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Peer reviewedRobertson, Donna Friedman – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 1998
Describes a qualitative research project examining homelessness's effects on children's schooling, highlighting a South Carolina intervention program's success. Research disclosed an informal homelessness "caste system," the political unpopularity of providing homeless services, homeless kids' high rates of academic failure and problem…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Access to Education, Administrator Attitudes, Behavior Problems
Peer reviewedHadley, Pamela A.; Simmerman, Alice; Long, Michele; Luna, Michael – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2000
Evaluation of a collaborative service delivery model involving a speech-language pathologist and regular teachers of two inner city primary grade classrooms found that, in comparison to standard practice control classrooms, experimental students showed superior gains in receptive vocabulary, expressive vocabulary, beginning sound awareness, and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Delivery Systems, Disadvantaged Youth, Expressive Language
Peer reviewedGerber, Theodore P.; Hout, Michael – American Journal of Sociology, 1995
Maintains that, in spite of state efforts to reduce educational inequities, stratification actually increased during the Soviet period. Removing gender preferences for men corrected some inequity. However, parents' education, occupation, and geographical origin contributed to the stratification. Contains a concise history of Soviet educational…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Educational Change, Educational Experience, Educational Policy
Peer reviewedHernandez, Donald J. – Future of Children, 1995
Provides a historical analysis of how demographic changes in American family life from the mid-1880s to the present have shaped the demand for programs to complement the efforts of families in educating and caring for their children. The author notes a second child care revolution currently taking place and argues for public funding for early…
Descriptors: Black Family, Child Rearing, Day Care, Demography
Peer reviewedMarkus, Thomas A. – Paedagogica Historica, 1996
Articulates the ideological and social relationships reinforced by the spatial design of urban children's schools in the early 19th century. Describes the purpose and function of the four types of schools: Sunday, monitorial, infant, and workhouse. Includes numerous illustrations from a variety of sources. (MJP)
Descriptors: Architectural Character, Architecture, Classroom Design, Economically Disadvantaged
Overstreet, Stacy; Devine, Joel; Bevans, Katherine; Efreom, Yael – Psychology in the Schools, 2005
Predictors of parental school involvement were examined within a sample of 159 economically disadvantaged, African American parents living in an urban setting. School involvement was defined in terms of parent activity within the school. Parent demographics, attitudes about education, and community engagement behaviors as well as parent…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, High School Students, School Involvement, Elementary School Students
van de Grift, W. J. C. M.; Houtveen, A. A. M. – School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 2006
In some primary schools, the average performance of pupils over several years is significantly below the level that could be expected of these pupils. There are several theories for this phenomenon, known as underperformance. Theory on opportunity to learn predicts that pupils in underperforming schools are not given sufficient opportunity to…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Student Characteristics, Educational Theories, Racial Differences
Mcintyre, Alice – Urban Education, 2006
Unlike school-aged youth attending well-resourced suburban schools, working-class poor students attending inner-city public schools are oftentimes denied the opportunity to develop a sense of agency within their schools and communities. In this article, the author addresses one way that educators and researchers can encourage young people to…
Descriptors: Urban Areas, Economically Disadvantaged, Urban Education, Action Research
Hagans-Murillo, Kristi – California School Psychologist, 2005
A response-to-intervention model (RTI) has been identified as a promising way to identify and intervene early with children who are experiencing learning difficulties. The general RTI approach also holds promise of preventing learning difficulties with preschoolers. This article examines the potential benefits of implementing a RTI model in…
Descriptors: Learning Problems, School Psychologists, Emergent Literacy, Teaching Methods
Tuvblad, Catherine; Grann, Martin; Lichtenstein, Paul – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2006
Background: Socioeconomic status is often assumed to be of importance for the development of antisocial behavior, yet it explains only a fraction of the variance. One explanation for this paradox could be that socioeconomic status moderates the influence of genetic and environmental effects on antisocial behavior. Method: TCHAD is a Swedish…
Descriptors: Twins, Socioeconomic Status, Intervention, Employment Level
Badham, Bill – Children & Society, 2004
Virtually every Government programme for children and every Government Department in the UK is expected to involve children and young people in its policy development and service delivery (Children and Young People's Unit, 2001). It is the new orthodoxy. Yet, hard questions are often avoided when reciting the mantra of participation. Why bother?…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Public Policy
Kugelmass, Judy; Ainscow, Mel – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2004
The issue of inclusion is high on the educational reform agenda in many countries. Set within the context of the United Nations organisation's push for "Education for All", the aim is to find ways of increasing the participation and learning of pupils who are vulnerable to marginalisation within existing educational arrangements (World…
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Social Class, General Education, Low Income
Peer reviewedElmesky, Rowhea – School Science & Mathematics, 2005
Those who are most marginalized, both culturally and economically, in society are concentrated in the nation's largest urban centers and have the least opportunities to be successful in school science or to pursue higher education and career trajectories in science, mathematics, or engineering. This article shares the results of a study in which…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Urban Schools, Physics, Science Instruction
Ausbrooks, Carrie Y. Barron; Barrett, Edith J.; Daniel, Theresa – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2005
This article chronicles the evolution of legislation for Texas open-enrollment charter schools to their implementation by demonstrating how these schools have (or have not) used their freedom from state-mandated requirements to develop innovative learning environments as well as to bring innovative curricula into the classroom. The investigative…
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Charter Schools, Disadvantaged Youth, Teacher Persistence
Landa, Laura Gabriela Garcia – Current Issues in Language Planning, 2006
The ability to access a foreign language can be an issue for academics trying to publish in international journals. The barriers that non-(limited)English-speaking academics in poor countries have in accessing the academic literature pose an issue of disadvantage in a world where the current trend is to publish research work mostly in English.…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Language Planning, Foreign Countries, Politics of Education

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