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Loss, Christopher P. – History of Education Quarterly, 2020
America's sprawling system of colleges and universities has been built on the ruins of war. After the American Revolution the cash-strapped central government sold land grants to raise revenue and build colleges and schools in newly conquered lands. During the Civil War, the federal government built on this earlier precedent when it passed the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, War, World History, United States History
West, Anne – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2020
This paper explores legislative provision and pre-school education policy in England over the course of the twentieth century. The paper argues that there has been a significant ideational shift over this period, from a policy focus on nursery education for poor children to universal early childhood education. Not only have ideas changed but…
Descriptors: Educational Legislation, Educational Policy, Preschools, Preschool Education
Clausen, Thomas – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2020
This study is a historical investigation of the state education grants and loans system in Denmark during the period 1950-2000. Since 1952, Danish students enrolled in higher education programmes have been subsidised under a unified public financial aid scheme, with varying degrees of general coverage. During the first decades of the state support…
Descriptors: Educational History, Grants, Student Financial Aid, College Students
Rosnes, Ellen Vea – History of Education, 2020
When the purified National Party (NP) came to power in South Africa in 1948, they introduced educational policies based on the ideology of apartheid. At that time 7,183 pupils attended primary education in 110 Lutheran Norwegian mission schools in Zululand and Natal. When the State took over these schools after the passing of the Bantu Education…
Descriptors: Institutional Mission, Educational History, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries
Smith, Annie K.; Black, Sheila; Hooper, Lisa M. – Urban Education, 2020
The resegregation of public schools in the United States continues to place African American students at an academic disadvantage with--oftentimes--limited educational resources and fewer qualified teachers. Providing African American students with skills and strategies to succeed has never been more urgent. Metacognition, often defined simply as…
Descriptors: Public Schools, African American Students, Equal Education, Metacognition
Mendonca, Ana Lucia – Educational Considerations, 2020
Brazilian education has specific cultural and regional traits that infuse the school settings and vast inequalities that go beyond cultural and socioeconomic levels. All that contributed to creating two different school settings: the private and the public. The purpose of this article is to understand from a historical perspective how policies and…
Descriptors: Cultural Traits, Social Differences, Equal Education, Private Schools
Gaviria, José-Luis – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2022
This paper is on the paradox of a right, the right to education that is almost universally declared as compulsory. The reason for the compulsion seems to be in its nature as a right. Within a Hohfeldian framework, any claim-right has a corresponding duty. Given that making education compulsory equates to establishing a duty, the possible…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Access to Education, Equal Education, Political Attitudes
Climate as Artefact between 1830 and 1930: A Transnational Construction of the Swiss School Building
Helfenberger, Marianne – History of Education, 2018
This paper explains how heating and ventilation systems as technical artefacts shaped the historical meaning of Swiss school buildings between 1830 and 1930 by analysing official and legal documents, sources regarding the World Exhibitions, and minutes at the Zurich cantonal and city archives. It exposes the theoretical assumptions of heating and…
Descriptors: School Buildings, School Construction, Foreign Countries, Heat
Magsumov, Timur A.; Artemova, Svetlana F.; Ustinova, Oksana V.; Vidishcheva, Evgeniya V. – European Journal of Contemporary Education, 2018
This article considers the public education system in the Caucasus region in the 1850s, i.e. at the time when unification and regulation of the educational process was taking place within educational institutions. Statutory documents describing the public education system in the Caucasus during the middle of the 19th century were used as study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Geographic Regions, Public Education, Educational Practices
Ferguson, Maria – Phi Delta Kappan, 2018
With the signing of the bipartisan Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act, Congress and the president managed to reauthorize the Carl T. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act (known as "Perkins"), after an earlier attempt in the Obama administration fizzled. Maria Ferguson describes the growing support…
Descriptors: Career Education, Technical Education, Educational Legislation, Federal Legislation
Whitman, David – Century Foundation, 2018
This report is in a series examining the troubled history of for-profit higher education, from the problems that plagued the post-World War II GI Bill to the reform efforts undertaken by the George H. W. Bush administration to the regulatory relapse under George W. Bush. From President Dwight Eisenhower to President George H. W. Bush, Republican…
Descriptors: Political Affiliation, Proprietary Schools, Colleges, Educational Legislation
Leenen-Young, Marcia; Naepi, Sereana – Journal of International Students, 2021
It has long been established that education is both a colonial and imperial tool that enables colonizing nations to establish themselves in foreign territories. This paper explores New Zealand's historical and contemporary role in the Pacific and how the country has leveraged higher education to both strengthen and continue its ongoing colonial…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, International Education, Educational History, Higher Education
Bañuelos, Nidia – History of Education, 2021
In 1978, the University of Phoenix was among the first for-profit universities to receive accreditation from a prestigious regional agency: the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. Its accreditation marked a turning point in broader acceptance for the for-profit model in higher education and gave the…
Descriptors: Universities, Educational History, Accreditation (Institutions), Higher Education
Mickelson, Ann M.; Stayton, Vicki D.; Correa, Vivian I. – Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education, 2023
Spurred by the 1986 IDEA reauthorization, the movement toward collaborative, or blended, preservice early childhood personnel preparation now spans an impressive 30-year history. In this paper, we trace the evolution of blended preparation by applying a conceptual framework that situates the development of blended program identity within a…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Teacher Education Programs, Preschool Teachers, Professional Identity
Schneider, Jack; Saultz, Andrew – Harvard Educational Review, 2020
In this essay, Jack Schneider and Andrew Saultz offer a new perspective on state and federal power through their analysis of authority and control. Due to limitations inherent to centralized governance, state and federal offices of education exercised little control over schools across much of the twentieth century, even as they acquired…
Descriptors: State Government, Federal Government, Power Structure, Government Role