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Showing 1 to 15 of 85 results Save | Export
Carleton, Sean – University of British Columbia Press, 2022
Between 1849 and 1930, colonial, provincial, and federal governments assumed greater responsibility for education in what is now British Columbia, using schooling as a strategy to catalyze and legitimize the development of a capitalist settler society. "Lessons in Legitimacy" brings the histories of different kinds of state schooling for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Colonialism, Social Systems, State Schools
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Reay, Diane – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2022
"The Oxford Dictionary of English" defines authoritarianism as the enforcement or advocacy of strict obedience to authority at the expense of personal freedom, as well as a lack of concern for the wishes or opinions of others. In this paper I argue that there are growing signs of a move towards more authoritarian practices and structures…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Authoritarianism, Political Influences
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Archie Thomas – Critical Studies in Education, 2024
Schooling has been a site of harm for Indigenous people in settler colonial contexts, as a tool of dispossession, assimilation and separation from country and kin. However, schools have simultaneously been sites to work against this and build alternatives to settler colonial systems that nourish Indigenous futures. This article centers the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Colonialism, Educational Policy
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Dorota Lubinska – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2024
Informed by the conceptual-analytical framework of LPP and bilingual education policy, this study addresses a unique and under-researched case of heritage language education policy for complementary Polish State Schools abroad. These are Polish governmental educational offering aimed at Polish migrants and their descendants. Data consist of two…
Descriptors: Polish, Heritage Education, Goal Orientation, Bilingualism
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Giomi, Fabio – History of Education, 2015
This article explores the entanglement of gender, education and empire in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Habsburg period throughout the analysis of a unique institution: Sarajevo's Muslim Female School. Established at the very end of the nineteenth century, this pedagogical institution was the only school in Austria-Hungary specifically devoted…
Descriptors: Muslims, Females, Educational History, Femininity
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Fischer, Karin – History of Education, 2011
A common history curriculum was introduced for the first time in Northern Ireland schools in 1991, which attempted to bridge the longstanding gap between Catholic and state schools in this field. This paper outlines the various aspects of the crucial role played by a number of historians from all the major universities in Ireland, North and South,…
Descriptors: State Schools, Foreign Countries, Historians, History Instruction
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Hadas, Miklos – History of Education, 2009
This article highlights how "turnen", the modernised form of earlier gymnastic exercises, emerged in Hungary in the second part of the nineteenth century. It is argued that although the advocates of the "turnen" movement are gradually squeezed from the spheres of modern competitive sports, their strategies of expansion are…
Descriptors: State Schools, Physical Education, Foreign Countries, Educational History
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Halpin, David – Frontiers of Education in China, 2010
Both China and England require state-funded schools to teach a national curriculum. While policy congruence in terms of overall intention is apparent, there are major differences between each country's approach to systemic curriculum reform which highlight contrasting attitudes to how best to effect change in schools and widely differing views on…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Design, Educational Change
Usher, Alexandra – Center on Education Policy, 2011
This background paper from the Center on Education Policy (CEP) examines the origins, history, and evolution of federal land grants for public schools, as well as their significance as an early example of the federal role in education. It is intended to serve as a more detailed companion to another CEP paper, "Get the Federal Government Out of…
Descriptors: State Schools, Public Schools, Government Role, Federal Government
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Mendelsson, David – History of Education, 2009
Between 1965 and 1979 the demand for places at Jewish day schools in England rose dramatically. In the preceding decades, most parents sent their children to state non-denominational schools, showing little interest in providing their children with a solid Jewish education. Sunday or after-school Hebrew classes, rarely extending beyond Bar/Bat…
Descriptors: State Schools, Private Schools, Jews, Day Schools
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Wiborg, Susanne – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2009
It is the aim of this article to contribute towards an understanding of why Scandinavia and England have achieved very different levels of social integration in their state school systems.
Descriptors: State Schools, Social Integration, Foreign Countries, Integration Studies
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Matthews, Kay Morris – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2009
As a British colony, New Zealand had early to grapple with how best to implement a state system of schooling. Inspectors of primary schools and governing boards of secondary schools were responsible for appointing school principals. This paper examines the ways in which they dealt with new situations: in the case of the primary schools where there…
Descriptors: State Schools, Elementary Schools, Secondary Schools, Females
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Maxcy, Brendan; Sungtong, Ekkarin; Nguyen, Thu Suong Thi – Educational Policy, 2010
Mounting religious-ethnic tensions and broad-scale reform have precipitated reconsideration of the mission, traditions, operations and institutional positions of government schools in southern Thailand. The authors report on a study of a dozen schools located in four border provinces adapting to national reforms and regional unrest. The authors…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Political Attitudes, Religious Factors, Government Role
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Sarra, Grace – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2008
Cherbourg State School is some 300 kilometres northwest of Brisbane. It is situated in an Aboriginal community at Cherbourg with approximately 250 students, all of whom are Indigenous Australian children. Cherbourg State School aims to generate good academic outcomes for its students from kindergarten to Year 7 and nurture a strong and positive…
Descriptors: State Schools, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Context, Change Strategies
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Ferrari, Alessandro – Journal of Moral Education, 2006
The paper aims to investigate the role assigned to state schools in France and Italy in constructing social cohesion and a common citizenship. The theme will be treated by individuating three different stages of a process of progressive mutual rapprochement between state and civil society. From the separatist phase, passing through an intermediate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, State Schools, Catholics, Citizenship Education
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