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Allen, Harry C.; Mullarney, Patrick B. – NASSP Bulletin, 1975
Critics of education tend to view the schools that we now have as the schools that we will always have. The authors in this article project "images of the future" based on the concept of reintegrating the community into all aspects of the educational process. (Editor)
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Community Development, Community Education, Community Involvement

Longstreth, Larry; Porter, Charles – NASSP Bulletin, 1975
What's in it for you is the framework in which these authors describe the community school concept. They are careful not to claim community schools as the panacea to education's current problems, but they do have confidence in the future of the concept. (Editor)
Descriptors: Community Education, Community Resources, Community Schools, Educational Development

Miller, Brian P. – NASSP Bulletin, 1983
Eight New Mexico Citizen Advisory Councils identified competencies within essential task areas for councils in community school settings. Task areas cited include fiscal management, programing, facilities use, identifying community resources, publicity, and organization and administration of the program. Productivity can be enhanced by identifying…
Descriptors: Citizens Councils, Community Education, Community Involvement, Community Resources

Piotrowski, Lou J. – NASSP Bulletin, 1975
The community school does not start at 3:30 p.m. This is the notion that the writer tries to get across as he illustrates how to expand the concept of community education into the traditional day school program. (Editor)
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Community Resources, Community Schools, Curriculum Design

Van Voorhees, Curtis; And Others – NASSP Bulletin, 1975
Despite discouragement about what a couple of studies reveal about some administrators' views of community education, these authors are optimistic that the concept can help schools cope with today's problems and that, perhaps, it holds the key to positive change. (Editor)
Descriptors: Community Education, Community Schools, Educational Research, Parent Participation

Wood, Joseph L. – NASSP Bulletin, 1977
Descriptors: Career Education, Community Resources, Community Schools, Experiential Learning

Decker, Larry E. – NASSP Bulletin, 1975
In addition to defining the concepts of community education and the community school, the author covers the basic tenets as well as many of the misconceptions regarding the subject. (Editor)
Descriptors: Citizen Participation, Community Development, Community Education, Community Schools

Udell, Donald S.; Nance, Everette E. – NASSP Bulletin, 1975
An examination of different kinds of administrative structures for community education programs is presented in this article. The authors believe the models they describe demonstrate cooperative arrangements and alternative plans that are possible. (Editor)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Community Education, Community Schools, Educational Administration

Kraus, Susan; Northwick, Kenneth – NASSP Bulletin, 1975
With a sense of alarm in writing, these authors urge principals to examine the community education concept as soon as possible. It's their choice today, they write, but tomorrow it may not be as taxpayers search for full utilization of public facilities. (Editor)
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Community Education, Community Schools, Evening Programs

Tirozzi, Gerald N. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
Most teenagers are hungry for more interactions with adults and for new, challenging experiences. The community-school approach supports young people's academic, social, and interpersonal goals by creating learning and caring connections in and out of class, before and after school, using a community's total resources. (MLH)
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Community Schools, Community Services, Educational Philosophy

Jordan, Catherine F. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
The startup of 465 federal 21st Century Community Learning Center Programs has propelled the idea of school/community collaboration onto national and local agendas. Collaborative action teams in the Southwest have identified three factors that encourage collaboration: the organizing group's commitment and diversity, administrative and campus…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Community Schools, Cooperative Programs, Elementary Secondary Education

NASSP Bulletin, 1999
In community schools, youth, families, and community residents work as equal partners with schools and other organizations to develop programs and services in five areas: quality education, youth development, family support, family and community engagement, and community development. Community schools foster strong partnerships and share…
Descriptors: Accountability, Community Involvement, Community Schools, Educational Improvement

Fleming, William; Youmans, Don – NASSP Bulletin, 1975
The title coordinator today is preferred to director, the authors explain, because the principal is truly the director of the educational program that the community school embraces. They urge that this person be a member of the principal's administrative team. (Editor)
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Administrator Role, Administrators, Community Schools

Agosto, Rosa – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
In 1987, the Children's Aid Society of New York City and the Central Board of Education agreed to develop four full-service community schools. Programs stress educational improvement, family involvement, and comprehensive services. The CAS technical assistance center has helped create 45 U.S. and overseas community schools. (MLH)
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Childhood Needs, Community Schools, Cooperative Programs

Bradshaw, Lynn K. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
In full-service and community schools, principals must possess a collaborative attitude and strong boundary-spanning skills. Principals must believe that collaboration can address children's complex needs, be able to obtain and distribute information strategically, view problems imaginatively, craft solutions, and develop and support others'…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Community Schools, Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education
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