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Showing 316 to 330 of 340 results Save | Export
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Sheline, Yvonne E.; And Others – Comparative Education, 1984
Suggests that school sponsorship in Zaire by Protestant, Catholic, or government agencies serves as an indicator of future social power. Contends that perception of social power motivates students and influences their examination performance. Explains the charter system, compares the sponsors, reviews Zaire's education since 1908, cites…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Catholic Schools, Comparative Analysis, Comparative Education
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Sharpe, Keith – Comparative Education, 1997
Draws on Weber to argue that clear and persistent differences between French and English primary education arise from deeply embedded cultural traditions through which fundamental value orientations are mediated and that these contrasting value orientations represent secularized educational versions of French Catholicism and English Protestantism.…
Descriptors: Catholics, Comparative Education, Cultural Context, Cultural Influences
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Dunn, Seamus; Morgan, Valerie – Oxford Review of Education, 1999
States that the outbreak of violence in Northern Ireland in 1969 led to the examination of the role of segregated education in perpetuating divisions between Catholics and Protestants. Focuses on two approaches to bring children from Catholic and Protestant backgrounds together: (1) establishing programs within the denominationally segregated…
Descriptors: Catholics, Community Relations, Educational Change, Educational History
Duffy, Terence – 1992
This paper explores the issue of peace education in Northern Ireland in its broadest sense. It looks not merely at peace education per se but also at the sectarian context of schooling and at a variety of anti-sectarian initiatives. In recent years there have been several peace education ventures in Northern Ireland reflecting the statutory…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Catholics, Educational History, Educational Policy
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Reddie, Anthony G. – Religious Education, 2003
This article details the work of the Birmingham Initiative, a Methodist inspired, ecumenical research project that operated in Birmingham, in the West Midlands of the United Kingdom between 1995 and 1999. As the Christian Education Development Officer employed by this project, the author undertook doctoral research among twenty-six inner-city,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Church Programs, Curriculum Development, Religious Education
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Darby, John – Integrated Education, 1980
Describes the school desegregation process in Cambridge, Massachussetts, in 1979-80 in terms of sociopolitical context, public attitudes, and strategy adopted. Compares desegregation conditions in Boston and Cambridge. Contrasts racial desegregation of schools in the United States with religious desegregation of Protestant and Catholic schools in…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Catholics, Community Involvement, Comparative Analysis
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Karsten, Sjoerd – History of Education, 2003
Asserts the Dutch educational systems' key feature is the principle that parents should be given the opportunity to organize and choose the kind of education they desire. Focuses on the role of the Dutch Social Democrats, the Groningen motion, and the outcome and intellectual foundation of publicly run Dutch schools. (KDR)
Descriptors: Catholics, Educational Change, Educational History, Educational Research
Peters, Frank – Education Canada, 1986
Changes to legislation dealing with elections for school boards in Alberta have created a situation where it is conceivable that the membership on separate school boards that were established by Catholic or Protestant minorities could be made up partly or totally of electors who are neither Catholic nor Protestant. (JHZ)
Descriptors: Board of Education Policy, Boards of Education, Catholics, Educational Legislation
McGlynn, Claire – 2000
Since the early 1980s, efforts have increased to educate Catholic and Protestant students together in Northern Ireland. This case study examined the impact of mixed Protestant and Catholic education on former students' respect for diversity, friendship patterns, and their own religious, political, and cultural identity. A case study approach was…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Catholics, Cultural Pluralism, Diversity (Student)
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Greer, J. E. – Journal of Social Psychology, 1990
Investigates the religious beliefs, practices, and moral judgment of sixth-form students attending Protestant schools in Northern Ireland through three studies carried out-in 1968, 1978, and 1988. Finds girls significantly more religious than boys. Identifies a significant trend toward more orthodox beliefs, and simultaneous rejection of some…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Beliefs, Foreign Countries, Grade 6
Dronkers, Jaap; Hemsing, Werner – International Journal of Educational Policy, Research, and Practice: Reconceptualizing Childhood Studies, 2005
Public, religious and private schools have been coexisting in continental Europe since the 19th century. Scientific interest in differences between the educational outcomes of public and religious schools has grown recently, as a result of international debates on parental choice and school autonomy especially in the USA. Clear differences have…
Descriptors: Differences, Educational Attainment, Employment Level, Religion
Byrne, Sean – 1997
This book describes the results of a study of the political development of 35 Protestant and Catholic children between 11 and 16 years old, attending integrated and non-integrated secondary schools in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The research maps Belfast schoolchildren's images of political violence, political authority figures, and their views…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Catholics, Children, Culture Conflict
Darby, J.; And Others – CORE: Collected Original Resources in Education, 1978
A survey of the management, religious practices, teaching methods, and extracurricular activities in 250 Protestant and Catholic schools in Northern Ireland revealed more similarities than differences. (CP)
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Comparative Analysis, Differences, Elementary Secondary Education
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Cook, Lorainne A. – History of Education, 1997
Attempts a comprehensive investigation into the impact of nonconformity on the development of elementary education in Swansea, Wales, between 1851 and 1900. Nonconformity was a dissenting strand of English Protestant theology popular among the working class. Recounts the early efforts of the nonconformists in establishing Sunday schools. (MJP)
Descriptors: Educational History, Elementary Education, Ethnicity, Foreign Countries
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Farren, Sean – History of Education, 1994
Examines tensions and divisions that formed the educational legacy of the two states in Ireland that emerged from the political settlements of 1920-21. Concludes that, on the eve of partition in 1921, deep divisions in education were reminders that education would continue to expose ideological differences between Ireland and Britain. (CFR)
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Catholic Schools, Catholics, Educational History
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