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Bruce, Michael G. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1981
During the last 30 years unprecedented economic growth and novel patterns of migration in Europe have increased opportunities and simultaneously destroyed established patterns of life and traditional processes of education. (Author)
Descriptors: Demography, Education, Employment Patterns, Enrollment Trends
Hodgkinson, Harold L. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1995
Using racial/ethnic categories as official census data is outdated; this information has become a political reality with little scientific or intellectual validity. Although race has always been a partial marker for poverty, people have been more effectively segregated by wealth. Poverty is the best predictor of school failure. (10 references)…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education, Minority Groups, Population Trends
Herzog, Mary Jean Ronan; Pittman, Robert B. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1995
Discusses certain educational, demographic, and economic trends challenging rural education and summarizes Rural Attitude Survey results. Despite consolidation efforts, rural schools are poorer and smaller than nonrural schools. Despite their marginalization by the dominant culture, rural communities have precisely the qualities valued by critics…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Demography, Economic Factors, Educational Change
Hodgkinson, Harold – Phi Delta Kappan, 1991
Cites demographic figures showing that U.S. children are an endangered species. Educators alone cannot "fix" the problems of education, because dealing with poverty's root causes must involve health care, housing, transportation, job training, and social welfare bureaucracies. The United States has the resources, if not the will, to reduce the…
Descriptors: Agency Cooperation, Dropout Rate, Education Work Relationship, Family Characteristics
Bracey, Gerald W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2000
U.S. taxpayers score lower on the "Forbes" Misery Index than taxpayers of other industrialized nations. A recent report concludes that public-school students challenge their schools more than private-school counterparts. Low birth weight and demographic factors (gender, poverty, and race) affect Florida's burgeoning special-education…
Descriptors: Birth Weight, Diversity (Student), Elementary Secondary Education, Influences
Truscott, Diane M.; Truscott, Stephen D. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2005
The shared struggles facing urban and rural schools, such as changing cultural and linguistic classroom profiles, increased childhood poverty, and residential segregation patterns, influence financial inequities between people and communities thus contributing to gaps in academic achievement and teacher shortages in both settings. The…
Descriptors: Teacher Shortage, Rural Areas, Urban Areas, Residential Patterns