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Feldhusen, John F.; Boggess, Jeremy – Gifted Education International, 2000
A study of nine secondary schools serving academically talented students found criteria for admissions included teacher recommendations, grades, standardized achievement tests, and IQ tests. Teachers were dynamic, there were more courses offered at schools for the academically talented, and schools offered a wide array of non-academic courses.…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Admission Criteria, Curriculum, Extracurricular Activities
Zemtsova, M. – 1972
Described with accompanying photographs is education for blind and partially sighted children between 7 and 20 years of age in special residential schools in the Soviet Union. Discussed is vocational education in 120 vocational polytechnic schools for the blind and partially sighted from 1st to 11th forms (grades), sanatorium schools from 1st to…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Exceptional Child Education, Foreign Countries, Professional Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Clark, Jeffrey K. – American Annals of the Deaf, 1995
Responses of 25 residential schools for the deaf to a survey examining the status of health education found that 22 schools indicated a comprehensive health instruction program was in place, and 60% of respondents had specified time requirements for health instruction. Most schools did not require health curriculum teachers to be certified in…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Deafness, Elementary Secondary Education, Health Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Lewis, Gail – Journal for the Education of the Gifted, 1993
This article describes the accelerated college level curriculum at the Louisiana School for Math, Science, and the Arts, a residential school for academically or artistically talented eleventh and twelfth graders. The curriculum combines a required core curriculum with specialized focus areas. Student perceptions of the curriculum are also…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Acceleration (Education), Advanced Courses, Curriculum
Green, James E. – 1993
This guide to residential state academies for academically gifted high school students discusses the history of this movement, student characteristics, curricula, faculty, outreach programs, and evaluation. The establishment of the nine existing state institutions is traced from the prototype, the North Carolina School for Science and Mathematics,…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Academically Gifted, Curriculum, Eligibility
Bell, Donald, Ed. – 1968
The development of an English elementary and secondary school for blind boys es examined from its inception in 1866 to 1912. The status of education for the blind, the role of the second headmaster Samuel Forster, curriculum, instructional materials, athletics, changes in facilities, and financial support are discussed. Changes made from 1912 to…
Descriptors: Administration, Admission Criteria, Athletics, Blindness
Sallop, Marvin B.; And Others – 1990
This report describes the expansion of services by the Texas School for the Deaf, as it develops the Educational Resource Center on Deafness to serve students and professionals throughout the state. The Center provides service functions in the following nine areas: statewide assessment center for the hearing impaired (including comprehensive…
Descriptors: Community Programs, Curriculum, Deaf Interpreting, Deafness
Harshman, Hardwick W., Ed. – 1969
Selected readings treat education of the emotionally disturbed. Aspects considered include the problems the emotionally disturbed pose for the school (10 articles) and approaches to their education, including theory, day classes in regular schools, special schools, and residential centers (three, eight, five, and six articles respectively).…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Community Programs, Curriculum, Educational Programs
Martens, Elise H. – Office of Education, United States Department of the Interior, 1940
There are four groups of handicapped children for whom residential schools are generally considered indispensable. These are the blind, the deaf, the mentally deficient, and the socially maladjusted or juvenile delinquents. While each of these groups presents conditions and problems quite distinct from those of the other three, they are all marked…
Descriptors: Social Adjustment, Physical Disabilities, Epilepsy, Educational Needs