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Dickson, David – Science, 1988
Reviews the current situation of mathematics in France and its potential situation in the future. Cites the lack of university teaching posts for fueling a new brain drain to the United States. Claims that the situation threatens to erode some of France's most prized intellectual achievements. (CW)
Descriptors: Brain Drain, College Mathematics, Demand Occupations, Educational Policy
Beaulieu, Lionel J., Ed.; Gibbs, Robert, Ed. – Southern Rural Development Center, Mississippi State University, 2005
Today's rural leaders are becoming increasingly attuned to the fact that high achieving schools and related human capital investment strategies are key ingredients in the promotion of sustainable development at the local level. Serious challenges often await rural areas that seek to pursue such efforts. As a case in point, if rural schools are…
Descriptors: Role of Education, Skilled Workers, Sustainable Development, Talent
Archwamety, Teara – 1996
This study of Japanese and American exchange students focuses on the "perceived" rather than on the "real" impact of international education on one's own society and on the society hosting the foreign student. Thirty-four randomly selected American undergraduate students attending a Japanese university in Osaka, Japan and 34…
Descriptors: Brain Drain, College Students, Cultural Exchange, Educational Assessment
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Hartnett, Rodney T. – Journal of Higher Education, 1987
Undergraduate admission test scores were traced for Ph.D. recipients in eight arts and science disciplines and compared to the scores of those who earned degrees in business, law, and medicine. The data do not support the hypothesis that more able college graduates have done post-baccalaureate study in the professions. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Brain Drain, Business, College Entrance Examinations, Comparative Analysis
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Higher Education in Europe, 1986
The final report of an international conference on the recognition of academic credentials in Europe addresses (1) cooperation between Europe and developing countries, (2) graduate study and the training of researchers in an international context, and (3) problems posed by international recognition of credentials, particularly the "brain…
Descriptors: Brain Drain, Credentials, Degrees (Academic), Developed Nations
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Sanchez-Arnau, J. C.; Calvo, Elba Hermida – Higher Education in Europe, 1987
Patterns and reasons for migration of highly educated manpower, primarily from developing to developed nations, are examined; and efforts to encourage return to home countries are discussed. (MSE)
Descriptors: Brain Drain, Developed Nations, Developing Nations, Educational Attainment
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Heller, Peter B. – International Studies Notes, 1989
Considers the effects of international student mobility as a form of technology transfer. Focuses on the growth of international student exchange between the United States and developing countries, and at how foreign students can affect the transfer of skills between the United States and other countries. Concludes that such exchanges are mutually…
Descriptors: Brain Drain, Cultural Exchange, Developed Nations, Developing Nations
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Norcini, John J.; Mazmanian, Paul E. – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2005
Physician migration is a complex and multifaceted phenomenon that is intimately intertwined with medical education. Imbalances in the production of physicians lead to workforce shortages and surpluses that compromise the ability to deliver adequate and equitable health care to large parts of the world's population. In this overview, we address a…
Descriptors: Patients, Physicians, Migration, Global Approach
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Dauphinee, W. Dale – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2005
Physician migration to and from countries results from many local causes and international influences. These factors operate in the context of an increasingly globalized economy. From an ethical point of view, selective and targeted "raiding" of developing countries' medical workforce by wealthier countries is not acceptable. However,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Physicians, Human Capital, Ethics
Durden, William G. – 1988
Although performance on the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) and the American College Test Program (ACT) indicates that Wisconsin's students are superior to those of other states, a more thorough assessment reveals that the state does not compare well with its neighbors either on the general level of academic preparedness or in efforts to develop…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academically Gifted, Achievement Tests, Brain Drain
Karlsson, Britta; Turner, Solveig M. – 1987
The potential usefulness of an intermittent ladder curriculum for educating health professionals in the Middle East and Africa was evaluated. Intermittent education would allow students to complete a lower educational qualification abroad and then enter the job market at home for some years before continuing with additional, higher education…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Brain Drain, Developed Nations, Developing Nations
O'Neal, Linda; Cox, Dana – 2002
Two decades ago, many of the strengths and advantages of small rural schools were understood. These include a greater sense of community, which enables closer relations between faculty and administration, between teachers and students, and among teachers; less violence; better school-community relationships; more parent participation; greater…
Descriptors: Brain Drain, Community Schools, Disadvantaged Youth, Educational Environment
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Webster, David S.; And Others – College and University, 1981
Data show that the the "brain drain" of talented Black students from historically Black institutions to White ones, earlier traced from the 1930s to 1970, continued from 1970 to 1978. Black students with affluent, well-educated parents, and whose fathers have high-status occupations, also shifted from Black to White colleges. (MSE)
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Black Education, Black Students, Brain Drain
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Stewart, David W. – Educational Record, 1991
Changes in immigration patterns bring problems and opportunities to higher education. New federal law significantly changes the ethnic and skills mix of the immigrant pool. Issues emerging include potential brain drain; pressure for curriculum change; language as a barrier to access; and the rights of illegal immigrants to higher education. (MSE)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Brain Drain, College Admission, Curriculum Development
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Allen, Henry Lee – Journal of Negro Education, 1991
Examines the interinstitutional career mobility of Black college faculty, using a twice-stratified random sample of mobile faculty recruited to Black colleges during the 1981-82 academic year. Findings indicate little evidence of "brain drain" or "raiding" of Black faculty from Black to White colleges and universities in the…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Black Teachers, Brain Drain, College Faculty
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