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Christman, Dana; Guillory, Raphael; Fairbanks, Anthony; Gonzalez, Maria Luisa – Journal of American Indian Education, 2008
This study sought to understand the perceptions of American Indian educators as they made their way through a pre-service school administrator preparation program at a large, public research university. The Model of American Indian School Administrators, or "Project MAISA", prepares American Indian/Alaska Native teachers to obtain…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Research Universities, Altruism, American Indians
Wormnaes, Siri – International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 2008
The present study explored how cross-cultural collaboration involving university lecturers from Norway (the North) and Egypt (the South), and student-teachers from Egypt, can be an arena for facilitating student-teachers' reflection and for challenging student-teachers' preconceived beliefs and perspectives about disability and education. The…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Foreign Countries, Specialists, Drills (Practice)
Royse, David; Dignan, Mark – Research on Social Work Practice, 2008
Although the need for evaluation of prevention programs is clear, the implementation of evaluation, particularly for large, complex projects with multiple investigators, poses numerous challenges. Program evaluators in these circumstances do not have the same degree of control as, say, experimental psychologists and must find ways to obtain data…
Descriptors: Evaluators, Program Evaluation, Formative Evaluation, Prevention
Goldston, David B.; Molock, Sherry Davis; Whitbeck, Leslie B.; Murakami, Jessica L.; Zayas, Luis H.; Hall, Gordon C. Nagayama – American Psychologist, 2008
Ethnic groups differ in rates of suicidal behaviors among youths, the context within which suicidal behavior occurs (e.g., different precipitants, vulnerability and protective factors, and reactions to suicidal behaviors), and patterns of help-seeking. In this article, the authors discuss the cultural context of suicidal behavior among African…
Descriptors: Pacific Islanders, Prevention, American Indians, Alaska Natives
Tsering, Tashi – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2008
In environmentalist discourse, there is often an assumption that certain non-industrial peoples, usually called "traditional" or "indigenous" live in more "harmonious" relations with nature. The general argument is that instead of treating these communities as "backward" or "uncivilized," the…
Descriptors: Buddhism, Cultural Context, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations
O'Herin, Julie – California Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages, 2007
People have enough trouble defining themselves and determining what they want in life when they operate within a single language and culture, but the job gets trickier when they live in a world of multiple lexicons, grammars, histories, cultures, audiences and social systems, where identity and perceptions vary by language context. This paper…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Multilingualism, Audiences, Bilingualism
Greene, Jay P.; Kisida, Brian; Butcher, Jonathan – Center for Civic Innovation, 2007
The names that school boards give to public schools can both reflect and shape civic values. It is increasingly rare for public schools to be named after presidents -- or people, in general -- and increasingly common to name schools after natural features. This shift from naming schools after people worthy of emulation to naming schools after…
Descriptors: Public Education, Public Schools, School Policy, Identification
Hartley, David – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2007
The recent emergence of distributed leadership has been very marked. In England, it has received official endorsement. But the evidence-base which supports this endorsement is weak: there is little evidence of a direct causal relationship between distributed leadership and pupil attainment. What therefore might explain its rise to prominence? Here…
Descriptors: Leadership, Academic Achievement, Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Environment
Tilley, Susan; Gormley, Louise – Qualitative Inquiry, 2007
Drawing from educational research conducted in Canada and Mexico, university researchers explore how culture complicates both the ethics review process and the translation of ethical research principles into practice. University researchers in Canadian contexts seek approval from university Research Ethics Boards to conduct research, following…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Researchers, Ethics
Sternberg, Robert J. – Roeper Review, 2007
Different cultures have different conceptions of what it means to be gifted. But in identifying children as gifted, we often use only our own conception, ignoring the cultural context in which the children grew up. Such identification is inadequate and fails to do justice to the richness of the world's cultures. It also misses children who are…
Descriptors: Gifted, Cultural Context, Academically Gifted, Concept Formation
Badger, Richard; MacDonald, Malcolm N. – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2007
The principles of many international language teacher education programmes are grounded in a relatively homogenous set of "Western" cultural values, even though their participants come from a wide range of different cultural backgrounds. This paper addresses some of the issues surrounding the role of culture in language teacher education and…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Language Teachers, Teacher Educators, Cultural Context
Stolte, John F.; Fender, Shanon – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2007
How and why does a given social value come to shape the way an individual thinks, feels, and acts in a specific social situation? This study links ideas from Goffman's frame analysis to other lines of research, proposing that dramatic narratives of variable content, vividness, and language-in-use produce variation in the accessibility of…
Descriptors: Social Values, Social Influences, Schemata (Cognition), Cues
Bennett, Janet M.; Salonen, Riikka – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2007
Modern educators face new challenges both in teaching about culture, and in teaching across cultures. While culture is often addressed in the "content" of the curriculum, it is less frequently incorporated into the "process" of teaching and learning. In short, cultural knowledge does not equal intercultural competence. Being global citizens…
Descriptors: Student Needs, Intercultural Communication, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Context
Sanders, Dawn L. – International Journal of Science Education, 2007
Plants are essential to life on Earth and yet are often deemed invisible by the human populace. Botanic gardens are an under-researched educational context and, as such, have occupied a peripheral arena in biology education discussions. This article seeks to readdress this absence and present the case for a more sustained use of informal learning…
Descriptors: Botany, Informal Education, Literature Reviews, Meta Analysis
Brennan, Margaret – Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 2007
Sociocultural theories propose that social context and more experienced cultural members are integral to children's development and enculturation into their communities. However, the argument is made that the current Western cultural and structural arrangement of group public child care impedes the successful implementation of sociocultural-based…
Descriptors: Young Children, Social Environment, Child Care, Teaching Methods

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