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Dunne, Faith | 1 |
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Squires, Don | 1 |
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Howley, Aimee A.; And Others – Rural Special Education Quarterly, 1988
Considers characteristics of rural gifted students, rural family and community attitudes and school conditions relevant to rural gifted students' underachievement. Recommends active administrator support for gifted programs, and the use of acceleration as an equitable, effective, and cost-efficient strategy for rural gifted education. 41…
Descriptors: Acceleration (Education), Community Attitudes, Family Attitudes, Gifted
Edington, Everett D. – Rural Sociologist, 1981
Discusses nine major characteristics of rural schools which affected their willingness to accept change, as revealed in a study of the five-year Rural Experimental Schools Program. Available from: Rural Sociological Society, 325 Morgan Hall, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37916. (NEC)
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Community Attitudes, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education
Dunne, Faith – Phi Delta Kappan, 1983
This article explores the benefits and drawbacks of centralized versus local control of schools. It concludes that our traditional conflict between Jeffersonian and Hamiltonian perspectives makes it possible for us to avoid a permanent imbalance between centrist imperatives and the need to maintain rural strength. (PB)
Descriptors: Community Attitudes, Community Control, Decentralization, Elementary Secondary Education
Lawrence, Barbara Kent – 1999
Two concepts have been confused: equality of opportunity and equality of ability, which has led us to link intellectual giftedness with elitism. This linkage undercuts the ability to nurture and benefit from the gifts of the gifted, an important issue in rural places experiencing either withering economies and loss of population or an influx of…
Descriptors: Anti Intellectualism, Brain Drain, Cognitive Dissonance, Community Attitudes

Squires, Don – Education in Rural Australia, 2003
Australian rural communities often suffer from psychological isolation in addition to geographic isolation. Human and social capital are powerful antidotes to psychological isolation and are closely dependent on learning. Rural schools can reverse the negative effects of isolation on educational outcomes if they first work on building human and…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Community Attitudes, Community Development, Disadvantaged
Boyd, Thomas A. – 1987
This paper summarizes arguments surrounding the closing of Hisel School in Jackson County, Kentucky, in an effort to analyze the debate on rural education in Appalachia and how it relates to school-community relationships. Events surrounding closure of the school are summarized, including a two-year period in which a school community volunteer…
Descriptors: Citizen Participation, Community Attitudes, Community Involvement, Community Support
Grubis, Steve – 1982
High teacher attrition in rural Alaska is abetted by stress induced by the culturally and environmentally differing milieus of the arctic and sub-arctic. Severe climatic conditions curtail traditional activities, and confined isolated settings place strain on personal relationships and heighten irritability, anxiety, and anger, often leading to…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Alaska Natives, Antisocial Behavior, Communication Problems