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Bakker, Nelleke; de Beer, Fedor – History of Education, 2009
In this article the authors address the question of why school medical inspection in the Netherlands developed not only considerably slower than the British service but did so also on a more modest scale in terms of the impact on children's lives. In the Netherlands school doctors were not allowed to treat children's illnesses and therefore never…
Descriptors: Medical Services, Religious Cultural Groups, Compulsory Education, Pediatrics
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Wada, Kaori; Park, Jeeseon – Death Studies, 2009
The field of grief counseling has yet to see an integration of Buddhist psychology. Drawing on Buddhist psychology literature and Western models of grief, this article explores possible integrations of two approaches. To lay the foundation for this discussion, the authors introduced a brief overview of the history of Buddhism as well as a Buddhist…
Descriptors: Grief, Buddhism, Psychology, Religious Cultural Groups
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Emery, Miranda Dawn – Journal of International Students, 2011
This paper seeks to understand different religions and cultures by comparing and contrasting the similarities, differences, and opinions found within two religious/cultural groups. This case study uses the Social Learning Theory of communication to illustrate how perceptions of others are formed in a community with a growing Muslim population. It…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Social Networks, Religion, Religious Cultural Groups
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Seggie, Fatma Nevra; Austin, Ann E. – Journal of College Student Development, 2010
This qualitative study examines the impact of the Turkish higher education headscarf ban policy on the plural self-identities (i.e., as Turkish citizens, as Muslims, and as females) of part-time unveilers, female students who cover their hair in their private life but who remove the headscarf (or conceal it to appear unveiled) while at a Turkish…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Muslims, Anxiety, Dress Codes
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Thanissaro, Phra Nicholas – International Journal of Children's Spirituality, 2010
In a quantitative survey of religious attitudes and practices in a multi-religious sample of 369 school pupils aged between 13 and 15 in London, the practice of bowing to parents was found widespread in 22% of adolescents spanning several religious affiliations and ethnicities--especially Buddhists, Hindus and those of Indian, African and…
Descriptors: Religion, Philosophy, Statistical Analysis, Surveys
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Schinkel, Anders; de Ruyter, Doret; Steutel, Jan – Theory and Research in Education, 2010
The development of autonomy in children is a central concern of liberal philosophers of education. We endorse the liberal intuition that autonomy matters and that it is an appropriate aim of education. However, we divert from autonomy liberals, who defend a rather limited and demanding conception of autonomy that is closely connected with skills…
Descriptors: Children, Personal Autonomy, Educational Philosophy, Religious Education
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Coldron, John; Cripps, Caroline; Shipton, Lucy – Journal of Education Policy, 2010
This paper seeks an explanation for the persistent social phenomenon of segregated schooling in England whereby children from families with broadly the same characteristics of wealth, education and social networks are more likely to be educated together and therefore separate from children from more socially distant groups. The paper outlines the…
Descriptors: Community Schools, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Social Networks
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Cozart, Sheryl Conrad – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2010
This article is an autoethnography of the author's journey toward the reconciliation of her spirituality with the academy. She depicts the origin of her crisis in the academy, and why the climax of the crisis was critical to her reconciliation. Drawing on Cynthia Dillard's notion of an endarkened feminist epistemology, she identifies the Black…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Career Development, Feminism
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Welsh, Paul J. – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2010
The paper opens with a discussion of some of the methodological difficulties inherent in comparative educational research, and outlines ways in which systemic inequalities in doing comparative work can be reduced. The social circumstances in Thanet and Lille are delineated, and the paper then considers structural differences in denominational…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Social Problems, Comparative Analysis, Educational Policy
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Frye, Steven B. – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2012
Looking back on the use of distance education tools by religious groups, one word that stands out is change. The old adage "We've never done it that way before" will become less valid as religious bodies find themselves in the midst of a world inundated with online possibilities that call them to question how they interact with members…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Web Based Instruction, Computer Mediated Communication, Distance Education
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Naeslund, Lars – British Journal of Religious Education, 2009
This article illuminates how religious education worked when students posed questions to believing guests in a Swedish upper secondary classroom, which was homogeneous concerning ethnic origin. The guests invited to school represented four religious traditions but they also represented themselves. Their messages, as well as the questions posed by…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Religious Education, Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students
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Hajj, Mandana; Panizza, Ugo – Economics of Education Review, 2009
This paper uses individual-level data and a differences-in-differences estimation strategy to test whether the education gender gap of Muslims is different from that of Christians. In particular, the paper uses data for young Lebanese and shows that, other things equal, girls (both Muslim and Christian) tend to receive more education than boys and…
Descriptors: Muslims, Gender Discrimination, Gender Differences, Christianity
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Tan, Charlene – British Journal of Religious Education, 2008
This article discusses how the concept of "good citizens" in Singapore is linked to the principle of harmony, characterised by collectivism and a strong interventionist government. The value of religious harmony is actively promoted by the Singapore government and supported by the religious leaders. This article argues that the principle…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Religion, Foreign Countries, Social Systems
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Ritchey, Jeffrey A. – Convergence, 2008
Intentional communities--groups of unrelated individuals who choose to live together, sharing such things in common as wealth, property, labour, food and a sense of identity and fellowship (Kamau 2002)--continue to serve as powerful points of resistance to the larger culture of consumption that permeates our modern world. Grounded in recent…
Descriptors: Collective Settlements, Religious Cultural Groups, Christianity, Resistance (Psychology)
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Ferketich, Amy K.; Katz, Mira L.; Kauffman, Ross M.; Paskett, Electra D.; Lemeshow, Stanley; Westman, Judith A.; Clinton, Steven K.; Bloomfield, Clara D.; Wewers, Mary Ellen – Journal of Rural Health, 2008
Purpose: The objective of this study was to estimate tobacco use prevalence among the Amish in Holmes County, Ohio, using both self-report and a biochemical marker of nicotine exposure. Methods: Amish adults (n = 134) were interviewed as part of a lifestyle study. Self-reported tobacco use was measured using standardized questions, and cotinine…
Descriptors: Religious Cultural Groups, Smoking, Incidence, Counties
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