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Soares, Louis; Eaton, Judith S.; Smith, Burck – EDUCAUSE Review, 2013
The Internet enables new models. In the commercial world, for example, we have eBay, Amazon.com, and Netflix. These new models operate with a different set of rules than do traditional models. New models are emerging in higher education as well--for example, competency-based programs. In addition, courses that are being provided from outside the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Models, Educational Policy, State Policy
Akinpelu, J. A. – Adult Education (London), 1980
In a critique of the government of Nigeria's policy statement on education, the author highlights funding and implementation, literacy programs, and integration of formal and nonformal education as the major concerns for adult education in that country. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Educational Policy, Financial Support, Foreign Countries

Armstrong, Gregory – Comparative Education Review, 1984
Long-term centralization of Thailand's Adult Education Division resulted in a preponderance of urban-oriented curriculum in a country that was 80 percent rural. Beginning in 1976, the World Bank-Thai government's Nonformal Education Development Project facilitated decentralization by sharply increasing rural staff, offering new career…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Comparative Education, Decentralization, Educational Change

Rivera, William M. – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 1995
The agricultural work force includes farmers and farm laborers, agricultural institution employees, and agriculture students. Their varied human resource development needs must be met within a context of global forces affecting agriculture and on various levels: policy (information needs), institutional (strengthening programs, improving access),…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Agricultural Education, Educational Needs, Educational Policy

Mbakile, E. P. R. – Indian Journal of Adult Education, 1979
The Tanzanian government has made a major commitment to its National Literacy Programme as a strategy for national development. Goals of the program are the eradication of illiteracy, self-reliance in solving economic and social problems, and lifelong education. To deal effectively with the problem of learner motivation, the program links literacy…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Developing Nations, Dropouts, Educational Policy

McDowell, David W. – International Review of Education, 1980
The Nigerian Government is attempting to create a national identity and eliminate inefficient indigenous educational practices. The author argues that quick implementation of this plan to regulate indigenous private education and craft apprenticeships could aggravate the employment situation and restrict the ability of localities to meet their own…
Descriptors: Centralization, Coordination, Developing Nations, Educational Change

Barber, Elinor G. – Comparative Education Review, 1981
The author argues against specialized education programs for rural children in developing nations, asserting that these children's education should not essentially differ from that considered suitable for urban children. For a contrasting opinion, see the article by David R. Evans (pp232-43). (See AA 533 194.) (SJL)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Dropouts, Educational Needs, Educational Policy

Evans, David R. – Comparative Education Review, 1981
Reacting to the preceding article (pp216-21) by Elinor G. Barber, the author argues against a single formal system of general education for both rural and urban areas of developing nations. (See AA 533 193.) (SJL)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Dropouts, Educational Needs, Educational Policy
Queeney, Donna S., Ed. – 1996
This paper sets out an agenda for higher education that will create a society in which lifetime learning is encouraged, valued, and rewarded. The paper presents five key issues that must be defined in order to achieve these goals: (1) the role of higher education; (2) the role of public policy; (3) how resources and intellectual property are to be…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Continuing Education, Education Work Relationship
Tanguiane, S. – 1979
The USSR's success in educational development suggests that its experience may be helpful to developing nations. The USSR has, since the 1917 revolution, eradicated illiteracy and constructed a universal education system. Among the factors that made this possible are the use of educational planning based on broad development policies; the…
Descriptors: Citizen Participation, Educational Development, Educational Planning, Educational Policy
Senesh, Lawrence – 1991
The efforts to reform the U.S. educational system should focus on the goal of creating a Learning Society. A Learning Society is based upon the commitment to a set of values and to a system of education that affords all members of the community the opportunity to stretch their minds to full capacity from early childhood through adulthood. This…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Community Education, Community Role, Curriculum Development
Muley, D. S. – Population Education in Asia and the Pacific Newsletter and Forum, 1991
Presents a projection of the plans and requirements for modification of the national population education program in India. Outlines various strategies for attainment of the main objective to institutionalize population education in all national educational processes. (MCO)
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Curriculum Development, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, Hamburg (Germany). Inst. for Education. – 1990
This report summarizes the deliberations and presents the proposals which were the products of a UNESCO-sponsored round table conference. Representatives from 15 countries and several regional and international organizations attended the conference. The objectives and expected outcomes of the conference are listed, and its organization and…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Adult Basic Education, Developing Nations, Educational Policy
Reymer, Christina – 1999
Melanesian education systems generally reflect the biases of their former Western colonial masters in that formal education is regarded as a means of preparing for employment in a formal market economy. This bias is evident in resource allocation, with formal education getting the lion's share of education spending. Focusing on the market economy…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Colonialism, Education Work Relationship, Educational Policy
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, Paris (France). International Inst. for Educational Planning. – 1984
The International Institute for Educational Planning (IIEP) selected three areas of inquiry as its focal concerns for the years 1984-1989. The first of these centered on the influences on each other of education and technological development, and on the implications of these mutual influences for educational planning on a national scale,…
Descriptors: Developed Nations, Developing Nations, Educational Needs, Educational Objectives
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