Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 13 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 48 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 144 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 538 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Practitioners | 558 |
Teachers | 524 |
Researchers | 129 |
Students | 82 |
Administrators | 22 |
Policymakers | 13 |
Community | 8 |
Parents | 5 |
Media Staff | 4 |
Counselors | 2 |
Support Staff | 1 |
More ▼ |
Location
Canada | 103 |
United States | 70 |
Australia | 54 |
United Kingdom (England) | 49 |
United Kingdom | 37 |
California | 36 |
Germany | 29 |
China | 27 |
Indiana | 26 |
Japan | 25 |
New York | 25 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
General Social Survey | 1 |
SAT (College Admission Test) | 1 |
Woodcock Johnson Tests of… | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Taller Puertorriqueno, Inc., Philadelphia, PA. – 1979
During the months from February 1977 to December 1978, Taller Puertorriqueno, Inc., conducted an oral history project to produce a cross-generational comparison of Puerto Ricans in Philadelphia (Pennsylvania). The project was designed to train young people to be perceptive human beings who were sensitive to their environment and especially aware…
Descriptors: Community Programs, Employment Patterns, Family History, Housing
Shimoni, Rena – 1990
This paper advances a framework for conceptualizing the professional status of day care personnel and describes training options for such personnel. The conceptual framework consists of a historical review of day care providers and discussions of the desirability of the service provided by day care centers and the knowledge base required of day…
Descriptors: Certification, Child Caregivers, Competency Based Education, Day Care
Nostrand, Richard L. – 1983
Two strikingly contrasting culture groups, Latin Americans and Anglo Americans, overlap in a Borderlands that straddles the international boundary between the United States and Mexico. This overlap began with the Aztec conquest by Cortes which triggered the intermixing and miscegenation between Spaniards and Indians that produced a mestizo people…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Cultural Context, Cultural Exchange, Cultural Interrelationships
Petersen, Keith – 1986
Celebrations of shared personal, religious, occupational, and historic events are worldwide and ancient phenomena. In the United States, most people participate, as either major or minor actors or members of the audience, in private events marking the human cycle and life experiences, from birth and birthdays to weddings and anniversaries to death…
Descriptors: Cultural Activities, Cultural Context, Cultural Opportunities, Family History
Hurley, Roberta Smith – 1985
Nutrition is well-recognized as a necessary component of educational programs for physicians. This is to be valued in that of all factors affecting health in the United States, none is more important than nutrition. This can be argued from various perspectives, including health promotion, disease prevention, and therapeutic management. In all…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, Dietetics, Disease Control, Health Education
Layton, Edwin T., Jr. – 1986
In examining the history of American engineering, this book emphasizes professionalism, social responsibility, and ethics. It explains how some engineers have attempted to express a concern for the social effects of technology and to forge codes of ethics which could articulate the profession's fundamental obligation to the public. The document's…
Descriptors: Business, Civil Engineering, Engineering, Engineering Education
Stoeltje, Beverly J. – 1983
This paper contends that women are as vital as men to the functioning of western ranches where cattle raising--or cattle culture--is central to the social system. The self-sufficient nuclear family is also emphasized, and a ranch couple is described as a business as well as a domestic partnership. Ranch women have four roles: rearing children,…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Family Life, Family Structure, Farm Management
Cole, Phyllis – 1986
Based on the diary of Mary Moody Emerson (1771-1863), which was discovered in the Houghton Library at Harvard University among the Emerson family papers, as well as on hundreds of her letters and other records, the lives of five generations of women within the Emerson ministerial dynasty are recovered, and their religious and family experiences…
Descriptors: Church Role, Cultural Influences, Diaries, Family Characteristics
Bromberg, Lloyd; And Others – 1988
This calendar of lessons conforms to the New York State syllabus for grades 7-8, United States and New York History, which was officially implemented throughout the state in September 1987. It is a guide to the objectives of the state social studies program, not a prescription for day-to-day lesson plans. United States and New York State History…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Course Content, Curriculum Development, Grade 7
Graham, Roberta – 1985
This reference guide catalogs over 700 citations of written material, films, recordings, and photographs about Alaska women from 1896 to 1985. Each entry contains author, title, periodical citation or source, and a brief description. Major subject areas include adventure, agriculture, anthropology, art and music, aviation, churches and missions,…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, Biographies, Family Life, Females
Morgen, Sandra, Ed.; White, Judith, Ed. – 1983
Proceedings of a conference to explore the impact of women's studies scholarship on the humanities are divided into eight sections. Section I, an introduction, describes the rationale of the conference and gives an overview of conference attendance. Section II introduces the keynote speakers. Section III contains the texts of the three keynote…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Black Studies, Blacks, Educational History
Whitten, Norman E., Jr. – 1976
Just east of the Andes live two of the largest concentrations of tropical forest Indians in central Ecuador. Both speak Quichua which is a language long associated with Incaic expansion in the highlands and well known as a lower-class, rural, "Indian" means of communication in contemporary highland Ecuador. These Jungle Quichua live near…
Descriptors: American Indians, Colonialism, Cultural Background, Culture Conflict
Nord, David Paul – 1982
The rejection of the "Great Forces" and "Great Man" theories of newspaper history allows a middle-range view that seeks to discover the uniqueness of the newspaper business and to explain how that uniqueness shaped the business values of the editors and proprietors. An examination of three Chicago, Illinois, newspapers--the…
Descriptors: Arbitration, Business Responsibility, Content Analysis, Editorials
Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul. – 1973
Through the centuries, the Ojibwe moved westward to Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, North Dakota, and Manitoba, Canada. Every Ojibwe person inherited membership in a clan or totem from the father. Parents taught their children, talked with them, told them stories, corrected them, and taught them by setting good examples. Boys learned everything…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Cultural Background, Cultural Traits, Elementary Secondary Education
MacLean, Hope – 1976
An introduction to Canada Natives briefly identifies the seven different culture areas which existed in Canada before the white man came, and the Indian tribes who lived in those areas. The booklet then gives more extensive description of the history and culture of the Huron (farmers of the Eastern Woodlands), the Blackfoot (Plains), the Ojibwa…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Studies, American Indians, Canada Natives