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Howley, Craig B.; Howley, Aimee – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2018
Did rural America bring Donald Trump to the presidency? As a phenomenon related to the rise of Trump, the authors try, in this paper, to explain the conservatism that surrounds them personally, as rural residents and rural education scholars. Their neighbors are (mostly) conservative; in part it defines them; it is part of their culture. They have…
Descriptors: Rural Education, Rural Sociology, Political Attitudes, Ideology
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Howley, Craig B.; Howley, Aimee; Yahn, Jacqueline – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2014
Dissertation literature focusing on issues of curriculum and instruction (C&I) in rural schools has substantially increased since 1987. We located 580 possibly rural C&I dissertations and subsequently identifi ed 194 as probably rural; of these we were able to obtain digital copies of 188 full-length studies. Our purpose was to…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, Literature Reviews, Content Analysis, Discourse Analysis
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Howley, Craig B.; Theobald, Paul; Howley, Aimee – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2005
Offering a response to the question, "What rural education research is of most worth?", the authors recommend an approach very different from the one taken by Arnold, Newman, Gaddy, and Dean (2005) in their consideration of the rural education research literature. They remind readers that about 150 years ago, Herbert Spencer put a similar…
Descriptors: Rural Education, Educational Research
Howley, Craig B.; Howley, Aimee – Phi Delta Kappan, 1995
Systemic approaches like outcome-based education can't accommodate the common good of rural areas; rural scholars are rightly skeptical of "the one best system" and supporting technologies. Educators should also question new technologies (distance education, computer-assisted instruction, and telecommunications) promising an even more…
Descriptors: Appropriate Technology, Computer Assisted Instruction, Distance Education, Educational Technology
Howley, Craig B.; Howley, Aimee – 1995
This paper critiques the notion that technology can solve the problems of rural schools. The critique begins with the recognition that the United States is an economic empire, that technology is the instrument of empire, and that national objectives for education are concerned with promoting economic competitiveness. While rural places are…
Descriptors: Accountability, Appropriate Technology, Centralization, Computer Uses in Education