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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

Publication Date
In 201532
Since 2014194
Since 2011 (last 5 years)673
Showing 1 to 15 of 673 results
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Maussen, Marcel; Vermeulen, Floris – Comparative Education, 2015
Liberal democratic states face new challenges in balancing between principles of religious freedom and non-discrimination and in balancing these constitutional principles with other concerns, including social cohesion, good education, and immigrant-integration. In a context of increased prominence of secular and anti-Islamic voices in political…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Educational Philosophy, Foreign Countries, Minority Group Students
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Scheunpflug, Annette – Comparative Education, 2015
This paper addresses the situation of non-governmental religious schools in Germany. The available empirical data demonstrate an increasing demand for these schools in recent decades. In this paper, possible causes of this development are discussed. First, the given constitutional framework for religion in governmental and non-governmental schools…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Foreign Countries, Church Role, Government Role
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Rougier, Nathalie; Honohan, Iseult – Comparative Education, 2015
This paper examines the evolution of the state-supported denominational education system in Ireland in the context of increasing social diversity, and considers the capacity for incremental change in a system of institutional pluralism hitherto dominated by a single religion. In particular, we examine challenges to the historical arrangements…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Educational Change, Protestants, Financial Support
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McKinney, Stephen J.; Conroy, James C. – Comparative Education, 2015
Catholic schools in Scotland have been fully state-funded since the 1918 Education (Scotland) Act. Under this Act, 369 contemporary Catholic schools are able to retain their distinctive identity and religious education and the teachers have to be approved by the Catholic hierarchy. Similar to the position of other forms of state-funded and…
Descriptors: Federal Aid, Educational Finance, Catholic Schools, Foreign Countries
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Pons, Xavier; van Zanten, Agnès; Da Costa, Sylvie – Comparative Education, 2015
In this article, we analyse changes in the contemporary management of private Catholic schools under State contract in France since the 1980s. Writing from a "policy sociology" perspective, we use data from previous studies on policy and on public and private schools as well as from an ongoing research project comparing policies of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Catholic Schools, Educational Policy, Accountability
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Maussen, Marcel; Bader, Veit – Comparative Education, 2015
The European Convention on Human Rights guarantees freedom of education, including opportunities to create and operate faith-based schools. But as European societies become religiously more diverse and "less religious" at the same time, the role of religious schools increasingly is being contested. Serious tensions have emerged between…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Religious Education, Role, Foreign Countries
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Merry, Michael S. – Comparative Education, 2015
In this paper Merry examines in detail the continued--and curious--popularity of religious schools in an otherwise "secular" twenty-first century Europe. To do this he considers a number of motivations underwriting the decision to place one's child in a religious school and delineates what are likely the best empirically supported…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Protestants, Catholic Schools, Educational Quality
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Dronkers, Jaap; Avram, Silvia – Comparative Education, 2015
All European states have a primary obligation to establish and maintain governmental schools everywhere, but as the result of political struggle and constitutional guarantees, they have also allowed and often financed non-state schools based on special pedagogical, religious or philosophical ideas. Depending on the level of state grants for…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, School Choice, Parent Background, Foreign Countries
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Olsen, Tore Vincents – Comparative Education, 2015
The Danish free school tradition has entailed a large degree of associational freedom for non-governmental schools, religious as well as non-religious. Until the late 1990s, the non-governmental schools were under no strict ideological or pedagogical limitations; they could recruit teachers and students according to their own value base, and were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Free Schools, Politics of Education, Educational Change
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Waldow, Florian; Takayama, Keita; Sung, Youl-Kwan – Comparative Education, 2014
The article compares how the success of the "Asian Tiger" countries in PISA, especially PISA 2009, was depicted in the media discussion in Australia, Germany and South Korea. It argues that even in the times of today's "globalised education policy field", local factors are important in determining whether or not a country…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Asians, Achievement Tests, Global Approach
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Moss, Gemma – Comparative Education, 2014
This article examines the construction and design of literacy attainment data in the English school system in two different historical periods: the 1860s and the 1950s. These periods represent contrasting moments in the history of education in the UK when school structures and the governance of education varied, as did the design and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literacy, Educational History, Educational Indicators
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Cowen, Robert – Comparative Education, 2014
Comparative education as a field of study in universities (and "comparative education" as practised by nineteenth-century administrators of education in Canada, England, France and the USA) has always addressed the theme of "transfer": that is, the movement of educational ideas, principles and practices, and institutions and…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Educational Practices, Educational Policy, Reputation
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Bradbury, Alice – Comparative Education, 2014
Since 2003 children in England have been formally assessed at the age of 5 after their first year in school, and their numerical scores reported to parents and analysed at school and national levels. The use of statutory assessment for this age group is unique in the UK, where other regions use less formal methods of assessment. It is also unusual…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Assessment, Early Childhood Education, Case Studies
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Vincent, David – Comparative Education, 2014
This article examines the invention of counting literacy on a national basis in nineteenth-century Britain. Through an analysis of Registrar Generals' reports, it describes how the early statisticians wrestled with the implications of their new-found capacity to describe a nation's communications skills in a single table and how they…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literacy, Statistical Analysis, Measurement
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Levacic, Rosalind – Comparative Education, 2014
Since the late 1980s, education systems have increasingly moved to allocating funding for general education by means of a per-student formula. The trend started with developed economies and moved to transition and developing economies, where the World Bank has promoted the adoption of per-student funding (PSF). But promoting a particular reform,…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Funding Formulas, Developing Nations, Program Implementation
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