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Stephens, E. Robert – 1984
Until the quantity, quality, and utility for policy development of research literature on rural education is improved, the potential for furthering the current national momentum of interest in rural education cannot be realized. Explanations for the limited research literature include a lack of appreciation for differences between rural and urban…
Descriptors: Adoption (Ideas), Change Strategies, Educational Development, Educational Planning
West Virginia State Dept. of Education, Charleston. – 1989
West Virginia is recognized as the second most sparsely populated state in the nation. Legislation that intended to upgrade the quality of education in the state was passed in 1988. Some educational leaders argued that statewide reform must consider the uniqueness of sparse, rural school districts in the state, taking into account issues such as…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, County School Districts, Educational Attainment, Educational Change
New York State Special Task Force on Equity and Excellence in Education. – 1982
A statewide task force established to improve educational equity in New York State describes its activities and results in this report. The task force chairman's letter of submittal discusses the Levittown v. Nyquist decision that led to the task force's formation and reviews the group's deliberations. The report then summarizes task force…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Educational Finance, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education
Nachtigal, Paul – 1980
Four sets of variables are likely to influence the nature of rural education by the year 2030. The first trend characterizes the mass production model of education and calls for increased specialization. This trend is likely to be replaced by a broader, more integrated one in which the interrelationships between content areas will be more evident…
Descriptors: Biculturalism, Bilingual Education, Community Control, Consolidated Schools
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Chambers, Gurney – Rural Special Education Quarterly, 1987
Tells the story of a special teacher in a rural school and her influence on the writer's life. Notes qualities of the effective teaching including empathy, energy, high expectations, acknowledgement of the whole child, and perception of the hidden curriculum. Discusses teacher's ways of overcoming her students' poverty and educational…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Elementary Education, Personal Narratives, Poverty
Quinn, Cheri L. – 1993
In this video, former students and teachers recall their experiences in rural one-room schools in various regions. Just getting to school involved some hardship; anecdotes include experiences of walking, riding horses, driving snowmobiles or all-terrain vehicles, and canoeing to school. Students, teachers, and community members developed a…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education, Interviews
Sugrue, Ciaran – 1996
This paper provides an overview of practices in small rural elementary schools in Ireland and recent trends related to school size. There are 3,200 "ordinary" elementary schools in the Republic of Ireland serving children aged 4-12 in eight levels: two preschool levels and grades 1-6. System-wide policies with implications for small…
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Educational Policy, Educational Practices, Educational Trends
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DeYoung, Alan J. – Rural Special Education Quarterly, 1989
Argues that the "social capital" provided to schools by parent and community involvement has been eroded in rural areas by school consolidation, centralization, and urban models, placing all rural students at risk. Traces this erosion in one rural West Virginia school district. Contains 19 references. (SV)
Descriptors: Community Support, Consolidated Schools, Educational Trends, Elementary Secondary Education
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Wiles, Jon – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 1995
Two viewpoints criticize the views of DeYoung and others by claiming that the middle school movement came about as a result of research documenting the developmental needs of children. Rejoinder by DeYoung and others maintains that this trend has led to the loss of rural communities and had more to do with economic factors and rural elementary…
Descriptors: Child Development, Consolidated Schools, Economic Factors, Educational Change
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Warner, Mildred – Rural Sociology, 1999
Theoretical rationale and rural examples illustrate that local government, directly or through participatory community-based intermediaries, can promote development of community social capital. Important program features are participant autonomy, linkage, and returns on investment. Examples with varying social capital impacts include…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Citizen Participation, Community Action, Community Organizations
Rosenfeld, Stuart A. – Rural America, 2001
The rural community college has evolved into a multipurpose institution that meets lifelong learning needs and the economy's demand for information and skills. The best institutions merge an applied higher education with extension-like services for local industry. New challenges facing rural community colleges include competition from other…
Descriptors: College Role, Community Colleges, Economic Development, Education Work Relationship
Nachtigal, Paul – 1992
The usual opposing perspectives on the school-size debate focus on economies of scale and school climate. This paper examines school size, educational cost, and quality from a third perspective, that of maintaining healthy viable communities. Rural schools and rural communities are tightly linked and highly interdependent. The school is one of the…
Descriptors: Community Development, Consolidated Schools, Cost Effectiveness, Educational Quality
Schmuck, Patricia A.; Schmuck, Richard A. – 1989
Small town school boards are made up of conscientious, hardworking, and caring citizens who face arduous economic challenges and difficult educational dilemmas. The changing economy of small towns has led to fewer professionals and business owners participating in boards of education, a rift between educators who are bureaucrats and board members…
Descriptors: Board Administrator Relationship, Board of Education Policy, Board of Education Role, Boards of Education
Barnhardt, Ray, Ed.; Tonsmeire, J. Kelly, Ed. – 1988
This collection contains 15 essays by teachers who participated in the First Annual Rural Alaska Instructional Improvement Academy in Fairbanks in May 1987. The essays were written as a follow-up to the academy, based on the teachers' reflections on their own experiences in rural schools as well as on the academy workshops they attended and on the…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian Education, Cultural Education, Curriculum Development
Schmuck, Patricia A.; Schmuck, Richard A. – 1990
This paper describes a study that consisted of interviews with 38 elementary school principals in 21 Western and Midwestern states. The sample was made up of 27 men and 11 women with an age range of 35 to 64, all of whom worked in small-town schools. The paper describes the various challenges faced by these principals, including academic deficits,…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary Schools, Inservice Teacher Education, Leadership Qualities
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