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Baldridge, J. Victor | 1 |
Bowers, C. A. | 1 |
Cantor, Leonard M. | 1 |
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de Weert, Egbert | 1 |
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de Weert, Egbert – Higher Education, 1990
Higher education quality control structures emerging in West European countries are examined, and the current trend toward definition of quality predominantly from one central power center is criticized. Methodological and substantive weaknesses in this system are discussed, and an approach taking into account other interests and perspectives is…
Descriptors: Centralization, Educational Trends, Foreign Countries, Higher Education

Bowers, C. A. – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 1998
Computers represent the digital phase of the Industrial Revolution, contribute to centralizing corporate and political power, worsen the growing environmental crisis, and displace local knowledge with data. By framing discussions of computers in terms of these worldwide trends, readers can avoid the simplistic thinking surrounding discussions of…
Descriptors: Centralization, Computer Simulation, Computer Uses in Education, Corporations
Baldridge, J. Victor – AGB Reports, 1981
In the 1960s crisis, higher education is seen as having made some decisions that outlasted their usefulness: easy tenure, Ph.D. overproduction, overbuilt plants. In meeting today's crisis, there is the threat of creating new "policy dinosaurs," such as overcentralization, erosion of faculty quality, debasement of educational standards. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Centralization, College Administration, College Faculty, College Planning

Cantor, Leonard M. – Comparative Education, 1980
Using examples from California, the author analyzes the increasing trend for states to assume a guiding or dominant role over local school districts in important aspects of American education. He considers the main reasons for this trend to be public concern over academic standards and the increasing cost of education. (Editor/SJL)
Descriptors: Centralization, Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Full State Funding
The Problem of Centralization: Health and Education Policies in Great Britain and the United States.
Hanneman, Robert A.; Hollingsworth, J. Rogers – 1978
The paper compares aspects of decision making in health and education in the United States and Great Britain from 1890-1970. The major purpose is to demonstrate variety in the degree of centralization within the two policy areas during this period. Centralization is defined as the degree to which all resources of a given type are controlled by one…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Centralization, Comparative Analysis, Comparative Education