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Showing 1 to 15 of 111 results Save | Export
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Peter Kallaway – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
During the 1930s there was a significant shift in the debate about African colonial education. Above all, somewhat discreetly hidden behind the formal language of the educational documents, is the question of the challenge presented to the traditional literary/religious missionary curriculum, or even to the "adaptationist" debate about…
Descriptors: Educational History, Best Practices, Colonialism, Curriculum Development
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Aberšek, Boris; Flogie, Andrej; Aberšek, Metka Kordigel – International Baltic Symposium on Science and Technology Education, 2023
With the approach of constant changes and quality assurance in education, we have reached an optimum that no longer justifies all further investments in such changes, as the results of these investments are (and will be) minimal and insufficient. We have reached a stage where we must shift from evolution to revolution, from constant changes in…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Quality, Quality Assurance, Social Change
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Velusamy, V. Rajkumar – Online Submission, 2021
India is the second-largest tribal population in the world. However, after the seven decades of independence, the tribal groups are disadvantaged and socially backward from the cycle of growth in many areas such as health, education, employment, and empowerment, and more. Among these, for tribal society, education is an essential requirement. The…
Descriptors: Tribes, Indians, Disadvantaged, Access to Education
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Rappleye, Jeremy; Komatsu, Hikaru – Comparative Education, 2020
Educational scholars, particularly those working in comparative education, have largely failed to recognise, let alone discuss, the impending finite-ness of global resources. The field continues to operate on an assumption of infinite resources, an implicit cultural horizon in place since at least the Western Enlightenment. It has missed the…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Futures (of Society), Sustainability, Economic Development
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Marginson, Simon – Journal of Higher Education, 2016
The world is rapidly becoming more educated at higher education level. In nearly all countries with per capita GDP of more than about $5,000 per annum there is a long-term tendency to growth of participation. The worldwide Gross Tertiary Enrollment Ratio (GTER) increased from 10% in 1972 to 32% in 2012, and is now rising by 1% a year. By 2012 the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Systems Analysis, Access to Education, Enrollment Rate
MDC, 2018
In every state in the South, the percentage of residents with bachelor's degrees or higher who were born outside the state exceed the percentage born in-state, reflecting their dependence on imported talent over building their own talent-development systems. In Virginia, the Southern state with the highest percentage of residents with a B.A. or…
Descriptors: Geographic Regions, Demography, Academic Achievement, Income
MDC, 2018
This executive summary highlights research findings on outcomes in education, employment, and income in the southern United States region. Findings include: (1) As a whole, Southern schools, colleges, and universities perform better than ever, though they are in constant need of improvement to meet the demands of both democracy and a changing…
Descriptors: Geographic Regions, Demography, Academic Achievement, Income
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Rimashevskaia, N. M.; Breeva, E. B. – Russian Education and Society, 2013
Russia's future is put in jeopardy by a decline in both the size of the population and its health and human capital. There is an urgent need for policies to deal with this problem.
Descriptors: Human Capital, Foreign Countries, Population Growth, Population Trends
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Wollebaek, Dag – Rural Sociology, 2010
This article uses unique community-level data aggregated from censuses of associations to analyze growth and volatility in rural populations of grassroots associations. A qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) shows that the two main paths to growth were (1) centralization in polycephalous (multicentered) municipalities and (2) population growth…
Descriptors: Municipalities, Population Growth, Centralization, Comparative Analysis
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Rong, Xue Lan – Teacher Education and Practice, 2012
The 1965 Immigration Act and its 1976 amendments paved the way for the fourth wave of immigration, the largest ever in U.S. history. From 1970 to 2010, about 35 million immigrants entered a postindustrial and service-oriented U.S. society. However, a new and striking trend of the fourth wave of immigration has swept rapidly beyond the coastal,…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Human Geography, Population Growth, United States History
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Parrado, Emilio A.; Kandel, William A. – Social Forces, 2010
We analyze the relationship between Hispanic population growth and changes in U.S. rural income inequality from 1990 through 2000. Applying comparative approaches used for urban areas we disentangle Hispanic population growth's contribution to inequality by comparing and statistically modeling changes in the family income Gini coefficient across…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Family Income, Population Trends, Population Growth
Wright, Michelle Stover – Child and Family Policy Center, 2010
The fact that there has been population growth in Iowa at all (about 100,000 growth per decade over the last 50 years) is due in large measure to an increased level of immigration into the state. This immigration has helped to stabilize Iowa's population and workforce. Immigrants bring diverse experiences and backgrounds with them. This report…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Population Growth, Immigration, Education Work Relationship
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Furstenberg, Frank F., Jr. – Future of Children, 2010
Frank Furstenberg examines how the newly extended timetable for entering adulthood is affecting, and being affected by, the institution of the Western, particularly the American, family. He reviews a growing body of research on the family life of young adults and their parents and draws out important policy implications of the new schedule for the…
Descriptors: Family Life, Young Adults, Parent Role, Family Financial Resources
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Ottmann, Jacqueline – Journal of Research on Leadership Education, 2009
Literature on leadership and change suggests that leaders help drive and sustain first- and second-order change and that they help to motivate people towards a vision based on common values; therefore, leaders do need to be prepared for significant responsibility. Leaders should ask, what "grand narrative" are today's leaders, this…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Foreign Countries, Content Analysis, Instructional Leadership
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Donner, William; Rodriguez, Havidan – Social Forces, 2008
The changing demographic landscape of the United States calls for a reassessment of the societal impacts and consequences of so called "natural" and technological disasters. An increasing trend towards greater demographic and socio-economic diversity (in part due to high rates of international immigration), combined with mounting…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Population Growth, Migration, Social Capital
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