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Showing 1 to 15 of 54 results Save | Export
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Andréa Jaggi; Kevin Guyurruyurru Rogers; Helen Gabibi Rogers; Annette Yulumburruja Daniels; Emilie Ens; Sue Pinckham – Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 2024
Australian Indigenous student participation rates in higher education are consistently lower than non-Indigenous students, especially in remote contexts. This has manifested in the usurpation of remote Aboriginal community control by 'more qualified' external staff. Here we present a reflexive assessment of the development, delivery, outcomes and…
Descriptors: Student Participation, College Students, Indigenous Populations, Rural Areas
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Bellino, Michelle J.; Faizi, Bibi-Zuhra; Mehta, Nirali – Journal on Education in Emergencies, 2016
Community-based educational (CBE) models have gained recognition across diverse contexts for closing access gaps, leveraging local assets, and shaping cost-effective and culturally relevant educational opportunities in marginalized communities. In protracted conflict contexts such as Afghanistan, CBE compensates for weak state capacity by…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sustainability, Community Schools, Attitude Change
Mwalimu, Michelle – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Community schools and other approaches to Alternative Primary Education or APE have increased access to primary education for underserved populations in Africa, Asia, and Latin America as a major goal of the Education for All (EFA) movement. In Zambia, a country where an estimated 20 percent of the basic education enrollment now attends community…
Descriptors: Community Schools, Elementary Education, Community Control, Disadvantaged Youth
Andrews, Richard L.; Noack, Ernest G. S. – 1971
This paper reports the results of a statistical study of two community school districts within one urban school system. The purposes of the study were to determine (1) whether parents in a decentralized district are more satisfied with their schools than are parents in a regular, centralized district, and (2) whether the type of school district is…
Descriptors: Community Control, Community Schools, Decentralization, School Community Relationship
Haskins, Kenneth W. – Inequality in Education, 1973
Descriptors: Black Attitudes, Black Community, Black Education, Community Control
Austin, Gary W.; Moore, Grant E. – Education Canada, 1984
Traces London, Ontario's community schools from 1968-1984. Describes a system in transition from being centrally controlled by a school board to being increasingly in the control of community volunteers. Reflects on the redevelopment of the community school ideal as responsibility for school operations is placed back in community hands. (BRR)
Descriptors: Community Control, Community Schools, Decentralization, Educational Change
Corman, Linda, Comp. – 1975
This bibliography of 219 numbered entries is limited to Canadian works. However, section 4, "Bibliographies," will provide leads to useful information from the United States. Section 1, "Community Schools/Community Education," includes the more comprehensive works and material about particular Canadian community schools,…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Change Strategies, Community Control, Community Education
Martell, George – This Magazine Is About Schools, 1971
Descriptors: Community Control, Community Education, Community Involvement, Community Schools
Fein, Leonard J. – Saturday Rev, 1970
An argument is presented in favor of adopting community control of local schools. This would place the schools in the hands of the particular ethnic group most heavily represented within a given system and would prevent suppression of minority group cultures for the sake of prosletyzing middle class ideas. (CK)
Descriptors: Blacks, Community Control, Community Schools, Educational Change
Sussmann, Leila – 1970
This report reveals the results of studies made of three groups actively seeking community participation in school affairs in a city noted for its conservative school system. The study utilized participant observation supplemented by interviews and document analysis. Each group had only 15-30 active members and no broad base in the community. All…
Descriptors: Community Action, Community Control, Community Influence, Community Involvement
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Marika, Raymattja; And Others – Convergence, 1992
Yolngu researchers in the Northern Territory of Australia are applying indigenous problem-solving processes and the traditional principle of unity to educational research in, for, and with the community. (SK)
Descriptors: Community Control, Community Schools, Educational Theories, Foreign Countries
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Ediger, Marlow – College Student Journal, 2004
In this article the author discusses the community school concept and relates it to his own experiences as a student and educator in Missouri. It asserts that in developing a community school, participants in the school district must be willing to give of their talents and time to improve the social environment for all its inhabitants. Cooperation…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Community Schools, Community Control, Neighborhood Schools
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Skeen, Elois M. – Journal of Black Studies, 1974
In a study comparing a traditional school with a community control school on the social psychological aspects of locus of control and pupils' attitudes toward school, the community control school children were more internal with respect to general life situations, perceived their teachers more positively and as making fewer decisions and…
Descriptors: Community Control, Community Schools, Locus of Control, Parent School Relationship
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Ellis, Peter; Sperling, John – Community Education Journal, 1973
It is the thesis of this paper that the most important task of many tasks of the community school director is to organize the various constituencies in his community. This does not mean that he organizes programs in which his constituents can participate, rather that he organizes people through the medium of activities. (Author)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Administrators, Community Control, Community Coordination
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Nelsen, William C. – Journal of Negro Education, 1971
The storefront school's value as change agent depends on its leaders attending to the key issues of ongoing funding, relationships with the public school system, cooperative arrangements with other alternative models, accountability, and power control. (JM)
Descriptors: College Preparation, Community Control, Community Schools, Decentralization
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