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Premack, Eric – School Business Affairs, 1996
School legislation is often designed to alter the fundamental structure of the public education system. Article describes elements of charter-school legislation and provides examples of strong and weak laws. Discusses California's experience to date with charter schools, issues to consider when assessing the implications of charter-reform…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Educational Finance, Educational Innovation, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedPecheone, Raymond L.; Stansbury, Kendyll – Elementary School Journal, 1996
Advocates standards-based teacher assessment linked with school reform as a system for building the capacity of elementary teachers. Suggests that linking teaching standards with student standards focuses and coordinates state reforms to address knowledge, skills, and abilities needed by teachers to enhance student learning. Examines a program in…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Educational Assessment, Educational Change, Educational Improvement
Peer reviewedDoktor, Judy E.; Poertner, John – Remedial and Special Education, 1996
The Kentucky Family Resource Centers developed under the Kentucky Educational Reform Act are described as examples of the school-linked service movement. The lessons learned in the development of the centers and policy issues that need to be addressed by both education and social services to assure continued development of this movement are…
Descriptors: Community Programs, Delivery Systems, Disabilities, Educational Change
Peer reviewedWilliams, Robert O. – Contemporary Education, 1996
One of five articles in the section on the "Promise and Purpose of Professional Development Schools," this article discusses the inherent institutional forces that work to counteract attempts at influential change. The paper reports on the establishment of a PDS program in a school/university partnership at Indiana State University,…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Educational Change, Educational Innovation, Elementary Secondary Education
Hill, Franklin – Educational Facility Planner, 1989
Facility planning can be a catalyst for restructuring education by coordinating technology throughout the entire curriculum anticipated for the school. Describes a major high school renovation in Snoqualmie Valley, Washington, where a teacher-developed science curriculum became the basis for restructuring science and technology during the facility…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Corporate Support, Curriculum Development, Educational Change
Peer reviewedPasch, Suzanne H.; Pugach, Marleen C. – Contemporary Education, 1990
Describes events leading to the establishment of four urban professional development schools (PDS) by the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and the Milwaukee Public Schools. School sites, university/school district interaction, preservice student activities, and schoolwide change projects are described. Results of a survey of site teachers on PDS…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Models
Peer reviewedRiel, Margaret – Journal of Research on Computing in Education, 1994
Examines the visions for the redesign of schools and the ways in which computers and communications technology have provided the means for these visions. Highlights include changes in instructional practices, including collaborative learning and interdisciplinary themes; change agents in the redesign of schools; and school organization and…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Mediated Communication, Cooperative Learning
Peer reviewedWright, Alan – Preventing School Failure, 1996
This article describes the Pathfinder Project, an Arizona project which serves adjudicated youth in an alternative placement based on a "Success School" model of the school as a learning organization with high emphasis on community service, individual goals, work-study, coaching for success, and group counseling. (DB)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Problems, Delinquency, Educational Philosophy
Peer reviewedJenkins, Joseph R.; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1994
Cooperative Integrated Reading and Composition was implemented with elementary school regular, remedial, and special education students as an approach for organizing reading and language arts instruction. Compared to a control school, the experimental school found significant effects on reading vocabulary, total reading, and language scores but…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Elementary Education, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Heterogeneous Grouping
Clinchy, Evans – New Schools, New Communities, 1995
Magnet schools were created as a result of the failure of mandatory desegregation plans, but the magnet schools concept has spawned the ideas of controlled parent choice of schools and the chartering of public education. Implementation of the Goals 2000 Act could jeopardize trends magnet schools have set in motion. (SLD)
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Educational Trends
Peer reviewedMahonly, David – Oxford Review of Education, 1993
Discusses the transition to a postbinary higher education system in Australia and the United Kingdom. Contends that, in Australia, the new direction was motivated by official concerns that universities be made more accessible to government priorities. Maintains that the Australian approach ignored a canon for diversity in higher education. (CFR)
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Colleges, Educational Change, Educational History
Peer reviewedMcCauley, Kevin J. – Teaching and Change, 1995
As his high school restructured to improve student outcomes, a biology teacher altered the instructional environment of his classroom accordingly, emphasizing curriculum, instruction, and assessment. As he acted more like a coach than a dispenser of information, students took more responsibility for learning and improving the quality of their…
Descriptors: Biology, Classroom Environment, Cooperative Learning, Course Content
Peer reviewedSindelar, Paul T. – Journal of Special Education, 1995
This response to five case studies of inclusive practices for elementary students with learning disabilities identifies problems inherent in inclusive education (e.g., coteaching and logistics) and suggests that fundamental school reform offers an alternative that meets recognized best-practice standards and requires the trained skills of learning…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Elementary Education, Inclusive Schools, Learning Disabilities
Odden, Allan; And Others – School Business Affairs, 1995
Summarizes a three-year Consortium for Policy Research in Education project to identify conditions in U.S., Canadian, and Australian schools that promote high performance through school-based management. Findings showed that SBM requires redesign of the whole school organization. Success depended on how schools decentralized four key resources:…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Decentralization, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedKerchner, Charles Taylor; Caufman, Krista D. – Elementary School Journal, 1995
Discusses results of teachers' unionism in setting standards for teaching and representing teachers' economic and work conditions interests. Suggests that despite the efforts, teachers are still workers subject to coercion and exploitation. Argues that the profession's boundaries are hard to define and defend, and existing laws do not support the…
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Elementary Secondary Education, Employer Employee Relationship, Instructional Leadership


