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Inna Kruvi – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Ever since the emergence of gifted education in the United States in the beginning of the twentieth century, the concept of giftedness has been used to marginalize, segregate, and exclude students of particular backgrounds from specialized academic programs. Among the factors that contribute to unequal access to gifted education for ethnically,…
Descriptors: Gifted Education, Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Critical Theory
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Terry D. Evans; Viktor Jakupec – Distance Education, 2023
This article considers selected Australian and international theories, policies, and practices of open and distance education, since ODLAA (formerly the Australian and South Pacific External Studies Association) was formed in 1973, through to the current post-pandemic period. It considers the shifting conceptualization of open education as…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Educational Policy, Educational History, Open Universities
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Bracken, Jerry; Elliott, Jeff; Sims, Monterey; Bemis, Matt; LaConte, Joey; Karlin, Craig; Elliott, Patrick S.; Feigert, Jim; Holmes, Doug; Reyes, Sue; Do, Tuan Anh; Umphres, Nancy – College and University, 2021
With the introduction of new standards for electronic records and transcripts and other changes within higher education, a perfect storm is forming that challenges the 30 years of electronic data exchange (EDX) work. This article outlines the threat to the work and uses recent data to explore the landscape around the past, present, and future. In…
Descriptors: Transcripts (Written Records), Electronic Publishing, Educational History, Educational Change
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Potter, David – Arts Education Policy Review, 2021
In less than a decade, Pearson's distribution of the Teacher Performance Assessment (edTPA) has expanded to hundreds of teacher education preparation programs in the United States. Used in more than forty states, the edTPA has become one of the most prevalent forms of high-stakes evaluation for student teachers, with several states requiring…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Performance Based Assessment, Art Education, Educational Policy
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Lily Todorinova – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
This essay recontextualizes the Yale Report of 1828, arguing that the report's advocacy for classical liberal education should be understood alongside the racial concerns of its authors, some of whom were well-known colonizationists who viewed African American education as a threat to New Haven's social and economic stability. The Yale Report's…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Educational History, General Education, African American Students
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Patricia Delgado-Granados; Gonzalo Ramírez-Macías – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
One of the primary goals of Franco's education policy was to train the working class in the doctrinal principles of the regime. Labour Universities were one of the education institutions created for this purpose; there were three for women (Zaragoza, Cáceres and Huesca). This article focuses on analysing the purposes sought by these…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Vocational Schools, Undergraduate Students, Womens Education
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Joel Barnes – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
This article examines the place of evolutionary science in protestant and Catholic residential colleges associated with Australian public universities across the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Although faith-based universities are a relatively recent phenomenon in Australia, a quasi-federal model of secular teaching and accrediting…
Descriptors: Evolution, Science Education, Foreign Countries, Religious Colleges
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James V. Shuls – Journal of School Choice, 2024
Milton Friedman is widely considered the intellectual father of the school choice movement. While Friedman deserves much credit, Father Virgil Blum stands out as an influential figure in the nascent school choice movement. Using archival research, this paper examines Blum's contributions to the movement. From his 1954 doctoral dissertation, which…
Descriptors: School Choice, Educational History, College Faculty, Educational Finance
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Rebecca S. New – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2024
This essay entails a critical review of the origins, discourses and contemporary manifestations of NAEYC's enduring commitment to 'developmentally appropriate practice' (DAP); and proposes a reconceptualisation of DAP as an open question and incentive for place-based collaborative inquiry. Brief discussion of ECE's early history highlights…
Descriptors: Developmentally Appropriate Practices, Educational History, Early Childhood Education, Educational Practices
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Tarana Jafarova; Aytan Aliyeva – Journal of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies, 2024
This article provides a comparative analysis of international education strategies employed by the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. It explores how both superpowers sought to disseminate their ideologies globally, leading to direct competition. The US and Soviet Union utilized international education to cultivate friendly…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, International Education, Educational Strategies, Educational History
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James Wright; Joanna Brooks; Roya Tabrizi – Journal of Education Human Resources, 2024
This article analyzes links between the origins of higher education institutions and the university "faculty development" movements. University faculty development programs surged during the peak of Cold War geopolitics. Thus, we trace the genealogy of higher education institutions to the surge in faculty development programs,…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Educational History, Higher Education, Ideology
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Adam L. McClain – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2024
Rooted in nearly five decades of scholarly research, transformative learning theory explores how individuals construct and reinterpret their experiences, leading to profound change. This chapter delves into the foundational principles of transformative learning within adult education, highlighting its significance and broad applications. It starts…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Adult Education, Educational History, Instructional Effectiveness
Sam Freedman – Sutton Trust, 2024
Education is often considered a particularly polarised area of policy -- with much unnecessary chopping and changing as governments and ministers come and go, wanting to make their mark. Yet, while there has been a lot of surface area turbulence the broad trends in policy have been remarkably stable for 35 years. The English school system has…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational History, Academic Achievement
Stephanie Joy Tisdale – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Historically Black Colleges and Universities are institutions that contribute to the higher education of people of African descent. The archives of enslaved and freed people describe their systematic approach to education, highlighting the ways that Black communities in America engaged in teaching and learning. Despite enslavement and forced…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, African American Students, African Culture, Role of Education
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Benjamin Mulvey; Bok-Nga Lee – Studies in Higher Education, 2025
Existing academic literature on higher education in China tends to promote an argument that current norms of academic freedom and the broader intellectual-state relationship can be attributed primarily to Chinese political and cultural traditions, particularly Confucian political thought, creating a false dichotomy between 'Western' liberal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academic Freedom, Confucianism, Individualism
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