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Parr, Alan – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2023
The first years of the 20th century saw an intriguing partnership between two high-profile figures in elementary education. Between them they offered a tantalising progressive vision for primary schooling. Harriet Johnson gained followers for Sompting School as far away as the USA and Japan, and the chief inspector of elementary schools, Edmond…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Educational Development, Educational Cooperation, Educational History
Adam Barton; Gloria Lee – Center on Reinventing Public Education, 2024
The scorching, arid northeastern state of Ceará, Brazil has long been known for growing cashews and coconuts. Now, it's defied expectations by cultivating one of the world's best public elementary school systems, despite high rates of poverty. How Sobral transformed its public school system and attained near-universal literacy offers lessons for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Schools, Elementary Schools, Poverty
Rrezarta Draçini – International Society for Technology, Education, and Science, 2024
The Albanian language until it became a written and a spoken language to all of the Albanians, passed through a long and a difficult path. If you go back in time, you see how many efforts were made to preserve Albanian language and identity. Albanian intellectuals and patriots got their visionary aim of its preservation at all costs. Albanian…
Descriptors: Indo European Languages, Educational History, Social Systems, Language of Instruction
Vujsic Zivkovic, Natasa – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2022
This article is focused on the theoretical basis of the study of the history of education in Serbia in the period from the foundation of the first Teacher College (1871) to the end of the socialist establishment in the country (1989). By theoretical bases, we mean theoretical and methodological assumptions, including ideological patterns, which…
Descriptors: Educational History, Intellectual Disciplines, Foreign Countries, Teacher Education Programs
Domanico, Ray – Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, 2022
Tamim is an organization designed as a school network, much like those found in the charter school sector, among innovative public schools, and in smaller numbers in other corners of the private school sector. Tamim is built on the notion of expanding existing prekindergarten programs associated with local Chabad Jewish centers into full…
Descriptors: School Choice, Jews, Judaism, Public Schools
Leatherwood, Sandra – Journal of Catholic Education, 2019
The Diocese of Charleston is composed of 32 schools, of which 26 are parish elementary, two parish PK through 12, and 4 diocesan secondary schools. Unlike many dioceses in the United States, the Diocese of Charleston is unique in that it encompasses the entire state of South Carolina. This poses a challenge not only geographically, but also in…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Elementary Schools, Secondary Schools, Religious Education
Yao, Jian-Xin; Guo, Yu-Ying – International Journal of Science Education, 2018
China initiated a new round of science curriculum reform in 2017. Using the tripartite curriculum framework (including policy, programmatic, and classroom curriculum), we introduce and analyse China's policy curriculum and programmatic curriculum for science in primary school and senior high school, and describe the potential problems hindering…
Descriptors: Scientific Literacy, Competence, Foreign Countries, Curriculum Development
Gutiérrez, Xosé Manuel Malheiro – History of Education, 2018
Over the course of the final 30 years of the nineteenth century, and well into the early decades of the twentieth century, hundreds of thousands of Galician people migrated to different areas of America. There they found a new world to contend and interact with -- a world that was more advanced and developed socially and culturally. From the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Immigration, Literacy
Raina, Jyoti – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2021
This paper is a reflective account of a travel that shifted the site of initial elementary teacher education from a metropolitan milieu of New Delhi; to the contrasting locale of a remote mountain region in the central Himalayas. This shift of site aimed to re-locate the concerns of quality schooling, diversity and ecological living to this new…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Metropolitan Areas, Rural Areas, Teacher Education Programs
Shah, Rajendra Kumar – Shanlax International Journal of Education, 2020
In the history of Nepalese education, 1853 AD marked the entry of the English system of education by the establishment of Durbar Elementary School by Jung Bahadur Rana after his return from his visit to Great Britain. The English type followed the British model of India, which was at one time accredited based on the Oxford and Cambridge…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Quality, Buddhism, Religious Cultural Groups
Free and Compulsory Primary Education in India under the British Raj: A Tale of an Unfulfilled Dream
Mondal, Ajit – SAGE Open, 2017
Attempts to make free and compulsory education accessible to Indian children began a little more than a century ago. A strong consciousness for the need of free and compulsory Primary Education in India was highly moved by enactment of the Compulsory Education Act in 1870 in England. Education has been formally recognized as a human right since…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Access to Education, Compulsory Education, Elementary School Students
Moss, G.; Bradbury, A.; Braun, A.; Duncan, S.; Levy, R. – Institute of Education - London, 2021
COVID has highlighted significant weaknesses in how the education system in England is currently managed and resourced. England needs to build a more resilient education system post-pandemic. The Institute of Education's project, "Learning Through Disruption," set out to explore what headteachers, teachers, other school staff and parents…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing, Educational Change
Damm, Robert J. – Music Educators Journal, 2015
The "fanga" is a dance taught throughout the United States to children in elementary music classes, students in African dance classes, teachers in multicultural workshops, and professional dancers in touring ensembles. Although the history of the fanga is a path overgrown with myth, this article offers information about the dance's…
Descriptors: Music Education, Dance Education, Dance, Educational History
Andersen, Jesper – Global Partnership for Education, 2018
In 2015, one in every two primary aged refugee child was missing out on primary education, and three in every four had no access to secondary education. The five least developed countries in the list of top 10 refugee hosting countries in the world in 2016 were all Global Partnership for Education (GPE) partners: Democratic Republic of Congo…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Refugees, Conflict, Access to Education
Lovitt, Thomas C.; Perry, Leslie; Hughes, Stanley – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2015
Why not set up a school in an apartment complex? After all, that is where children reside before and after they attend an actual school, and that is where they are during the summers when their actual school is closed. It is also where their parents are after work. And why not unite this school at an apartment complex with the school attended by…
Descriptors: Educational Development, Educational Planning, Community Schools, Neighborhood Schools