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Scott Thorne; Nathan Mentzer; Greg J. Strimel; Scott Bartholomew; Jason Ware – Journal of Technology Education, 2024
Learning by Evaluating (LbE) is an instructional approach that involves students making comparative judgements of pairs of artifacts, such as student work, portfolios, prototypes, or curated images related to a topic of instruction to enhance critical thinking and decision-making skills. Situated as a primer for learning, the efficacy of LbE stems…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Secondary School Students, Learner Engagement, Teaching Methods
Cheryl Fields-Smith; Timberly L. Baker – Thresholds in Education, 2023
Compared to all other options, homeschooling provides parents with the most control over their children's educational experiences. The COVID-19 pandemic led to a surge in the U.S. homeschool population. Black families had the largest increase in home educators from 3.3% to 16.1% between April 2020 and October 2020. The emerging literature on Black…
Descriptors: Rural Areas, Home Schooling, African Americans, Mothers
Tom Manning – Learning Professional, 2024
The Standards Assessment Inventory (SAI) has provided relevant, educator-level data helping systems of all kinds -- states, districts, schools, provinces, and organizations -- gather and track data about the professional learning their educators experience. An online, confidential, valid, and reliable instrument administered to school-based…
Descriptors: Data Collection, Faculty Development, Program Improvement, Measures (Individuals)
Kadir Demir; Brett Criswell – Science Education International, 2023
This research study focused on understanding changes that were taking place in Promotion and Tenure (P and T) practices in eight selected institutions of higher education in the state of Georgia and examined factors, if any, that were acting as a catalyst for change. The research team used both quantitative and qualitative analyses of the P and T…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Systems Approach, Educational Change, Faculty Promotion
Clifford Davis Jr.; Andy Nixon – AASA Journal of Scholarship & Practice, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic and the rapidly changing societal issues that it occasioned have accelerated the dynamic nature of the principalship. Changing demographics, technological advances, teachers' working conditions, social unrest, and in particular the global pandemic are among the factors driving this continuous role transformation. This study…
Descriptors: Principals, Administrator Role, Administrator Education, Technology Uses in Education
Toutkoushian, Robert; Riffe, Karley; Sanford, Paula; Ness, Erik – Journal of Education Finance, 2022
Retirement benefits for faculty are an important, but relatively understudied, topic in postsecondary education. To date, there have been very few studies that have used qualitative research methods to examine how workers make financial decisions about retirement, and no qualitative investigations of faculty choice between DB and DC plans. To help…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Retirement Benefits, Money Management, Planning
Bell, Angela D.; Hodges, Leslie E.; Rubin, Donald L.; Shiflet, Coryn – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 2022
Although education abroad in the US offers participants demonstrable benefits, direct and opportunity costs are cited as primary barriers to broader participation. Yet the degree to which low-income status deters studying abroad and whether additional need-based aid beyond Pell Grants encourages participation remain uncertain. Moreover, not all…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Financial Needs, Low Income Students, Study Abroad
Brad Boykin; Juliann Sergi McBrayer; Summer Pannell; Richard E. Cleveland; Suzanne B. Miller; Mary Josephine Carney – School Leadership Review, 2024
School leaders must make decisions and implement strategies to improve a school climate and student achievement, and it benefits them to understand which areas of school climate have the greatest impact on student achievement. The State of Georgia measures school climate and student achievement with its school accountability measure, the College…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Gap, Decision Making, Educational Environment
Prausnitz, Mark R.; Cuba-Torres, Christian M.; Liu, Nian; Lee, Yunki – Chemical Engineering Education, 2022
To characterize the professional interests, motivations, aspirations and demographics of chemical engineering (CHE) students, we surveyed almost 600 sophomores and seniors at Georgia Tech during the 1996-1997 and 2018-2019 academic years. Our objective was to study the evolution over two decades of: influences on student decision to study CHE,…
Descriptors: Chemical Engineering, Engineering Education, Student Interests, Undergraduate Students
Sara E. North – American Journal of Evaluation, 2024
A method called multi-attribute utility analysis (MAUA) provides a decision-making framework that facilitates comparative analysis of multiple real-world decision alternatives with unique complex attributes. Utility analysis as a measure of effectiveness has been minimally used by educational researchers to date, despite clear relevance in complex…
Descriptors: Urban Universities, Suburban Schools, Nontraditional Students, Higher Education
Rubin, Paul G. – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2021
Through an exploratory comparative case study of two U.S. states (Georgia and Nevada), this study investigates how the selection mechanism to state higher education governing agency boards influences the responsiveness of board members to stakeholders and their role in the policy-making process. Framed around the recent national policy agenda to…
Descriptors: State Boards of Education, State Agencies, Personnel Selection, Stakeholders
Vandenbussche, Jennifer; Ritter, Lake; Callahan, Kadian M.; Westlund, Erik E. – PRIMUS, 2021
In this article, the authors propose a department-level curricular committee structure, called Strand Committees, as a mechanism to facilitate oversight and enact significant change to policies and practices in specific courses. The primary goal of the Strand Committees is improving both student success and instruction while upholding a high…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, STEM Education, Educational Improvement, Educational Change
Hibel, Jacob; Penn, Daphne M. – Sociology of Education, 2020
Using an explanatory sequential mixed-methods design, we analyze quantitative administrative and survey data and qualitative archival data to examine the organizational character of standardized test cheating among educators in Georgia elementary schools. Applying a theoretical typology that identifies distinct forms of rule breaking in…
Descriptors: Organizational Culture, Cheating, Standardized Tests, Accountability
Limaye, Rupali J.; Malik, Fauzia; Frew, Paula M.; Randall, Laura A.; Ellingson, Mallory K.; O'Leary, Sean T.; Bednarczyk, Robert A.; Oloko, Oladeji; Salmon, Daniel A.; Omer, Saad B. – Health Education & Behavior, 2020
Immunization is one of the most effective ways to prevent infectious diseases. However, vaccination rates are suboptimal in the United States. Obstetric providers are critical in influencing vaccine decision making among pregnant women, as trust between a patient and provider may facilitate willingness to accept vaccination. Little is known about…
Descriptors: Patients, Decision Making, Immunization Programs, Physician Patient Relationship
Waugh, Alex H.; Andrews, Tessa C. – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2020
Random call is a randomized approach to select a student or group of students to share their thinking with the whole class. There are potential costs and benefits of random call in undergraduate courses, yet we lack insight about how this strategy is actually implemented and why instructors choose to use it. We interviewed 12 college biology…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Classroom Communication, Student Participation, Undergraduate Students