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Harbour, Jerry L. – Performance Improvement Quarterly, 1993
Discussion of the need to increase efficiency focuses on a process-oriented approach for systematically identifying and minimizing non-value-adding process steps to analyze and improve tasks, services, and production. Highlights include a historical perspective, a discussion of wasted efforts, and a case study. (Contains 16 references.) (LRW)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Efficiency, Performance, Productivity
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Bashaw, Carolyn Terry – Educational Theory, 1986
The cult of efficiency, comprised of leading lights in education early in this century, stressed the necessity of bringing more efficient industrial practices into schools. This article describes the efficiency movement and Ella Flagg Young's dissent. Young's career as teacher, professor, and superintendent of the Chicago schools is highlighted.…
Descriptors: Biographies, Educational Change, Educational History, Efficiency
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Berman, Barbara – History of Education Quarterly, 1983
An emphasis on efficiency among public school superintendents did not emerge full-blown at the end of the nineteenth century, as Callahan argues, but was a basic tenet of earlier public school development and reform. This interest in providing economical and socially efficient institutions is crucial to understanding American education. (IS)
Descriptors: Educational Administration, Educational History, Educational Policy, Efficiency
Andrews, Benjamin F. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1919
The report of the agricultural and mechanical colleges for the year 1916-17 has more than ordinary significance on account of the important relation of those institutions to the war. From the beginning they have cooperated closely with the Government in furnishing a large quota of men with military training. Courses have been added which will…
Descriptors: Statistical Data, Agricultural Education, Military Training, War
Glynn, Frank L. – United States Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1914
In general the trade-school situation in Europe may be summed up very briefly. In France we find the all-day trade school in its highest development, with special schools established for both boys and girls. The aim of these schools is to intensify the idea of artistic expression as well as to improve mechanical construction and efficiency in…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Foreign Countries, Gender Differences, Special Schools
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Besag, Frank P. – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1981
The importance of educational research as a determinant of educational policy and practice is demonstrated. The impact of racism on research technology and the effect of research technology on racism is explained, including alternatives to present research methodology. (Author/RL)
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Educational History, Educational Policy, Educational Practices
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Nelson, Richard; Watras, Joseph – Journal of Thought, 1981
A review of the scientific movement in education in the early twentieth century: its origins in the scientific management and industrial efficiency theories of Frederich Taylor; its effects on administrative organization and educational research; and the reactions of its critics, who favored the child-centered school. (SJL)
Descriptors: Administrative Principles, Educational History, Educational Research, Educational Theories
Flanagan, Sherman E. – Office of Education, United States Department of the Interior, 1937
The efficiency and moral of members of college faculties are dependent in a large measure on an assurance of economic security. In order, that they may render a high standard of service in teaching youth and in discovering knowledge for the benefit of society, protection for them and their families against the risks and anxieties of the future is…
Descriptors: Disabilities, College Faculty, Comprehensive Programs, Health Insurance
United States Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1912
Of all the technical schools in the United States, probably none exists whose aim is so clearly defined as that of our two great Government schools for the training of officers for the United States Army and Navy. The purpose of these schools is strictly utilitarian, viz, to give to a selected number of young men of this country the best possible…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Class Organization, Military Schools, Mathematics Teachers
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Bergen, Timothy J., Jr. – Journal of Thought, 1981
Reviews the career of pioneer educational sociologist David Samuel Snedden (1868-1951) and examines his theory of education for social efficiency, which presumes to improve society through the direct teaching of the knowledge, attitudes, and skills predetermined to make citizens more vocationally useful and socially responsible. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Biographies, Education Work Relationship, Educational Change, Educational History
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Segel, David – Office of Education, Federal Security Agency, 1948
This bulletin on intellectual growth and development during the adolescent period is a cumulation of (1) a study of the results on certain aptitude tests used in the War Department adapted for secondary schools (2) an analysis of the research studies on the subject of intellectual abilities at the secondary school level. It is published with the…
Descriptors: Aptitude Tests, Secondary Education, Cognitive Ability, Adolescent Development
McMannon, Timothy J. – 1995
This selective view of American educational history is intended primarily to demonstrate how educational change has been pursued almost exclusively as a means to the greater efficiency of students, society, or schools. Even as far back as Colonial days, Americans have usually tried to reform schools by increasing their practicality, i.e., their…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational History, Educational Objectives, Educational Philosophy
Foght, Harold W. – United States Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1915
Many factors enter into the problem of remaking the rural schools, such as well-prepared teachers, satisfactory unit of organization, close and intelligent supervision, and redirected course of study. Of these, none is more important than the first. It is certain that the trained leadership needed in rural districts can not be fully realized until…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Agricultural Colleges, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers
Avery, George T. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1924
It is a well-known fact that, while we have a considerable body of literature on public-school administration, information on collegiate administration is meager. This is especially true concerning the problems of the registration office. In collecting the data used for this report, the institutions holding membership in the Association of…
Descriptors: Registrars (School), Educational History, College Administration, Guidelines
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Unger, Jonathan – Comparative Education Review, 1980
Through a case study of China (Guangdong Province) the author examines the problem of "diploma disease" in developing nations. "Diploma disease" is the students' desire for the paper credentials of academic education that insure employability. This desire can frustrate government efforts to promote alternate vocational…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Case Studies, Developing Nations, Educational Attitudes
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