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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 43 results
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Vieluf, Svenja; Hochweber, Jan; Klieme, Eckhard; Kunter, Mareike – Oxford Review of Education, 2015
In the present study we compared comprehensive education systems and education systems using between-school tracking with regard to disparities in the quality of student-teacher relations between low and high achieving students, between students with different socioeconomic backgrounds, and between schools with different achievement and social…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Track System (Education), Comprehensive Programs, Comparative Analysis
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Ertl, Hubert; Zierer, Klaus; Phillips, David; Tippelt, Rudolf – Oxford Review of Education, 2015
This paper presents findings from two studies of publication patterns in leading English, German, European and US journals of education. The studies were funded by the German Research Association and conducted by an international team of researchers. All papers published in 14 selected journals between 2001 and 2010 were analysed in terms of their…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Educational Research, Comparative Analysis, Journal Articles
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Singh, Abhijeet – Oxford Review of Education, 2014
Various studies have noted that students enrolled in private schools in India perform better on average than students in government schools. In this paper, I show that large gaps in the test scores of children in private and public sector education are evident even at the point of initial enrollment in formal schooling and are associated with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Achievement Gap, Public Education, Private Education
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Rolleston, Caine – Oxford Review of Education, 2014
Educational access in developing countries has improved significantly in recent years, but less evidence is available on learning and learning progress in comparative perspective. This paper employs data from Young Lives to examine levels and trends in cognitive skill development and the links to enrolment in school across the four study countries…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Developing Nations, Access to Education, Cognitive Development
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Backes-Gellner, Uschi; Geel, Regula – Oxford Review of Education, 2014
This paper analyses whether tertiary education of different types, i.e., academic or vocational tertiary education, leads to more or less favorable labor market outcomes. We study the problem for Switzerland, where more than two thirds of the workforce gain vocational secondary degrees and a substantial number go on to a vocational tertiary degree…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Comparative Analysis, Success, Career Development
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Kelly, Peter – Oxford Review of Education, 2014
A commonsense problematic positions comparative researchers as either inside or outside cultures, or their situation is considered so as to acknowledge cultural fluidity and fragmentation. This article rejects the objectivism of these positions to provide a relational account. Using the lens of social practice theory, comparative pedagogy is…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Educational Researchers, Comparative Education, Comparative Analysis
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Lamote, Carl; Speybroeck, Sara; Van Den Noortgate, Wim; Van Damme, Jan – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
In this study, we examine the development of student engagement in relation to dropout. We focus on different growth trajectories of engagement between groups of students and on whether these trajectories lead to differences in the survival of the student. The development of behavioural and emotional engagement of 4063 graduates and 541 (11.7%)…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Dropouts, Learner Engagement, Correlation
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Tooley, James – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
The phenomenon of low-cost private schools "mushrooming" in poor areas of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, and elsewhere, is now well-documented. Findings from research by the author's teams and others show that these schools are serving a majority (urban and peri-urban) or significant minority (rural) of the poor, including…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Foreign Countries, Poverty, Rural Areas
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Walford, Geoffrey – Oxford Review of Education, 2013
Section 12 of the Indian Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 (the RTE Act) states that 25% of the entry-level places in all private schools should be free and reserved for students from economically and socially disadvantaged families. The Indian State governments will pay schools a per-child fee based on costs in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Justice, Private Schools, Economically Disadvantaged
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Ince, Basak – Oxford Review of Education, 2012
This paper scrutinises citizenship education in Turkey from the foundation of the Turkish Republic (1923) to the present and explores the extent to which it encourages inclusive or exclusive concepts of national identity and citizenship. In Turkey, where there are citizens belonging to ethnic and religious minorities, civic education plays a…
Descriptors: Nationalism, Citizenship, Textbooks, Democracy
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Green, Francis; Vignoles, Anna – Oxford Review of Education, 2012
We present a method to compare different qualifications for entry to higher education by studying students' subsequent performance. Using this method for students holding either the International Baccalaureate (IB) or A-levels gaining their degrees in 2010, we estimate an "empirical" equivalence scale between IB grade points and UCAS points…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement Programs, Measures (Individuals), Vocational Education, Comparative Analysis
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Riley, Patrick – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Rousseau's political philosophy presents the great legislator as a civic educator who must over time transform naturally self-loving egoists into citizens animated by a general will without destroying freedom. This is an educational process which is "denaturing" but which aims to produce autonomous adults who can ultimately say to their teacher…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Comparative Analysis, Education, Politics
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Shapira-Lishchinsky, Orly – Oxford Review of Education, 2010
This article explores a cross-occupational approach for dealing with ethical dilemmas by comparing teaching and nursing. Findings indicate more shared patterns of ethical dilemmas (such as caring for needs for others versus following formal codes) than dilemmas specific to teaching (e.g., advancing universal values versus advancing knowledge) or…
Descriptors: Ethics, Teaching (Occupation), Nursing, Correlation
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Sarangapani, Padma M.; Winch, Christopher – Oxford Review of Education, 2010
Tooley, Dixon and Gomathi maintain that private unrecognised unaided schools in Hyderabad, India, catering for children of the poor, provide a better level of education than do their government counterparts. We examine this contention and argue first that Tooley et al.'s conceptualisation of education and its benefits is flawed and second that the…
Descriptors: Private Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Finance, Educational Assessment
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Verachtert, Pieter; De Fraine, Bieke; Onghena, Patrick; Ghesquiere, Pol – Oxford Review of Education, 2010
Several studies have reported significant relationships between children's season of birth and measures of their academic success (i.e., the "season of birth effect"). Whereas most of these studies were cross-sectional, the current study uses growth curve modelling to analyse longitudinal data on 3,187 children in Flemish primary education. The…
Descriptors: Age, Primary Education, Grade Repetition, Mathematics Achievement
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