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Beattie, Mary – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2007
The paper presents insights into the creation and re-creation of a narrative from the perspective of two female students, Phillipa and Eva, at Corktown Community High School. Corktown is an alternative high school which focuses on the development of the whole person--creative, intellectual, social, emotional, aesthetic and physical. The school is…
Descriptors: Freedom of Speech, Females, High Schools, Nontraditional Education
Crow, Sherry R. – Knowledge Quest, 2007
Developmentalists state that children are born with the intrinsic motivation to learn, but studies show that this intrinsic desire to learn begins to wane during the early school years, around third grade, and continues a steady decline through eighth grade. Intrinsic motivation is at the core of information literacy, the foundation for a desire…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Learning Motivation, Self Determination, Theories
Johnson, Genevieve – AACE Journal, 2007
Meta-analysis is a method of quantitatively summarizing the results of experimental research. This article summarizes four meta-analyses published since 2003 that compare the effect of DE and traditional education (TE) on student learning. Despite limitations, synthesis of these meta-analyses establish, at the very least, equivalent learning…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Context Effect, Distance Education, Traditional Schools
Dye, Linda; Hare, Dougal Julian; Hendy, Steve – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2007
Background: Within the context of current legislation relating to mental capacity in adults, the capacity of people with intellectual disabilities to consent to take part in research studies and the impact of different forms of information provision was experimentally investigated. Materials and methods: A questionnaire measure of ability to…
Descriptors: Photography, Mental Retardation, Questionnaires, Verbal Ability
Landman, James H. – Social Education, 2007
This September, Oxford University Press is publishing "Out of Range: Why the Constitution Can't End the Battle Over Guns." Written by Mark Tushnet, the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, "Out of Range" explores competing interpretations of the Second Amendment and discusses how the entanglement of…
Descriptors: Weapons, Conflict Resolution, Public Policy, Civil Rights
Merry, Michael S. – Ethics and Education, 2007
For many, it is far from clear where the prerogatives of parents to educate as they deem appropriate end and the interests of their children, immediate or future, begin. In this article I consider the educational interests of children and argue that children have an interest in their own well-being. Following this, I will examine the interests of…
Descriptors: Children, Well Being, Parent Responsibility, Personal Autonomy
de la Rosa, Alvaro Romo – Higher Education Policy, 2007
This article presents a brief historical overview on the origin and development of institutional autonomy and academic freedom in the United States of America and in Latin America. Such overview allows the reader to contrast two different geographical contexts, as well as different and even opposing opinions concerning the meaning of the concepts…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Personal Autonomy, Institutional Autonomy, Academic Freedom
Meadow, Mary Jo – 1982
Family theorists have considered the idea of boundary in terms of the concepts of disengagement and enmeshment. Disengaged families are those having rigid, well-delineated boundaries that are often impermeable. Alternately, enmeshed families have diffuse ego boundaries, acting as if all are part of each other, and are likely to produce an…
Descriptors: Conformity, Developmental Stages, Family Influence, Moral Development
Peer reviewedRobertson, Gill – Management Education and Development, 1987
Exploring the facilitator's role in a management self-development program, the paper presents the view that "self"-direction takes place in a context of "other"-directedness. It argues that development of the learner's self-direction demands that the facilitator be prepared to interact openly, to learn, and to change. (Author/CH)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Independent Study, Management Development, Personal Autonomy
Danis, Claudia; Tremblay, Nicole A. – Lifelong Learning, 1987
The authors highlight major new propositions that were inferred from a study of autodidactic learning experiences. They suggest corresponding implications for practice in a formal educational setting. Topics include motivation, goals, specialization, monitoring of the learning process, and reflection. (CH)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Educational Objectives, Independent Study, Lifelong Learning
Wesson, Anthony J. – Vocational Aspect of Education, 1986
The nature of autonomy and the relevance of education to its development is explored through a discussion of three theories--progressive, liberal-rational, and social class--of the curriculum. Reasons are advanced for preference for a "collaborative" over a "negotiated" curriculum. Defends the liberal-rational theory.…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Theories, Personal Autonomy, Postsecondary Education
Peer reviewedCollopy, Bart J. – Gerontologist, 1988
Notes that, in long term care, conflicts over autonomy can begin at level of conceptualization, especially when basic distinctions and polarities are not adequately recognized. Indicates conceptual complexity by identifying and examining six polarities. Presents case studies to illustrate how each polarity can give rise to ethical problems in long…
Descriptors: Conflict, Conflict Resolution, Ethics, Individual Power
Peer reviewedMoody, Harry R. – Gerontologist, 1988
Considers informed consent standard inadequate for insuring autonomy in long term care. Argues for complex standard of "negotiated consent." Illuminates philosophical argument by qualitative data from interviews with physicians, nurses, and social workers in nursing homes, which demonstrated continuum of interventions ranging from…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Institutionalized Persons, Nursing Homes, Older Adults
Peer reviewedWolf, Diane L. – Journal of Family Issues, 1988
Analyzes the relationship between factory daughters and their families in Java, Indonesia, to examine the relationship between gender stratification and industrialization. Finds industrialization maintains, and may even enhance, female status within the family. Comparing this Southeast Asian with an East Asian experience, demonstrates the…
Descriptors: Family Characteristics, Females, Foreign Countries, Industrialization
Peer reviewedZacharakis-Jutz, Jeff – Adult Education Quarterly, 1988
The author states that the movement to increase discipline and detail in post-Freirean adult education may ultimately reduce it to reproducing the status quo. He argues that empowerment and power are opposing concepts and that adult educators must oppose the systemizing of adult education if they hope to effect social change. (CH)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Empowerment, Personal Autonomy, Power Structure

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