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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. – 1990
Recent work by both neoclassical and political economists suggests the scope of the influence of economic structures on rural socioeconomic conditions and rural education. In particular, dual labor-market analyses look beneath the surface of the macroeconomy--the national economy--to the underlying reality of regional or sectoral economic…
Descriptors: Economic Impact, Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education, Role of Education

DeYoung, Alan J.; Howley, Craig B. – Peabody Journal of Education, 1990
This article defines historical and contemporary rural schools, outlines three sociological and political economy perspectives essential for understanding why school consolidation and rural school reform are abiding themes in rural America, and examines the political and economic context of a vigorous new school consolidation program in West…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Economic Factors, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education

Howley, Aimee A.; Howley, Craig B. – Rural Educator, 1995
A survey of 262 teachers in predominantly rural West Virginia measured respondents' technological literacy and receptivity to telecommunications applications. The majority of respondents were familiar with computer applications, particularly instructional applications and word processing. Although receptive to telecommunications, teachers were…
Descriptors: Computer Attitudes, Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Uses in Education, Distance Education
Coe, Pam; Howley, Craig B. – 1989
According to the definition that a rural school district is one in which 75% or more of the population lives outside Standard Metropolitan Areas or in which student density is equal to or less than 10 pupils per square miles, 36 or 65% of West Virginia's 55 counties are classified as rural. State school policies do not specifically recognize the…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Rural Areas, Rural Education, Rural Schools
Howley, Craig B. – 1989
The traditional relationships between rural and urban areas and the changes brought on by specialized rural industries discussed. The digest reviews work that has investigated the impact of farming, manufacturing, and mining on education. The effect of agricultural activity on academic achievement, especially via vocational agriculture programs,…
Descriptors: Agricultural Production, Economic Development, Education Work Relationship, Educational Trends
Howley, Aimee A.; Howley, Craig B. – 1994
Distance education is a way to provide needed instructional resources to rural schools, and the Internet and other telecommunications networks are the newest addition to the distance education toolkit. However, little is known about rural teachers' technological skills and attitudes in this area. A mail survey of 262 K-12 teachers in West…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Computer Literacy, Distance Education, Elementary School Teachers
DeYoung, Alan J.; Howley, Craig B. – 1992
This paper argues that social, political, and economic circumstances provide better explanations of rural school consolidation than the advertised curricular, pedagogical, or administrative benefits. Modern views of schooling over recent decades emphasize economic development and the need to improve international competitiveness. There is a…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Economic Development, Economic Factors, Elementary Secondary Education
Howley, Craig B. – 1989
While most economists agree that educational attainment contributes to national economic performance, studies have not generally confirmed a similar conclusion with respect to rural areas. This paper examines the relationships between rural education and economics. The new aim of American education, restoration of national economic…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Economic Development, Educational Objectives, Educational Theories
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
Howley, Craig B. – 1996
This paper addresses philosophical and ethical issues regarding school-to-work issues in public education. The purpose of school-to-work programs is to help students obtain employment. This paper asserts that schools should prepare students for work, but the concept of "work" entails much more than just securing employment.…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Educational Principles, Elementary Secondary Education, Employment Opportunities
Howley, Craig B.; Howley, Aimee A. – 1987
Poverty prevalent in rural areas is associated with unequal representation in gifted programs. Some impediments to equal access include cultural prejudice, family distrust of schools, the stigma of academic success, inappropriate identification practices, and poor funding for rural programs. Five rural states have adopted measures to promote…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Cultural Influences, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education
Howley, Craig B. – Appalachian Collaborative Center for Learning, Assessment, and Instruction in Mathematics (ACCLAIM), 2003
This talk addresses the connections between rural life and education research centered on rural places. It's informed by the author's experience of all three realms--life, education, and schooling. The author discusses how rural education consists of meanings related to the rural lifeworld as those issues confront the conventional agenda for…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Rural Population, Rural Areas, Rural Education

Howley, Craig B.; Howley, Aimee A. – Rural Special Education Quarterly, 1988
Discusses five common rural impediments to equal access to gifted programs, and focuses on two under educators' control, program funding and student identification practices. Offers three approaches to local standardization of intelligence test norms. 11 references. (SV)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Access to Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted
Johnson, Jerry D.; Howley, Craig B. – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2000
Reviews essays by Raymond Williams, which explain how, within the context of a 150-year literary history, rural stereotypes have been constructed and imbedded within a collective consciousness by a form of cultural colonization. Suggests that Williams' insights can help rural education researchers think outside the conventional wisdom that…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Cultural Images, Educational Research, English Literature