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Kehm, Bonny J. – ProQuest LLC, 2013
The outcome of Associate Degree Nursing (ADN) students not passing the initial National Council of Licensure Examination for Registered Nursing (NCLEX-RN) can adversely affect schools of nursing. This failure also adversely affects the national nursing shortage. The declining national pass rates on the NCLEX-RN for ADN graduates and the increasing…
Descriptors: Nursing Education, Nursing Students, Associate Degrees, Licensing Examinations (Professions)
Worthley, Mary – ProQuest LLC, 2013
In a national context of high failure rates in freshman calculus courses, the purpose of this study was to understand who is struggling, and why. High failure rates are especially alarming given a local environment where students have access to a variety of academic, and personal, assistance. The sample consists of students at Colorado State…
Descriptors: Mixed Methods Research, College Freshmen, Calculus, College Mathematics
West, Thomas C. – Montgomery County Public Schools, 2013
Each school year, roughly a thousand students drop out of Montgomery County (Maryland) Public Schools (MCPS). However, unlike other large, urban school districts where students who drop out skip school and are suspended often (Balfanz & Byrnes, 2010), students who drop out of MCPS are present in school; they just are not doing well…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Dropout Characteristics, Dropout Prevention, Potential Dropouts
American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry (NJ1), 2011
Parents are often worried when their child has learning problems in school. There are many reasons for school failure, but a common one is a specific learning disability. Children with learning disabilities can have intelligence in the normal range but the specific learning disability may make teachers and parents concerned about their general…
Descriptors: Learning Problems, Learning Disabilities, Children, Academic Failure
Froyen, Dries; Willems, Gonny; Blomert, Leo – Developmental Science, 2011
The phonological deficit theory of dyslexia assumes that degraded speech sound representations might hamper the acquisition of stable letter-speech sound associations necessary for learning to read. However, there is only scarce and mainly indirect evidence for this assumed letter-speech sound association problem. The present study aimed at…
Descriptors: Evidence, Reading Fluency, Dyslexia, Reading Failure
Zabaleta, Mariela Buonomo – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Child labor is considered a key obstacle to reaching the international commitments of Education For All. However, the empirical evidence on the effects of child labor on educational attainments is mostly limited to static measurements. This paper assesses the consequences of child labor on schooling outcomes over time by employing a three-year…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Labor, Outcomes of Education, Longitudinal Studies
Martin, Jennifer L.; Beese, Jane A. – Urban Education, 2017
Teaching writing to students of high need in an urban school is simultaneously pedagogical, curricular, and political. Students labeled "at-risk" for school failure often have lowered expectations placed upon them from without that impact how they feel within. Compounding this problem of perception is the real issue of heightened…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Writing Instruction, At Risk Students, Urban Schools
Helf, Shawnna; Cooke, Nancy L.; Konrad, Moira – Preventing School Failure, 2014
This study compared the reading gains of Kindergarten students who were at risk for reading failure who were taught with either a structured supplemental reading program or with teacher-designed or teacher-selected instruction. The authors used a quasi-experimental design with preexisting groups to examine changes from pretest to posttest.…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Supplementary Education, Reading Instruction, Reading Difficulties
Rudoe, Naomi – Ethnography and Education, 2014
This article analyses the school exclusion and subsequent educational inclusion of pregnant young women participating in a course of antenatal and key skills education at an alternative educational setting. It examines the young women's transitions from "failure" in school to "success" in motherhood and re-engagement with…
Descriptors: Pregnant Students, Pregnancy, Academic Failure, Mothers
Tufts, Mark; Higgins-Opitz, Susan B. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2014
Health Science students at the University of KwaZulu-Natal perform better in their professional modules compared with their physiology modules. The pass rates of physiology service modules have steadily declined over the years. While a system is in place to identify "at-risk" students, it is only activated after the first semester. As a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Health Sciences, Physiology, At Risk Students
Ramirez, Pablo C.; Jimenez-Silva, Margarita – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2014
In high school English classrooms where English language learners may be at risk of academic failure, Culturally Responsive Teaching can help educators build an inclusive community in which all students can improve their literacy skills.
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Literacy, English Language Learners, Student Improvement
Helms, Jeffrey L. – Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks, 2014
The purpose of the research was to compare student performance in an online or face-to-face (F2F) required Psychology course on three distinct sets of variables (i.e., pre-course, course, and post-course variables). Analyses revealed mixed significant and nonsignificant results. Students did not differ in terms of such variables as hours…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Online Courses, Conventional Instruction, Grade Point Average
Anderson, Charis – Mass Insight Education, 2014
The Indiana State Board of Education (ISBE) has not been shy about exercising its authority to intervene in chronically underperforming schools. Under the state's Public Law 221, the Indiana Board can mandate specific interventions for any school that has received six consecutive failing grades under the state's accountability system--up to a…
Descriptors: State Boards of Education, State Legislation, Failure, Intervention
Subjective Performance Evaluation in the Public Sector: Evidence from School Inspections. CEE DP 135
Hussain, Iftikhar – Centre for the Economics of Education, 2012
Performance measurement in the public sector is largely based on objective metrics, which may be subject to gaming behaviour. This paper investigates a novel subjective performance evaluation system where independent inspectors visit schools at very short notice, publicly disclose their findings and sanction schools rated fail. First, I…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Schools, Inspection, Institutional Evaluation
McCormack, Christopher – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2012
The spectacular growth and equally spectacular decline of the eighteenth-century charity school movement prompts this examination of the contribution made by the movement to nineteenth-century schooling--particularly superior or secondary schooling. Educational historians have argued that the movement was a failure. This paper argues that only in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Boarding Schools, Social Change, Hospitals

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