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Roberts, Charles – American Indian Quarterly, 1987
Details how the Cushman School (Tacoma, Washington), which served Indians of the Northwest by expanding their vocational skills since 1854, became a casualty of World War I. Considers federal austerity programs, Cushman's war experiences, impact of student and staff participation in the war, and the influenza epidemic of 1918. (NEC)
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education, School Closing
Schiffer, Judith – 1980
This book offers the premise that staff development plans are often based on politically naive assumptions about authority prerogatives. Three sources of authority: the public trust, the bureaucracy, and colleagues, are traced from colonial times through the progressive era. An analysis is given of the forces that have had an impact on educational…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Decision Making, Educational History, Educational Policy
Sirois, Herman A.; Smith, Ronald – Journal of the New York State School Boards Association, 1989
Reports how the prolonged 1978 Levittown (New York) teachers strike initially depleted resources and created problems but proved to be the impetus for development of an effective school system. Reviews sources of conflict that led to the strike, reactions of community and teachers, and reforms focused on teacher empowerment. (FMW)
Descriptors: Board of Education Role, Educational Change, Educational Finance, Educational Improvement
Valentine, John A. – 1987
The role of the College Entrance Examination Board (College Board) in setting standards in secondary school education is traced historically. The first college entrance examinations, which became known as the College Boards) were administered in June 1901 around the country to 978 high school students. The rationale was that a set of common…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Achievement Tests, Advanced Placement Programs, Agency Role
Ziaziun, Ivan A. – Soviet Education, 1989
Discusses the experiences and ideas of Anton S. Makarenko, an early influential Soviet educator known for his children's labor collective school that operated in the 1920s near Poltava. Examines Makarenko's legacy for the current educational reform movement, which emphasizes methods that combine instruction with social production and seeks ways to…
Descriptors: Biographies, Communism, Education Work Relationship, Educational Change
Brumberg, Stephan F. – 1988
In April 1917, the United States went to war, and the public schools across the nation initiated programs that encouraged patriotism, supported war policies, and promoted the assimilation of immigrants. In New York City in 1917-18, the Board of Education: (1) called for the unqualified allegiance of school principals and teachers to the U.S.…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Citizenship Responsibility, Educational Policy, Federal Government
Bathurst, Effie, G.; Blough, Glenn O. – Office of Education, Federal Security Agency, 1952
"Schools at Work in 48 States" is a record of a cooperative study made over a period of two and a half years by nine staff members of the elementary school section of the Office of Education, with the advice and help of their co-workers. Such a study requires that the group of persons working together arrive at some commonly accepted…
Descriptors: School Activities, Elementary Schools, Inservice Teacher Education, Workshops