Academic literature on the topic 'School: School of Education'

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Journal articles on the topic "School: School of Education"

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Ready, Douglas D., Valerie E. Lee, and Kevin G. Welner. "Educational Equity and School Structure: School Size, Overcrowding, and Schools-Within-Schools." Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education 106, no. 10 (October 2004): 1989–2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/016146810410601005.

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Consistent with the Williams v. California suit, our focus in this article is on educational equity, particularly the interface between equity and school organization. We concentrate on two structural issues, school size and school overcrowding, and one specific school structure, schools-within-schools. We organize the article as an interpretive summary of existing studies of these topics, concentrating on how these structural issues relate to social stratification in student outcomes, particularly academic achievement. Our evidence is drawn from both national studies and, when available and appropriate, from research that discusses the effects of school structure in California. We use this evidence to define which size high schools are best for all students (600–900 students), which responses to school overcrowding are appropriate (building more schools rather than adding portable classrooms or multitrack year-round schooling), and how creating smaller learning communities in high schools can work well for everyone by reducing the potential for internal stratification. California policies, however, have not promoted these responses. In many cases they have actually exacerbated inequality in educational outcomes and assisted the transformation of the social differences students bring to school into academic differences. We advocate reforms that are associated with high achievement and achievement that is equitably distributed by race, ethnicity, class, or family origin. Reforms that raise achievement of children at the lower end of the distribution without damaging those at the top are ones toward which we believe our nation should strive. By offering empirical evidence of practices that lead toward this important goal, we hope to inform the important debates surrounding the Williams case.
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Shomirzayev, M. Kh. "Developing Educational Technologies In School Technology Education." American Journal of Engineering And Techonology 02, no. 07 (July 30, 2020): 51–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.37547/tajet/volume02issue07-08.

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Kilic, Cigdem. "Parents’ opinions of the pre-school education concerning pre-school education institutions." International Journal of Academic Research 5, no. 6 (December 10, 2013): 37–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.7813/2075-4124.2013/5-6/b.7.

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OZGENEL, Mustafa, Filiz CALISKAN YILMAZ,, and Feyza BAYDAR. "School Climate as a Predictor of Secondary School Students’ School Attachment." Eurasian Journal of Educational Research 18, no. 78 (November 29, 2018): 1–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.14689/ejer.2018.78.5.

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Braden, Jennifer S., Eleanor DiMarino-Linnen, and Thomas L. Good. "Schools, Society, and School Psychologists." Journal of School Psychology 39, no. 2 (March 2001): 203–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0022-4405(01)00056-5.

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Alexander, Monique, and Vanessa A. Massaro. "School deserts: Visualizing the death of the neighborhood school." Policy Futures in Education 18, no. 6 (September 2020): 787–805. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1478210320951063.

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The purported purpose of school choice policies is to increase students’ access to “good schools.” There is little discussion, however, of where those good schools are located, nor of the ways in which the distribution of good schools mirrors broader patterns of uneven development in the United States. Given that schools are neighborhood assets and that the distance which students travel to get to school affects their success, the locations of schools matter tremendously and are inextricable from questions of social and spatial justice. We introduce and argue for the explicit use of the term “school desert” as a way for scholars to understand and describe the spatial injustice of school closures and for activists to argue the importance of effective local schools. Spatial visualization and rendering of social problems is an invaluable strategy for effecting policy change. As cities move increasingly to a “de-spatialized” geography of schooling where catchment zones are less determinate of where a student attends school, it is important to consider where the desirable schools are and where they are not. A more nuanced visualization of school locations than neighborhood demographics offers a new lens through which to examine the (un)intended effects of school closures on students, communities, and development. Using Pennsylvania as a case study, we use a geographic information system (GIS) to evaluate the broader reverberations of school choice policies and determine who, demographically, has access to high-quality schools. In light of this research, we also propose an innovative analytic and methodology that describes the educational inequity which is caused by spatial relationships between students’ homes and high-quality schooling. Through the concept of a school desert we explore the (un)intended spatial implications of school closures. School deserts occur as a result of school choice policies that justify school closures. Closures and the location of good schools are geographically uneven, tempered by the federal and local policies that ensure income and racial segregation in US housing. Our analysis of Pennsylvania reveals the uneven distribution of access to good schools in the same way that mapping food deserts displays how market forces have failed to evenly distribute quality food. We find that areas with high-quality schools are significantly wealthier and whiter than school deserts, a conclusion which mirrors those concerning other low-quality neighborhood assets. School deserts as a methodology demonstrate that if students do not have geographic access to good schools, then school choice policies do not, in fact, offer choice.
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Muijs, Daniel. "New Directions for School Effectiveness Research: Towards School Effectiveness Without Schools." Journal of Educational Change 7, no. 3 (August 25, 2006): 141–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10833-006-0002-7.

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Shomirzayev, M. Kh. "Technology Of Educational Process In School Technology Education." American Journal of Social Science and Education Innovations 02, no. 07 (July 30, 2020): 212–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.37547/tajssei/volume02issue07-28.

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Conger, Dylan. "Within-School Segregation in an Urban School District." Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis 27, no. 3 (September 2005): 225–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/01623737027003225.

