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Henkel, Mary – LATISS: Learning and Teaching in the Social Sciences, 2004
This article analyses key changes in higher education institutions as they have acquired more status, power and responsibilities in the UK higher education system and, indeed, in the polity at large. It argues that previously taken-for-granted academic ideologies now increasingly compete with those of managerialism and neo-liberalism in the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Ideology, Entrepreneurship, Power Structure
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Teitel, Lee – Journal of In-service Education, 2004
In the close to 20 years since the Holmes Group first introduced the term professional development school (PDS), PDSs have grown in the United States from a concept to become a cornerstone of serious attempts to simultaneously improve teacher education and public schools. In the course of this maturation process, PDSs have come in from the margins…
Descriptors: Professional Development Schools, Professional Development, Educational Development, Educational Change
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Smith, Louise W.; Van Doren, Doris C. – Journal of Marketing Education, 2004
Active and experiential learning theory have not dramatically changed collegiate classroom teaching methods, although they have long been included in the pedagogical literature. This article presents an evolved method, reality based learning, that aids professors in including active learning activities with feelings of clarity and confidence. The…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Experiential Learning, Active Learning, Teaching Methods
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Kraak, Andre – Journal of Studies in International Education, 2004
This article focuses on the impact of several competing discourses on higher education (HE) policy formulation in South Africa in the post apartheid period. It argues that there has never been a strong consensus in the HE community regarding the content of a new policy framework. In particular, the analysis focuses on the limits imposed by the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Policy Formation, Social Change
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Carrington, Suzanne; Robinson, Robyn – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2006
This paper addresses the question: why is it so hard for school communities to respond to diversity in learners, staff and parents in inclusive ways? The authors draw on theory and recent professional experience in Queensland, Australia, to offer four guiding principles that address traditional assumptions about learning that result in inequality…
Descriptors: Inclusive Schools, Foreign Countries, Educational Principles, Equal Education
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Michaels, Craig A.; Ferrara, Denise L. – Journal of Educational & Psychological Consultation, 2006
Successful collaboration and problem solving are the foundational processes on which meaningful transition plans are constructed. This article discusses the process of planning for the transition from school to adult life for students with disabilities and suggests that person-centered planning is an ideal vehicle for promoting collaboration and…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Cooperation, Problem Solving, Family Involvement
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Miroiu, Mihaela – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2004
In the past decade, Romania has passed through a profound educational reform. The main outcomes concern tangible progress concerning regulations and the curriculum. In spite of these impressive changes, gender sensitivity and gender fair policies have been largely absent from objectives, subjects, textbooks, assessment and evaluation. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Textbooks, Educational Change, Case Studies
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Dillon, Patrick; Ahlberg, Mauri – Technology, Pedagogy and Education, 2006
In this article integrativism is proposed as a framework for e-learning and practitioner research. The philosophical bases of integrativism are outlined. Foundational principles of integrating education, derived from the notions of continual quality improvement and high-quality learning, are explained. The extension of integrating education to…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Educational Environment, Teacher Researchers, Electronic Learning
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Raelin, Joseph A.; Raelin, Jonathan D. – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2006
In this account of practice, the authors introduce a variant of classic action learning, called developmental action learning (DAL). The DAL model, derived from cognitive development theory, introduces conventional learning modules prior to the more intensive set experience. It also calls for facilitation designed to help participants, selected…
Descriptors: Institutional Cooperation, Experiential Learning, Learning Modules, Organizational Development
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Evans, G. R. – Education and the Law, 2006
The Committee of University Chairman publishes a code of good practice designed, among other things, to ensure clarity about the authority on which decisions are taken on behalf of universities, subordinate domestic legislation created and the exercise of discretion regulated. In Carltona Ltd.v. Commissioners of Works [1943] 2 All ER 560 AC the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Democratic Values, College Administration, Administrative Principles
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Knight, Catharine C.; Sutton, Rosemary E. – London Review of Education, 2004
Educators are continuously challenged to increase their pedagogical effectiveness when teaching adult learners. Neo-Piagetian theory and research, based on Piaget's classic work, provides promising concepts and tools to help educators enhance their pedagogical knowledge and competence when teaching adults. Consequently, through research findings…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Adult Basic Education, Adult Learning, Adult Students
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Jones, Alister; Moreland, Judy – International Journal of Technology and Design Education, 2004
This paper describes the frameworks and cognitive tools that have been developed to enhance practising teachers' pedagogical content knowledge in primary school technology education. The frameworks evolved from our research that firstly examined existing teaching practices, secondly enhanced formative interactions and thirdly enhanced summative…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Student Relationship, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Technology Education
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O'Brien, Jim; Hunt, Gillian – Teacher Development, 2005
A national framework of continuing professional development (CPD) for teachers in Scotland has emerged since the McCrone Inquiry. The CPD Framework is intended to help teachers to identify and access relevant, high-quality development opportunities that enable them to realise their full potential. There is now a professional standard for each of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Professional Development, Standards, Educational Principles
Grier, Alan S. – Journal of Industrial Teacher Education, 2005
Deciding what should be included in a curriculum has long been a topic of controversy. The struggle to identify what should be taught in schools has been evident throughout the development of American schools and continues today. This article discusses the importance of needs assessment throughout the curriculum development process. Needs…
Descriptors: Needs Assessment, Curriculum Development, Career Education, Educational Objectives
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Gray, Sandra Leaton – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2006
This article debates three tensions within the contemporary teaching profession in Great Britain, in terms of education policy after the 1988 Education Reform Act. The first is between prospective and retrospective identities, as defined by Bernstein (1996/2000). The second is between teachers' expectations of professional status, and centralised…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching (Occupation), Public Policy, Educational Change
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