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Creed, Charlotte; Morpeth, Roslyn Louise – Journal of Learning for Development, 2014
Emergency and conflict in countries such as Syria, the Philippines, Sri Lanka and Afghanistan have made us more aware of the long-term serial disruption and psychosocial damage faced by people caught up in emergency and conflict areas. Open, distance and flexible learning (ODFL) has sometimes been employed in these regions to maintain a degree of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, War, Conflict, Natural Disasters
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Ray, Brian – Journal of School Choice, 2015
This study explores the motivations of African American parents for choosing homeschooling for their children and the academic achievement of their Black homeschool students. Their reasons for homeschooling are similar to those of homeschool parents in general, although some use homeschooling to help their children understand Black culture and…
Descriptors: African American Students, Home Schooling, Case Studies, Academic Achievement
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Bhatt, Rachana – Journal of School Choice, 2014
From 1982-1997, 35 states adopted legislation, referred to as homeschool rights, that explicitly granted families the right to educate their children at home. Using data from the National Household Education Survey, this article examines the impact that this legislation has had on the decision to homeschool a child versus the alternatives of…
Descriptors: School Choice, Home Schooling, Educational Legislation, Parent Rights
Davis, Jennifer – Council of Chief State School Officers, 2013
The question of whether and how to offer students the option of attending a school other than the one assigned by their residence is a hotly debated issue with substantial implications for policymaking. Whether pursued as an effort to increase the availability of high-quality options in communities without equal access; to drive improvement…
Descriptors: School Choice, Context Effect, Program Effectiveness, Educational Policy
Kolderie, Ted – Education Evolving, 2013
Eric Premack grew up in Minneapolis; graduated from Washburn High School. After graduate school in public policy he went to California; worked initially with the Office of the Legislative Analyst where he was assigned to education finance; then worked as a consultant in the field. In 1991 he began making people in California aware of the…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Charter Schools, State Policy, Common Core State Standards
Watson, John; Murin, Amy; Vashaw, Lauren; Gemin, Butch; Rapp, Chris – Evergreen Education Group, 2013
"Keeping Pace with K-12 Online & Blended Learning" (2013), the 10th in a series of annual reports that began in 2004, examines the status of K-12 online education across the country. The report provides an overview of the latest policies, practices, and trends affecting online learning programs across all 50 states. In this 10th…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Electronic Learning, Blended Learning, Educational Policy
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Staroverova, T. I. – Russian Education and Society, 2011
From the eighteenth through the early twentieth centuries, home education (home schooling) by tutors and governesses in Russia was a customary form of schooling for an overwhelming majority of members of the nobility. Social and political transformations of the twentieth century led to substantial changes as the state got actively involved with…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, Foreign Countries, Educational Experience, Educational Development
Clark, Vanessa P. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
In the United States, parents have been homeschooling their children since the colonial ages. Back then, homeschooling was a way of life, and parents provided education at home because there was no such thing as compulsory education or mandatory attendance of any kind. Homeschooling continued as a practice until Horace Mann, in 1850, helped…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, Superintendents, Public Schools, Board of Education Policy
Lips, Dan; Feinberg, Evan – Heritage Foundation, 2008
A growing number of American families are choosing to homeschool their children. While research evidence is limited, evaluations of student outcomes suggest that homeschooling is successful for participating students: They do well in their learning environment, perform as well on national college assessment tests as traditional high school…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, Outcomes of Education, Educational Policy, State Regulation
Greene, Jay; Loveless, Tom; MacLeod, W. Bentley; Nechyba, Thomas; Peterson, Paul; Rosenthal, Meredith; Whitehurst, Grover – Brookings Institution, 2010
Choice is most frequently realized within the public sector using the mechanisms of residence, magnet schools, and open enrollment systems, whereas the voucher-like systems applauded by choice advocates and feared by opponents are extremely rare. Further, the charter sector is neither large enough nor sufficiently prepared to go to scale to…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, School Choice, Parent Participation, Program Effectiveness
Berends, Mark, Ed.; Springer, Matthew G., Ed.; Ballou, Dale, Ed.; Walberg, Herbert J., Ed. – Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2009
Since the early 1990s when the nation's first charter school was opened in Minneapolis, the scope and availability of school-based options to parents has steadily expanded. No longer can public education be characterized as a monopoly. Sponsored by the National Center on School Choice (NCSC), this handbook makes readily available the most rigorous…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Magnet Schools, Elementary Secondary Education, Home Schooling
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McIntyre-Bhatty, Karen – Educational Review, 2008
This paper suggests that rather than criminalising or pathologising truancy as a "deviant" behaviour in need of either treatment or punishment, truancy should be considered as a rational enactment of dissatisfaction with State educational provision. It should be of little surprise that attempts to "solve" the truancy…
Descriptors: Truancy, Home Schooling, Relevance (Education), Educational Environment
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Conroy, James C. – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay James Conroy raises the question of how far the state should engage in the rearing of children, looking in particular at homeschooling as a site for contestation. He considers this question by looking specifically at recent developments in the United Kingdom around the elision of child safeguarding issues with concern about the…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Home Schooling, Foreign Countries, Child Welfare
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Glanzer, Perry L. – Educational Theory, 2008
Rob Reich's claim that fruitful discussions about the balance among state, parental, and children's educational interests would benefit by contemplating the widespread phenomenon of homeschooling is a welcome suggestion. His policy recommendations, however, place an unjustified burden on parents to show the adequacy of homeschooling arrangements…
Descriptors: Democracy, Home Schooling, Educational Philosophy, Educational Policy
Lips, Dan – Heritage Foundation, 2008
School choice improves parents' satisfaction with their children's schools, and public schools that face competition have shown improved performance, yet opponents continue to oppose reforms that give parents the opportunity to choose their children's schools. State and federal policymakers should reform existing education policies to give all…
Descriptors: School Choice, Educational Policy, Educational Vouchers, Public Education
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