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From Fordism to Neo-Fordism: Industrialisation Theory and Distance Education--a Chinese Perspective.
Peer reviewedDing, Xingfu – Distance Education, 1995
Provides a Chinese perspective on the debate concerning industrialization theory and distance education. Argues that higher education in China has a "craft-like" nature and China's Radio and TV Higher Education (RTVHE) represents one of the most industrialized forms of education in the world. Notes that RTVHE is in transition from…
Descriptors: Conventional Instruction, Distance Education, Educational Radio, Educational Television
Peer reviewedKellmayer, John – NASSP Bulletin, 1995
Chronically disruptive students are often funneled into "watered-down" alternative schools that warehouse rather than educate them. The Atlantic County (New Jersey) Alternative High School is a successful college-based program that expects referred students to fulfill normal academic requirements while taking tuition-free college…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, College School Cooperation, High School Students, High Schools
Peer reviewedMatasar, Richard A. – Journal of Legal Education, 1995
A law school dean criticizes the law school accreditation process as lacking in substance and not structured to respect the unique missions of different institutions. Accreditation's emphasis on institutional statistics and its skepticism about educational change are seen as inappropriate in the current climate of legal education. (MSE)
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Institutional Characteristics
Peer reviewedKnowles, J. Gary; Muchmore, James A. – Journal of Research on Christian Education, 1995
Interviews with 10 adults who were home-educated as children explored their past and current lives to determine how much they may have been deprived or enabled by their experiences. Subjects reflected positively on their home education and present occupations. Many shared a sense of moral purpose and spirituality. (SM)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Home Schooling, Life Satisfaction, Nontraditional Education
Gerard, Alice – Skole: The Journal of Alternative Education, 1994
A former teacher at Rockland Project School (New York) reflects on the effects of the alternative school on her former students after seeing them at a reunion. She concludes that the freedom offered at the school served most students well in their adult lives. (KS)
Descriptors: Alumni, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education, Free Schools
Peer reviewedCrow, Gary M.; Glascock, Catherine – Journal of Educational Administration, 1995
Studies candidates in a nontraditional principal preparation program, highlighting the socialization process of developing an innovative role perception. Candidates encountered conflict between a university-derived role conception and that promoted by the school system. Gradually, the sense of facilitating teachers yielded to the principal's…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Graduate Study, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSlater, Robert Bruce – Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 1995
Argues that, although there are presently over 20,000 prison inmates, the largest of whom are black, enrolled in higher education programs, by 1996, there may be none. The author provides justification for prisoner rehabilitation, revealing the inadequacy of harsh punishment in stemming crime, and presents reasons why higher education in prisons…
Descriptors: Blacks, Correctional Education, Crime Prevention, Educational Needs
Peer reviewedWoodruff, Joyce C.; Mollise, Dorothy C. – Journal of Continuing Higher Education, 1995
Comparison of grade point averages of adult students, who attended a course weekly--evenings and weekends--(n=60) with those (n=57) who attended daily showed that nontraditional scheduling did not hinder adult students' academic performance. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Delivery Systems, Evening Programs, Flexible Scheduling
Peer reviewedBierlein, Louann A.; Mulholland, Lori A. – Educational Leadership, 1995
Charter schools are independent legal entities empowered to hire and fire, handle lawsuits, and control their own finances. Charter schools require new relationships with school boards, utilize site-based decision making, and foster new teacher roles. Minnesota, California, and Massachusetts are experimenting with charter schools. A sidebar…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Change Strategies, Charter Schools, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedDiamond, Linda – Educational Leadership, 1995
Prospective charter schools in California must address educational design, outcomes, assessment methods, governance, staffing qualifications, health and safety procedures, racial balance, admission requirements, retirement benefits, employees' rights, financial audit procedures, expulsion and suspension procedures, and attendance alternatives.…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Community Involvement, Elementary Secondary Education, Nontraditional Education
Harrington, Sheila – Momentum, 1993
Waldorf Schools represent the largest nonsectarian school movement in the world, shunning fads and technology and relying on the creative gifts of teachers and students. Studies include eurythmy, woodworking, weaving, and traditional academic subjects, and no commercial textbooks are used. Despite teacher/funding shortages, the system continues to…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Educational Innovation, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories
Peer reviewedMaher, Carolyn; And Others – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 1991
Describes and illustrates the rationale, purpose, and philosophy of the conceptually based, school mathematics program of instruction at the Kenilworth Public Schools in their long-term collaborative partnership, since 1984, with the Center for Mathematics, Science, and Computer Education at Rutgers University. (26 references) (JJK)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Style, Cooperative Learning, Elementary Secondary Education
Harrington-Lueker, Donna – American School Board Journal, 1994
School systems across the country are adding alternative education programs designed for violent or chronically disruptive youth. Some school districts and states are contracting with private groups to provide programs including residential schools. Other programs include the Youth Challenge Corps, authorized by Congress in 1992, and boot-camp…
Descriptors: Delinquent Rehabilitation, Discipline Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, Nontraditional Education
Peer reviewedVanderbush, Ross E.; And Others – American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, 1994
Ambulatory care and family practice clerkships of the University of Arkansas' nontraditional pharmacy doctoral program are designed to minimize time the student is away from professional practice. They compel the student to take the initiative in identifying patients with specific disease states who would benefit from a pharmacist's knowledge and…
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Doctoral Programs, Family Practice (Medicine), Higher Education
Peer reviewedOwens, Major R. – Knowledge: Creation, Diffusion, Utilization, 1992
Education 2005 is a report prepared for the Subcommittee on Select Education of the Committee on Education and Labor in the U.S. House of Representatives. This article reproduces verbatim the foreword to that report, written by the subcommittee's chairman Major R. Owens (D-New York). (DB)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Improvement, Educational Research, Federal Government


