi, Weiping – Chinese Education and Society, 2013
Chinese vocational education is currently in its most optimal development period in history. This article discusses several challenges of different dimensions faced by vocational education in China as it develops, such as scale versus quality, development goals, a lifelong vocational education system, and creating model institutions; and puts…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Educational Development, Educational Practices, Barriers
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Yang, Dongping; Wang, Qi – Chinese Education and Society, 2013
Attention is being paid to the problem of migrant children in Beijing accessing education after junior high school. Because Beijing students generally do not want a vocational education, the availability of such education in Beijing is shrinking. But a survey indicates a high demand and desire among the children of migrant workers for a vocational…
Descriptors: Migrant Children, High School Students, Vocational High Schools, Educational Policy
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Yanqing, Ding – Chinese Education and Society, 2012
After a brief review of the achievements and the problems in compulsory education enrollment in the thirty years since the reform and opening up, this study analyzes the current compulsory education enrollment and dropout rates in China's least-developed regions and the factors affecting school enrollment based on survey data from a small sample…
Descriptors: Middle Schools, Enrollment Rate, Dropout Rate, Compulsory Education
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Prudence, Chou Chuing; Li-Tien, Wang – Chinese Education and Society, 2012
The objectives of expanding higher education are to foster advanced personnel and realize the concept of achieving equal access to education. The problems created by the expansion of higher education in many countries, including Taiwan, in fact indicate a divergence from originally anticipated objectives. Such problems include the uneven…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Higher Education, Resource Allocation, Educational Quality
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Ching-Yuan, Lin – Chinese Education and Society, 2012
Taiwan's education rate of return has increased incrementally over the long term, and education is the primary factor impacting income inequality. Its impact has been increasing every year. Having their children attend college is the way for disadvantaged households to escape poverty, but the high tuition policy is putting the poor in an…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Outcomes of Education, Family (Sociological Unit), Foreign Countries
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Ru-Jer, Wang – Chinese Education and Society, 2012
In recent years, the rapid growth of higher education in Taiwan has led to an essential shift from education for the elite to the massification of higher education. Although this massification is making higher education more accessible, one of the main concerns is whether opportunities for higher education are the same among all social classes in…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Opportunities, Foreign Countries, Educational Change
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Hsiou-Huai, Wang – Chinese Education and Society, 2012
Equality and excellence are two core values underlying many educational endeavors; however, they are often in conflict and controversy. This article intends to examine the dilemma created by such controversies in the context of massification of higher education in Taiwan and attempt to provide solutions from both the theoretical and policy…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Higher Education, Values, Conflict
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Chin-Shan, Liu; Hui-Juan, Cheng – Chinese Education and Society, 2012
Higher education is one of the most crucial indicators for national overall competitiveness. But the issue of education equity has remained a concern throughout the world. Many studies in Taiwan show that family income, parents' education level, and place of origin impact children's higher education enrollment opportunities. This paper analyzes…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Labor Market
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Yao, Cheng Sheng; Jacob, W. James – Chinese Education and Society, 2012
The global phenomenon of higher educational expansion and opportunity is one of the major social changes since World War II. In 1949, only 1 university and 3 junior colleges existed in Taiwan. After 60 years, the number of higher education institutions had grown to 163, including 147 universities/colleges and 16 junior colleges. The dialectic…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Opportunities, Vocational Education, Foreign Countries
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Jinzhong, Qiao – Chinese Education and Society, 2010
Currently, the rural-urban disparity in access to higher education opportunities is primarily trending toward continuous shrinking; however, this disparity is still very clear and is especially marked in terms of opportunities to attend the top universities. Urbanization and the extension of admission to colleges and universities have played an…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Rural Areas, Foreign Countries, Urbanization
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Zuoxu, Xie; Weihong, Wang; Xiaowei, Chen – Chinese Education and Society, 2010
Based on a survey of student enrollment at fifty colleges and universities of varying types in ten provinces and urban districts, including Shaanxi, Fujian, Hunan, and Shanghai, we analyzed the overall disparity in urban and rural women college students' access to education, as well as the urban-rural disparity across different types of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Public Colleges, Private Colleges, Females
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Weiwei, Lang – Chinese Education and Society, 2010
In 1977, the Chinese government reinstated the national unified college entrance exam enrollment system. As a part of this system, the government also implemented preferential policies on the enrollment of minorities that authorized the increase or decrease of exam scores and enrollment cutoff points; the policies were therefore seen as…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries, College Entrance Examinations, Educational Policy
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Jianwen, Wei; Jiawei, Hou – Chinese Education and Society, 2010
In mainland China, the "hukou" (household registration) system and the education system bound to it are two institutional sources that cause educational inequality for the children of migrant populations. By means of analyses of these institutions, this article posits that although the present "hukou" system has yet to be relaxed, reforms of the…
Descriptors: Migrant Education, Enrollment Rate, Migrant Children, Foreign Countries
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Liu, Yi – Chinese Education and Society, 2010
To accelerate the development of the ethnic minority regions and cultivate ethnic minority talent, the state has successively implemented policies of setting up the Tibet Class and the Xinjiang Class in institutions of higher learning in China's interior regions ("neidi"), enabling some of the finest young students among the ethnic minorities to…
Descriptors: Colleges, Minority Groups, Campuses, Educational Environment
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