NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 9 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
McGee, John J.; Lin, Fan-Yu – Preventing School Failure, 2020
This study explored practices that lead an alternative education program (AE) to improve student performance and progress toward graduation and transition. Eight former and current AE students were interviewed about their reasons for leaving regular schools and their perspectives regarding AE placements. The findings favor the implication of…
Descriptors: Nontraditional Education, Case Studies, At Risk Students, Nontraditional Students
Cenita, Jonelle Angelo S.; De Guzman, Zyra R. – Online Submission, 2023
Purpose: The objective of this study is to determine Education in the Digital World: from the lens of millennial learners. This also identifies the cybergogical implications of the issue with digital education as seen through the lens of the outlier. Method: This study uses a mixed-methods sequential explanatory design. A quantitative method was…
Descriptors: Age Groups, Student Attitudes, Technology Uses in Education, Teaching Methods
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Delacruz, Stacy; Guerra, Paula – School Community Journal, 2019
In this article we expand the scope of school-university partnerships to include a community partner. This study involved an afterschool tutoring program known as the Discovery Center (pseudonym) partnering with a university reading class. This partnership, which is in its sixth year of implementation, prepares teacher candidates in the area of…
Descriptors: After School Programs, Sustainability, Preservice Teachers, Partnerships in Education
MacDonald, Kristine – ProQuest LLC, 2017
For-profit institutions grew exponentially in population and demand in higher education in the 21st Century, yet have met tough times recently. With expedited, job-specific programs; flexible classes; no extracurricular activities; and the options of students earning certificates, diplomas or even associate's degrees; these schools are attractive…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Academic Persistence, Nontraditional Students, Private Colleges
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Gwynne, Susan – CEFP Journal, 1975
Mariemont High School in Mariemont, Ohio, has an open facility that enhances the school's goal to train the student to "think reflectively, critically, and constructively about the problems of his world." (Author/MLF)
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Educational Facilities Design, Flexible Scheduling, High Schools
Raichle, Henry F. – 1972
The education program of Northeast High School is based on the philosophy that education should be an experience in which students control some of their own learning experiences and learn how to handle them. This report describes modular scheduling, student achievement, and student and teacher attitudes toward modular scheduling. In a survey of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Status Comparison, Flexible Schedules, Flexible Scheduling
Eastern Arizona Coll., Thatcher. – 1974
Eastern Arizona College has developed a modularized system of instruction for five vocational and vocationally related courses--Introduction to Business, Business Mathematics, English, Drafting, and Electronics. Each course is divided into independent segments of instruction and students have open-entry and exit options. This document reviews the…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Business Education, English Instruction, Flexible Scheduling
Snortland, Robert K. – 1982
The use of the audio-tutorial (A-T) individualized teaching approach at the University of North Dakota is described. This approach, which was based on the work of S. N. Postlethwait and the philosophy of B. F. Skinner and Benjamin Bloom, attempts to match an instructional strategy with the needs of the learners. The modified A-T graphics approach…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Autoinstructional Aids, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis
Marshall, Randall G. – 1970
Changing social attitudes of students in American schools are seen to have a direct bearing on currently declining enrollment figures in foreign language programs. The author discusses ways in which motivation can be improved. Comments are directed to the use of class time, dialogues, pattern drills, memorization, prereading experience,…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Classical Languages, Educational Improvement, Educational Innovation