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White, Jeff – American School & University, 2006
The number of natural disasters and the number of people affected by them has been increasing worldwide over the past century, according to the Center for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters. Natural disasters cannot be prevented, but understanding how they occur can help education institutions design facilities that minimize damage. In this…
Descriptors: School Construction, Natural Disasters, Educational Facilities Improvement, School Safety
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), 2007
This brief report, delivered after the completion of the 1st year of the United Nations (UN) Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD) (2005-2014), highlights the recent developments regarding the Decade (2005). It reports on the documents prepared, the regional and national launches of the Decade held so far and presents relevant…
Descriptors: Nongovernmental Organizations, Sustainable Development, Economic Development, Natural Resources
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Tillotson, Dirk – High School Journal, 2007
The author, who lived and worked as a charter school consultant in post-Katrina New Orleans for 6 months, describes the evolution of charter schools as the predominant means of education and the challenges that chartering faces as a reform, raising issues of access and equity as central concerns. The article concludes by offering some solutions to…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Natural Disasters, Access to Education, Educational Change
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Klopotek, Brian; Lintinger, Brenda; Barbry, John – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
Hurricane Katrina traumatized the city of New Orleans and the Gulf South. It filled most Americans and global citizens with grief and rage in the late summer of 2005. As the world watched, feeling powerless to help the many thousands of suffering people, at first stunned and then furious over the ineptitude of government response to this…
Descriptors: Tribes, American Indian Reservations, American Indian Culture, American Indian History
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Dunn, Carolyn – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
In June 2004, the American national media spent a considerable amount of airtime revisiting the events of June 1964 when three civil rights workers were murdered near Philadelphia, Mississippi. On the fortieth anniversary of the murders. National Public Radio's "All Things Considered" devoted airtime to a story, "Truth and Reconciliation in…
Descriptors: Mass Media Effects, Government Role, African Americans, Civil Rights
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Landry, Brett J. L.; Koger, M. Scott – Journal on Educational Resources in Computing, 2006
Disasters happen all the time; yet despite this, many organizations are caught unprepared or make unrealistic assumptions. These factors create environments that will fail during a disaster. Most information technology (IT) curricula do not cover disaster recovery (DR) plans and strategies in depth. The unfortunate result is that most new computer…
Descriptors: Emergency Programs, Information Technology, Misconceptions, Natural Disasters
Viadero, Debra – Education Week, 2006
Hurricane Katrina, the disastrous storm that struck the Gulf Coast in late August of 2006, displaced an estimated 1 million people. Historians are already calling the resulting exodus of families from hard-hit communities in Louisiana and Mississippi the greatest mass migration in the United States since the Civil War. The diaspora extended north…
Descriptors: Migration, Refugees, Transfer Students, Family (Sociological Unit)
Fogg, Piper; Hoover, Eric; Mangan, Katherine S. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2006
Nearly five months after Hurricane Katrina swept them off their campuses in and around New Orleans, thousands of college administrators, faculty members, and students began a new semester in January 2006. Students came back with a new spirit of determination to adapt to the new realities of New Orleans, and to campuses that are forever changed,…
Descriptors: Campuses, College Faculty, College Students, Natural Disasters
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Hines, Chris – Primary Science Review, 2007
Climate change is having a major effect on water cycles. There is an increased intensity and frequency of severe storms resulting in flooding. Floods in other parts of the world cause death on a major scale. Meanwhile across the planet, one billion people (a sixth of the world's population) do not have access to safe drinking water, and two…
Descriptors: Water, Climate, Rural Development, Child Health
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O'Hanlon, Charlene – T.H.E. Journal, 2007
An inadequate or nonexistent disaster recovery plan can have dire results. Fire, power outage, and severe weather all can brin down the best of networks in an instant. This article draws on the experiences of the Charlotte County Public Schools (Port Charlotte, Florida), which were able to lessen the damage caused by Hurricane Charley when it hit…
Descriptors: Counties, Emergency Programs, School Districts, Planning
Lorenzo, George – Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks, 2008
This paper is basically the "story" of the Sloan Semester. It is written in a journalistic/case-study style. The Sloan Semester was a vibrant and vitally important undertaking that required the immediate attention of a group of dedicated educators. The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, though its sponsorship of the Sloan Consortium (Sloan-C),…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Case Studies, Electronic Learning, Online Courses
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Thirumurthy, Vidya; Uma, V.; Muthuram, R. N. – Childhood Education, 2008
The lives of many were changed forever when a tsunami struck on the morning of December 26, 2004, as a result of an earthquake off the coast of Indonesia registering 9.0 on the Richter scale. Aftershocks in the nearby Andaman and Nicobar Islands sent waves of fear among the survivors, further debilitating their spirits. The aim of this article is…
Descriptors: Nongovernmental Organizations, Foreign Countries, Natural Disasters, Cultural Awareness
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Toriello, Paul J.; Pedersen-Wasson, Else; Crisham, Erin M.; Ellis, Robert; Morse, Patricia; Morse, Edward V. – Journal of Addictions & Offender Counseling, 2007
Hurricane Katrina's impact on the operations of the largest residential, addiction treatment organization in New Orleans is described. Pre- and post-Katrina experiences are discussed and augmented with organizational performance data. Suggestions for future research are provided. (Contains 4 figures.)
Descriptors: Substance Abuse, Natural Disasters, Residential Programs, Rehabilitation
Stanistreet, Paul – Adults Learning, 2007
When floodwater swept through the McVities biscuit factory in Carlisle in January 2005 few were confident that it would reopen. The factory, in the Caldewgate area of the city, was one of the first casualties of the flood, as water, nine feet deep in places, coursed trough the food preparation areas, destroying equipment and covering everything in…
Descriptors: Food Service, Unions, Union Members, Natural Disasters
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Sachs, Carolyn E. – Rural Sociology, 2007
Rural sociologists figure prominently in the move towards public sociology. The paper takes up Michael Burawoy's call for public sociology and discusses what rural sociologists have to offer to publics and how we stand to gain as a discipline in working with publics. The paper argues that rural sociologists' ability to adopt a cosmopolitan view…
Descriptors: Feminism, Foreign Countries, Rural Sociology, Community Programs
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