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Showing 46 to 52 of 52 results Save | Export
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Leinster-Mackay, Donald – History of Education, 1990
Analyzes the party politics of religious education within the London School Board in the 1890s. Concentrates on the parliamentary struggle between two London School Board members: Edward Stanley (Progressive Party) and Joseph Diggle (Conservative Party) over the role of religion in education. Includes reactions of the Australian public to the…
Descriptors: Board of Education Policy, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
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Kuhlberg, Mark – History of Education, 2002
Focuses on the University of Toronto (Canada) forestry faculty; university president Robert Falconer's firing of W. N. Millar, an outspoken professor; and the politically sensitive university climate during early 20th century. Dissention over Millar's firing brought focus on limited academic freedom of speech and caused further restriction of…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Educational History, Educational Research, Foreign Countries
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Shackleton, J. R. – History of Education, 1990
Presents the lives and careers of Jane Marcet and Harriet Martineau and their contributions to the dissemination and popularization of political economics in early nineteenth-century education. Places their ideas about laissez-faire capitalism in historical context. Stresses the significance of their role as female writers and educators. (CH)
Descriptors: Authors, Biographies, Capitalism, Diffusion (Communication)
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Jones, Gareth Elwyn – History of Education, 1990
Reinterprets the way that the 1944 Education Act was viewed in Great Britain by detailing the political debate over restructuring schools in Swansea, Wales, after World War II. Examines social and political factors that determined Welsh educational policy and reveals the continuing struggle between providing equal educational opportunities and…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational History, Educational Philosophy, Educational Planning
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Evans, W. Gareth – History of Education, 1990
Describes the terms and benefits of the 1889 Welsh Intermediate and Technical Act. Regards the Act as a victory for the Welsh middle class and Nonconformists because it produced a secondary school system free from Church of England influence and recognized Welsh national identity. Notes that the Act emphasized equal education for girls. (CH)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Development, Educational Finance, Educational History
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Pugh, D. R. – History of Education, 1990
Focuses on the Passive Resistance campaign of the English Nonconformists in response to the 1902 Balfour Education Act's public funding of denominational (primarily Anglican) schools. Examines penalties the Nonconformists paid for tax resistance. Describes numbers of prosecutions, seizures of goods, imprisonment, and disfranchisement. Concludes…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Dissent, Educational History, Educational Legislation
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Reynolds, David – History of Education, 1990
Attributes the relatively high dropout rate among Welsh secondary school students to the educational processes within the comprehensive schools. Advocates extensive research into the nature of Welsh education and problems stemming from historical, socioeconomic, and political factors. Encourages policy formation that reflects Welsh rather than…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Comprehensive Programs, Dropout Rate, Educational Assessment
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