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Backes, Susanne; Baumann, Isabell; Harion, Dominic; Sattler, Sabrina; Lenz, Thomas – Prospects, 2021
To slow down the proliferation of COVID-19, governments virtually shut down public life, temporarily closed schools, and forced teaching to be done exclusively on a remote basis. These measures offer an opportunity to reexamine conventional teaching and learning arrangements, test new digital and analogue concepts, and provide essential…
Descriptors: Flipped Classroom, COVID-19, Pandemics, Home Schooling
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Tabatadze, Sandro; Dundua, Salome – Research in Educational Administration & Leadership, 2023
Policy change is an integral part of the modern education policymaking process. Policy changes can be done with different tools, one of which lies in policy transfer. The cons and pros of the education policy change and transfer can be seen comprehensively in post-socialist states, as the education system changed fundamentally in line with…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Policy Analysis, Educational Change, Technology Transfer
Greene, Jay P.; McShane, Michael Q. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2018
Over the last two decades, federal and state policy makers have launched a number of ambitious, large-scale education reform initiatives--No Child Left Behind, Race to the Top, the Common Core State Standards, and others--only to see them sputter and fail. In 2017, the authors convened a number of leading scholars to explore why those initiatives…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Failure, Educational Policy, Educational Legislation
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May, Helen – Global Education Review, 2022
Miss Isabel Little was a Scottish infant teacher who immigrated to New Zealand in 1912. She was described as a "Froebel trained Scot from Edinburgh" and known around Wellington education circles for her "modern methods". In contrast to known Froebelian pioneers, Miss Little's historical footprint is light but the few glimpses…
Descriptors: Educational History, Early Childhood Education, Strategic Planning, Foreign Countries
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Telling, Kathryn – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2019
A growing body of literature is encouraging academics to slow down their academic work as a way of managing the acceleration of university life. Little attention, however, has been paid to the important differences in temporalities among different sorts of higher education institutions, and the effect this is likely to have upon the sense of…
Descriptors: Universities, School Culture, College Faculty, Institutional Characteristics
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Benson, Tracey A.; Salas, Spencer; Dolet, Tia; Jones, Bianca – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2021
Urban charter schools targeting Black communities struggle to recruit Black teachers and even more to retain them. At the same time that scholarship has begun to recenter Black and Brown teachers' lives, the narrated perspectives of Black women teachers are often drowned out in urban educational reform's Hollywoodization. In this article, we story…
Descriptors: Caring, Charter Schools, Urban Schools, Minority Group Teachers
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McComas, William F.; Burgin, Stephen R. – Science & Education, 2020
While a mutually agreed-upon definition of STEM education remains elusive, there is no doubt that instructional models and ideas put forward with the STEM label have had a tremendous impact on thinking, debate, and practice in schools worldwide. At issue is the degree to which some or all the STEM disciplines must be taught in a concurrent or…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Criticism, Definitions, Teaching Methods
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Bjarnadóttir, Valgerður S.; Öhrn, Elisabet; Johansson, Monica – European Educational Research Journal, 2019
This article explores strategies, targets, and responses to young people's attempts to influence pedagogic practices, and the variations between different programmes in a deregulated upper secondary school system. Using Basil Bernstein's code theory, the study draws on ethnographic data from two of the most popular academic programmes in one upper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Science Education, Natural Sciences
Hockenos, Paul – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
Rarely do political scandal and academe collide so publicly as they have now, in Europe. In February, Germany's education minister stepped down after Heinrich Heine University, in Dusseldorf, revoked her doctorate because her thesis lifted passages from other sources without proper attribution. Her departure came after scandals over plagiarized…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Academic Freedom, Foreign Countries, Educational Change
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Tienken, Christopher H. – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2011
Education reform proposals are not in short supply. Recent issues of the "Kappa Delta Pi Record" examined two of these: Common Core State Standards (Winter 2011) and Charter Schools (Spring 2011). Teacher pay for performance is another policy gaining traction in state legislatures and at the federal level. The Race to the Top (RTTT)…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Exit Examinations, Educational Quality, Standardized Tests
Levinson, Meira, Ed.; Fay, Jacob, Ed. – Harvard Education Press, 2019
Teaching in a democracy is challenging and filled with dilemmas that have no easy answers. For example, how do educators meet their responsibilities of teaching civic norms and dispositions while remaining nonpartisan? "Democratic Discord in Schools" features eight normative cases of complex dilemmas drawn from real events designed to…
Descriptors: Democracy, Citizenship Education, Problem Solving, Cooperation
Bady, Aaron – Liberal Education, 2013
The Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC) phenomenon has happened very quickly and is also a shift in discourse. This article aims to slow things down and go through the last year or so with a bit more care than we're usually able to do in order to do a "close reading" of the year of the MOOC. Author Aaron Brady ventures an opinion to say…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Educational Change, Attention Span, Adolescents
Evangelauf, Jean – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1987
Arguments between factions advocating more or less teacher education could slow down the reform process enough to allow gains in the trend toward licensing teachers lacking teacher training. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Attitude Change, Certification, Educational Change
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Rimashevskaia, N. M.; Dobrokhleb, V. G.; Kislitsyna, O. A. – Russian Education and Society, 2010
The demographic situation in the Russian Federation is characterized by a steady process of natural population loss; it began in 1992 and coincided with the economic crisis. To a partial extent the loss was made up for by migration, and by early 2008 the number of inhabitants of Russia declined to 142 million compared to 148.6 million in early…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Human Capital, Educational Needs, Birth Rate
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Netteland, Grete; Wasson, Barbara; Morch, Anders I – Journal of Workplace Learning, 2007
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to provide new insights into the implementation of large-scale learning projects; thereby better understanding the difficulties, frustrations, and obstacles encountered when implementing enterprise-wide e-learning as a tool for training and organization transformation in a complex organization.…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Educational Change, Teaching Methods, Web Based Instruction