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Peer reviewedLongwill, Amy Wildman; Kleinert, Harold L. – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 1998
Describes how high school peer tutoring programs can enhance educational outcomes, including increased academic performance, for students with and without moderate and severe disabilities. The role of such programs in educational restructuring is addressed, as is the way such programs can promote general education class participation and community…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Disabilities, Educational Change, High Schools
Peer reviewedKremer-Hayon, Lya – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 1998
Explores the knowledge teachers will need to have in the future and considers the implications of new requirements for teaching and teacher education. Advances several propositions for changes in the perception of pedagogical knowledge, school curricula, and school structure and proposes a strategy of "core" and "periphery" aspects of…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Futures (of Society), Knowledge Base for Teaching
Peer reviewedYee, Dianne L. – Educational Leadership, 1998
In 1989, Swift Current Division in Saskatchewan, Canada, initiated the Chalk, Chips, and Children technology project. The project was funded by various corporate partners and developed by a broadly constituted advisory committee. The principal's role changed drastically as he reexamined leadership competencies and faculty developed their own…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Educational Technology, Foreign Countries, Intermediate Grades
Peer reviewedNeumann, Richard A. – Journal of At-Risk Issues, 1998
Examined the nature of culture change that occurred at an alternative continuation high school for at-risk students (n=116) and changes in student attitudes over 2 years. Quantitative and qualitative data show the effectiveness of the school's Team Learning Projects model and the school's restructuring program. (SLD)
Descriptors: Continuation Students, Democracy, High Risk Students, High School Students
Clinchy, Evans – Phi Delta Kappan, 1998
Two national reform movements--one focused on creating small, autonomous schools, the other fixated on a standardization agenda--are basically in conflict. The standards movement is touting the traditional, top-down, centralized, bureaucratic system modeled after Frederick Taylor and his efficiency experts. Progressive, decentralized initiatives…
Descriptors: Bureaucracy, Charter Schools, Conflict, Decentralization
Peer reviewedJablon, Paul – Journal of At-Risk Issues, 1994
Explores a creative middle-school structure that provides a block of about two hours in the school day when one teacher has a group of students engaged in a variety of interdisciplinary activities. The concepts of learning circles and group-dependent projects are discussed. The core of the proposed middle school is constructivism. (SLD)
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Group Activities
Peer reviewedRusch, Edith A. – Journal of School Leadership, 1998
Describes the values and associated behaviors of seven school administrators who foster and sustain democratic practices in schools engaged in restructuring. These administrators reject the centrality of the principal's role and prominently display values supporting equity, inclusion, mutual influence, and candor. These administrators' behavior…
Descriptors: Administrator Behavior, Administrator Role, Democratic Values, Elementary Secondary Education
Effects of Changes in the Recapture Provision on Equity of Education Funding: Evidence from Alberta.
Peer reviewedElhav, Moshe – Journal of Education Finance, 1998
Shows how reducing the recapture provision in a property-tax-dependent education-funding formula adversely affected fiscal equality in Alberta, Canada, from 1974 through 1992. An alternative plan would have recaptured .77 percent more of the funds in 1992. Another plan (full tax-base recapture) would ensure equitable distribution, compared to full…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Educational Equity (Finance), Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform
Peer reviewedHesch, Rick – Canadian Journal of Education, 1999
This case study of an inner-city teacher education program in Canada documents the tensions at work on a social reconstructionist academic staff attempting to produce a culturally relevant teacher education program. Staff members acknowledge the social and educational contexts in which they work while working for the long-term interests of their…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences, Educational Change
Peer reviewedBrandt, Kerryn A.; And Others – Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 1996
Describes programmatic changes in reference services at the Johns Hopkins University (Maryland) medical library and speculates on the future. Topics include institutional restructuring and consolidation; improvements in technology infrastructure; external economic pressure; and fiscal accountability, including library funding and cost center…
Descriptors: Change, Cost Effectiveness, Economic Factors, Futures (of Society)
Peer reviewedLin, Jing; Zhao, Yuming – International Journal of Educational Reform, 1995
School supervision, an important component of China's educational structural reform, arose from the need to implement government policies for modernization and political control and enhance scientific policy making in education. Although the new, decentralized system has helped implement government policies and increased administrative…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Decentralization, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedEngvall, Robert P. – Urban Review, 1996
Presents the view that genuine educational reform is impossible in today's political, social, and economic climate. Today's policymakers are not truly antipoverty and do not truly care about the plight of the less fortunate. The current preoccupation with economic progress means that reform has come to mean inattention. (SLD)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Change, Low Income Groups
Peer reviewedWhite, Robyn; Wallace, John – Research in Science Education, 1999
Describes the activities of two prominent science educators who presided over Australian science curriculum reforms during the 1960s and 1970s. Represents the educators' actions as heroic and describe how the Heroes shaped, modified, and united the culture through referents, rituals, and artifacts. Speculates on the importance of heroic activity…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Educational Administration, Educational Change, Educational Development
Jones, Bruce Anthony – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2005
This article is about policy decision making and racial politics in the St. Louis, Missouri, school district. From a research standpoint, traditional policymaking models are inadequate for explaining the evolution of school reform events in St. Louis over the past year. Teachers, principals, school staff, and parents perceive themselves to be…
Descriptors: Educational Change, African American Children, School Restructuring, School Districts
Kusler, Mary – School Administrator, 2004
What if every high school across the country were mandated to provide all students with four years of math, four years of English, three years of science and three years of social studies? What if all schools were required to participate in the 12th grade National Assessment of Educational Progress? The federal government wants to play a big part…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Legislation, High Schools, Educational Change

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