NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 9 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Rónay, Zoltán; Niemczyk, Ewelina K. – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2022
Having reviewed several pieces of strategy documents, policy papers, and literature, we concluded that there is no uniform definition of either institutional autonomy or academic freedom (AF). Many different points of view determine the interpretation of these terms. Furthermore, the policymakers (e.g., governments, legislators) can ignore the…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Institutional Autonomy, Comparative Education, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Humes, Walter – Citizenship, Social and Economics Education, 2023
This paper shows how a significant, but short-lived, episode in Scotland's educational history--the rise and decline of Socialist Sunday Schools (SSSs) in the first half of the twentieth century--provoked controversial debates about issues that continue to have relevance today. The first half of the paper explains the origins of SSSs, their links…
Descriptors: Educational History, Political Attitudes, Meetings, Publications
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Mathews, David – Journal of College and University Law, 1981
A former Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare discusses the way society has come to view higher education during the 1970s, as reflected in public policy and legislation affecting it. (MSE)
Descriptors: Educational Legislation, Federal Government, Government Role, Higher Education
Fthenakis, Wassilios E. – 1998
Toward the end of the nineteenth century, legal and sociopolitical sectors began to view children as a social group of their own, and European countries passed laws for the protection of children and introduced compulsory school attendance. This paper asserts that measures like these led to a far-reaching new definition of childhood on a…
Descriptors: Child Advocacy, Children, Childrens Rights, Educational Legislation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kantor, Harvey – American Journal of Education, 1991
Tracing the history of federal education policy in the 1960s and the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA) reveals shared assumptions about poverty and the government's role. These assumptions made educational reform essential to the Great Society, even though the federal commitment did not become local priority. (SLD)
Descriptors: Civil Rights Legislation, Compensatory Education, Economically Disadvantaged, Educational History
Commission on Civil Rights, Washington, DC.
The review documents civil rights developments during 1976, concentrating on positive developments such as school desegregation, increased political participation by minorities and women, and on negative developments such as economic recession and inadequate civil rights enforcement. Section I provides information on the Supreme Court's 1976…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Educational Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education
McCune, Shirley D. – 1977
The five major societal changes in the past twenty-five years which have had a major impact on education services are (1) our transition from a rural, agrarian society to an urban, technological society; (2) changes in occupational and employment structures; (3) education services have become a major enterprise; (4) expansion of Federal and State…
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Cooperative Planning, Coordination, Educational Change
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, Berlin (Germany). – 1998
This document contains a synthesis paper and four case studies of cooperation with the world of work in vocational and technical education (VTE) in Hungary, Romania, Russia, and Sweden. "Synthesis" (R. Barry Hobart) considers the common social and economic variables affecting VTE in the four study countries. The three case studies…
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), Case Studies, Comparative Analysis, Cooperative Planning
Pemberton, S. Macpherson – 1979
From 1917 to 1962, the West Indian islands of Trinidad and Tobago reflected and influenced changes in their social, economic, and political systems. Prior to World War I, education in the islands reflected two diverse cultural traditions. One system offered a classical education which promoted economic and political supremacy of the white upper…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Agricultural Education, Blacks, Colonialism