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Hilla Tal; Dorit Tubin – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2023
The education field favors innovations, but innovative schools tend to fade after an initial 'golden age.' According to the new institutional theory, this happens due to the innovative school's need to achieve institutional legitimacy, which encounters several difficulties. This study aims to explore the journey to attaining legitimacy in one…
Descriptors: Entrepreneurship, Institutional Survival, School Closing, Validity
Inaba, Yushi – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2020
Internationally and domestically, depopulation and the decrease of student enrollment caused are becoming an issue of interest in higher education, especially in regions such as east Europe, south Europe, and East Asia. This article analyzes strategies of Japanese universities to tackle depopulation issues in Japan. The 18-year-old bracket…
Descriptors: Universities, Population Trends, Declining Enrollment, Strategic Planning
Black-Branch, Jonathan L. – ACEHI Journal/Revue ACEDA, 1994
This article recounts the legal battles that ensued when the Saskatchewan (Canada) Minister of Education closed a special school for the deaf. The case, "Trofimenkoff versus Saskatchewan," is analyzed in terms of the plaintiffs' case against closure and decisions against the plaintiffs by the Minister, the Court of the Queen's Bench, and…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Deafness, Declining Enrollment, Foreign Countries

Graves, Margaret – Planning for Higher Education, 1995
After a period of rapid expansion, two-thirds of the branch campuses of United States universities in Japan have closed. A study suggests that the branch campuses were established largely to capitalize on short-term political, demographic, and financial factors, with little benefit. A deeper commitment to sustaining the overseas program and to…
Descriptors: College Administration, College Planning, Foreign Countries, Higher Education

Stockman, Tina R. – Scottish Educational Review, 1990
Investigates possibility of applying industrial organization theories to construct evaluative, analytical framework for educational institutions. Defines organizational identity in terms of culture, communication networks, and school image, using each to examine instability and conflict at Scotland's Summerhill school. Concludes cultural divisions…
Descriptors: Communication Problems, Culture Conflict, Educational Environment, Foreign Countries

Abbott, Ian – School Organisation, 1993
Provision and organization of local education authority in the United Kingdom is being eroded, because of various central government initiatives. This article examines the effects of opening a city technology college on various comprehensive (secondary) schools and their local education authorities. A new hierarchy of schools now exists.…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Federal Legislation, Foreign Countries, Free Enterprise System

Mintz, Jerry – Paths of Learning: Options for Families & Communities, 2000
Summerhill School has recently come under fire from England's educational bureaucracy, who are calling for its closure for noncompliance with the British national curriculum. The school has responded that it will not change its noncompulsory status nor any aspect of its educational philosophy that distinguishes it as a democratic, free school. (LP)
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Educational Philosophy, Educational Principles, Elementary Secondary Education
Mulcahy, Dennis M. – 1997
On September 10, 1996, the government of Newfoundland and Labrador (Canada) announced that public consultation on education reform would begin on September 16. Just prior to the first hearing, the government circulated a document entitled "Structuring the Education System: A Public Consultation Paper for Educational Change in Newfoundland and…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Community Attitudes, Community Schools, Educational Change
2003
In Ontario, nearly half of the elementary schools have fewer than 300 students, and one quarter of the high schools have fewer than 600 students. However, the province's funding formula was designed for larger schools. Small schools in Ontario are operating without adequate staff and resources and are at risk of being closed. Since 1999, 192…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Elementary Schools, Elementary Secondary Education, Enrollment
Hensher, Martin; Passingham, Steve – Compare, 1996
Summarizes the most important economic factors that have had an impact upon kindergartens in Kazakhstan in recent years. Provides city-specific data detailing the effects of the collapse of communism and the rise of market-oriented economic reform on kindergarten closures. Discusses policy responses to declining enrollments and school closures.…
Descriptors: Communism, Cultural Context, Economic Change, Economic Impact
Galton, Maurice; Hargreaves, Linda – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 1995
Because of increased demands for curriculum expertise and constricted funding, many small rural elementary schools in the United Kingdom have created consortia, allowing groups of schools to share resources and facilities and cooperatively plan for meeting educational standards. Describes cluster development and concludes that loss of school…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Consortia, Cooperative Planning, Curriculum Development