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Stables, Andrew; Gough, Stephen – Educational Theory, 2006
In this essay, Andrew Stables and Stephen Gough explore some of the implications for educational policy and practice of a view of living (and, therefore, of learning) as semiotic engagement. Such a view, Stables and Gough argue, has the potential to displace or circumvent essentially Cartesian models currently dominant within learning theory…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Cultural Context, Semiotics, Educational Policy
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Anker, Richard – International Labour Review, 1997
Reviews theoretical explanations for gender segregation in occupations: neoclassical, human capital, institutional and labor market segmentation, and gender discrimination. Determines that gender discrimination theories are most compelling, given the enormous overlap in abilities and preferences of individual men and women. (SK)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Labor Needs, Labor Supply, Occupational Segregation
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Ambrose, Don – Roeper Review, 2008
Utopian thinking has captured the human imagination for millennia and has exerted strong influences on societies--in particular, on their socioeconomic, political, and cultural dimensions of societies. Consequently, enhancement of global awareness requires attention to utopian frameworks, especially when those frameworks are influencing the…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Gifted, Global Approach, Ideology
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England, Paula – American Sociologist, 1989
Provides a feminist critique of rational-choice theory and the interdisciplinary feminist theories of sociology. Applies the separative model of self to four assumptions of the neoclassical economics version of rational-choice theory. Uses research on marital power to illustrate how removing distorting assumptions can help illuminate sociological…
Descriptors: Economics, Feminism, Interdisciplinary Approach, Marriage
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Harrington, David V.; And Others – College English, 1979
A review of available textbooks and other resources dealing with neo-classical invention, prewriting, tagmemic invention and linguistic theory, the dramatistic method, and invention in speech communication. (DD)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Resource Guides
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Valdes, Benigno – Journal of Economic Education, 2003
Provides an explanation of the post-World War II economic phenomenon of Japan as a process of economic convergence within the framework of the neoclassical Solo-Swan model of economic growth. States that this interpretation helps students understand economic growth and development and Japan's modern economic history. (JEH)
Descriptors: Asian History, Economic Factors, Economic Impact, Economics Education
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Walker, Jeffrey – College English, 1990
Revisits the hemisphericity theory of the 1970s and the revised and less familiar accounts that emerged in the 1980s. Argues that neither the older nor the newer psychobiological accounts of mind support the Neoclassical/Romantic claims. Contends that these accounts are more congenial to an Aristotelian theory of mind and rhetoric. (RS)
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Rhetorical Theory, Romanticism
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Bernhofen, Daniel M.; Brown, John C. – Journal of Political Economy, 2004
We exploit Japan's sudden and complete opening up to international trade in the 1860s to test the empirical validity of one of the oldest and most fundamental propositions in economics: the theory of comparative advantage. Historical evidence supports the assertion that the characteristics of the Japanese economy at the time were compatible with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, International Trade
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Hunter, James Davison – Society, 2002
Discusses the neo-classical backlash to a therapeutic liberalism in moral education that has attempted to revive the character education system established in the early decades of the 20th century. Notes the importance of generating habits of good moral conduct, then discusses literature and moral understanding, the move from theory to practical…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Ethical Instruction, Moral Values, Neoclassicism
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Leff, Michael C., Ed. – Western Journal of Speech Communication, 1980
The seven articles in this journal issue survey and assess the art of rhetorical criticism based on evidence derived from critical practice. The first five articles analyze the literature subsumed with certain approaches to rhetorical criticism and are arranged in the chronological order of the emergence of the approach: neo-classical criticism,…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Rhetorical Criticism, Speech Communication
Howley, Craig B. – Journal of Rural and Small Schools, 1992
Compares and contrasts two economic views, political economy and neoclassical economics, as they pertain to the development of human capital and education in rural areas. The concluding discussion draws implications for rural educators. (Author/KS)
Descriptors: Economic Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Human Capital, Labor Market
Snow, Marcellus S. – 1988
This paper summarizes the results of a recent study of the past performance and future prospects of the International Telecommunications Satellite (INTELSAT) Organization. First, an overview of INTELSAT's history is provided and major policy issues are detailed. Five alternative paradigms are then presented through which to evaluate INTELSAT's…
Descriptors: Communications Satellites, Costs, Economics, Evaluation Methods
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Grant, Gerald; Riesman, David – Daedalus, 1975
This article contrasts the more popular educational reforms of the 1960's with reform movements occurring earlier in the century. Included in the article are discussions on the neo-classical university model, the aesthetic-expressive model, the communal-expressive model, and the activist-radical model. (Author/DE)
Descriptors: Activism, College Programs, Educational Change, Educational History
McAnany, Emile G. – 1983
Through a review of development literature, this paper examines the changes that have occurred in thinking about the role of communication in developing nations. The first section of the paper surveys the theories of the past, including those of the neo-classical and Marxist scholars. The section also looks at the emergence of the dependency…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Communication (Thought Transfer), Developed Nations, Developing Nations
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Chen, Edward K. Y. – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
The author has chosen three major topics in development economics for a discussion on how to teach the subject: the concepts and measurement of development, models of growth and development, and the international aspects of economic development. For the concepts of development, it is important to emphasize the coherence of the topics to be…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Economic Progress, Models, Global Approach
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