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Office of English Language Acquisition, US Department of Education, 2022
For multilingual learners (MLs) and their families, the COVID-19 pandemic has had disproportionate and inter-related consequences for their economic stability, educational opportunities and outcomes, and social, emotional, physical, and mental well-being. Supportive learning environments and conditions may help students overcome the negative…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Bilingual Students, At Risk Students
Cruse, Lindsey Reichlin; Contreras Mendez, Susana; Holtzman, Tessa – Institute for Women's Policy Research, 2020
Nearly four million undergraduates, or more than one in five college students, are parents of children under 18. These student parents face--in normal times--disproportionate economic insecurity, difficulty meeting basic needs, and significant time and caregiving demands. Student parents are now coping with the closing of colleges and…
Descriptors: Parents, Child Rearing, At Risk Students, COVID-19
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White, Jason C. – Arts Education Policy Review, 2016
While there are many educational and experiential benefits to attending professional higher arts education programs, students who incur excessive student loan debt during their studies may experience unanticipated or poor professional outcomes either over the course of their artistic careers, shortly after the expiration of a loan grace period, or…
Descriptors: Intervention, Art Education, Debt (Financial), Student Loan Programs
Barbour, Andrew – Campus Technology, 2013
With the US economy continuing its weak recovery, it's tempting to think that IT budgets in higher education might begin to rebound especially in light of the increased focus on online learning. Nice thought, but no. Education costs are rising even faster than those for healthcare, and the public outcry over the cost of higher education…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Economic Factors, Economic Impact, Efficiency
Yaffe, Deborah – Educational Testing Service, 2015
This issue of ETS Policy Notes (Vol. 22, No. 1) provides highlights from a recent symposium sponsored by ETS and the Children Defense Fund (CDF), "Advancing Success for Black Men in College," held on June 23, 2014, in Washington, DC. The symposium is part of a two-conference series: It was the 18th of ETS's "Addressing Achievement…
Descriptors: Achievement Gap, Student Improvement, College Students, Success
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Stabile, Mark; Allin, Sara – Future of Children, 2012
Childhood disabilities entail a range of immediate and long-term economic costs that have important implications for the well-being of the child, the family, and society but that are difficult to measure. In an extensive research review, Mark Stabile and Sara Allin examine evidence about three kinds of costs--direct, out-of-pocket costs incurred…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Physical Disabilities, Mental Health, Disabilities
Bigger, Alan S.; Bigger, Linda B. – Facilities Manager, 2009
The saguaro cactus looked a little like humans, in different shapes and sizes. How on earth do they survive in a climate that seems so inhospitable? It is possible to learn lessons for life from a cactus, if one can only get beyond the thorns, and that these lessons will assist one to survive during tough or prickly times. These plants survive…
Descriptors: Barriers, Educational Facilities, Facilities Management, Economic Impact
Ginsberg, Rick; Multon, Karen D. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2011
Given the centrality of leadership for school success, leader morale and effectiveness in tough times can't be overemphasized. The authors' work examined how principals and superintendents deal with and are affected by a significant economic downturn. They surveyed 93 principals from one large upper-Midwest metropolitan area and 100…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Superintendents, Principals, Coping
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Davies, Lynn – Comparative Education, 2011
This paper examines capacity development in education in fragile contexts. This is a current concern for donors and development partners, but there has been little work on the nexus between capacity, education and fragility. The paper examines the concept of fragility and the particular problems in education associated with fragile contexts. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Governance, Cheating, Deception
Zehr, Mary Ann – Teacher Magazine, 2006
To keep up with Las Vegas' explosive growth, school districts such as Clark County School District builds, on average, one new school per month. That alone goes a long way toward explaining why improving academic performance is especially challenging in Nevada, where the number of public school students increased by more than 50 percent between…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Economic Impact, Student Problems, Population Growth
Mendoza, Veronica – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2005
While a graduate student at Stanford University, Veronica Mendoza, the author, conducted research on six Latino students from a troubled high school in San Jose, California. The school, located in a crime- and poverty-riddled neighborhood, is predominately Latino. Some of the students may go on to community college, at best, after graduation.…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Research, College Outcomes Assessment, Profiles