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This article examines ethnic segregation, defined as segregation among racial groups as well as between native-born and immigrant students, across elementary school classrooms in New York City. Specifically, the study compares patterns in within-school segregation across ethnic groups, grades, boroughs, and years. Current levels of within-school segregation are also compared to levels of across-school segregation and to levels of segregation that result from three simulations where students are assigned to their classrooms: (a) randomly, (b) to achieve complete ethnic segregation, and (c) according to their prior year test scores. Results indicate that racial segregation across schools is far greater than racial segregation within schools, however the segregation of immigrants within-schools is equal to the segregation of immigrants across schools. Within-school segregation cannot be entirely attributed to random processes or to the use of ability grouping practices, particularly in the case of black and Hispanic segregation. Finally, segregation within-schools varies considerably across the five boroughs and declined during the second half of the 1990s.
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Haynes, Norris M. "Creating Safe and Caring School Communities: Comer School Development Program Schools." Journal of Negro Education 65, no. 3 (1996): 308. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2967347.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "School: School of Education"

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Erickson, Brittany. "Democratic School Design: Reimagining School Turnaround in Denver Public Schools." Thesis, Harvard University, 2016. http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:27013332.

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After a decade of focused attention and millions of dollars, school turnaround remains one of the education sector's most pressing challenges. Research shows that tackling it requires the implementation of tried and true levers—high-quality instruction, effective school leadership, and family engagement—at the highest possible levels, and that it requires a sophisticated interrogation of broader structural challenges such as segregation, poverty, and racism. This capstone explores a novel approach to school turnaround in Denver Public Schools (DPS), the Year Zero Redesign cohort. This approach strives to equip principals with the mindsets, skills, and autonomy to build partnerships with families, redesign their schools, and effectively lead dramatic change efforts. Through this inquiry, I explore the unique role of principals in system-level transformation; the way trust affects schools and communities; and the quest to redesign schools in alignment with the needs and preferences of students and families. I also examine how DPS, a large and ambitious school district, might learn to support this work in a rapidly evolving policy environment. I argue that taking time for intentional school design and leadership development—not instructional leadership development alone, but community and creative leadership development as well—holds great potential for more consistent results in school turnaround and school redesign. I also suggest that this and other creative approaches to turnaround will become possible only when system-level incentives and accountability measures allow for it. This capstone offers lessons for DPS as it seeks to create an ecosystem of excellent and diverse school models, and for practitioners and policymakers across the sector seeking to realize transformative change through community mobilization and school design.
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Stoll, Louise. "Making schools matter : linking school effectiveness and school improvement in a Canadian school district." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1992. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/10006575/.

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King, Chyrise S. "School Leader Emotional Intelligence and the Impact on School Climate in K-12 Catholic Schools." Thesis, Indiana Wesleyan University, 2018. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10745330.

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This study examined the relationship between school leaders’ self-reported levels of emotional intelligence and teacher perceptions of school climate in K–12 Catholic schools in Indiana. This study built upon the findings of a mixed-method study by Juma (2013) that was limited in scope and generalizability, and examined the relationship between a principal’s perceived emotional intelligence and teacher perceptions of school climate. The current study used a quantitative methodological approach and a larger sample size to enhance understanding of the relationship between school leaders’ perceptions of emotional intelligence and teacher perceptions of school climate. The Emotional Intelligence Quotient 2.0 (EQ-i 2.0) and the Organizational Climate Questionnaire (OCQ) were completed by 200 teachers and 30 school leaders in 30 K–12 Catholic schools in Indiana. This study did not find a significant relationship between a school leader’s perceived level of emotional intelligence and teacher’s perceived school climate. Prior research on these variables has been inconclusive. This study adds to the body of research examining the possible connection between a school leader’s emotional intelligence and school climate.

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Bass, Ruth N. "The impact of school culture on school safety: An analysis of elementary schools in a Southwestern metropolitan school district." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/290104.

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Purpose of the study. The purpose of this study was to identify the relationship that exists between school culture and school safety. The principle school culture subscales measure (1) Collaborative Leadership, (2) Teacher Collaboration, (3) Professional Development, (4) Collegial Support, (5) Unity of Purpose, and (6) Learning Partnerships. The safety subscales utilized were (1) Valuing Influence of Teachers and Staff, (2) Feelings of Fear and Lack of Safety, (3) Stressors and Daily Discomforts, and (4) Positive Attitude Toward School Environment and Community. This relationship was surveyed using the School Culture Survey (Gruenert & Valentine, 1997) and the Inviting School Safety Survey (Lehr & Purkey, 1997) among seven metropolitan elementary schools in one Southwestern section of the United States. Procedures. The study included seven elementary schools. Teachers in each school were surveyed on numerous aspects of culture and safety. Teacher data were collected through surveys. Two hypotheses were tested using Pearson-Product Moment Correlation to determine if any of the six subscales of culture from the School Culture Survey correlate with the four safety subscales of the Inviting School Safety Survey. Ordinary Least Squared Regression was used to identify school culture factors that predict school safety factors. The six subscales of culture from the School Culture Survey were used as predictor variable for each of the four Inviting School Safety Scales. Findings. A high level of correlation was found between teachers' perceptions of school culture subscales with School Safety subscales when controlling for the variables of SES, percent of special education students, mobility rate, and number of students. A statistically significant predictive relationship was found for the School Culture subscales with each of the School Safety subscales. Low correlation and low predictive relationships was found for the six School Culture subscales with the School Safety subscale of Feelings of Fear and Lack of Safety. If schools are to be safe for all students, school leaders must change the culture of their schools.
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Lilly-Warner, Regina Madeline. "Opinions of parents, students, and other educational stakeholders in one urban setting toward middle level education /." Access Digital Full Text version, 1996. http://pocketknowledge.tc.columbia.edu/home.php/bybib/12027492.

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Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University, 1996.
Includes tables. Typescript; issued also on microfilm. Sponsor: Frank L. Smith Jr. Dissertation committee: Jeannette E. Fleischner. Sponsor: Frank L. Smith, Jr. Dissertation Committee: Jeannette E. Fleischner, . Includes bibliographical references (leaves 160-167).
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Meyer, Kathleen A. "Catholic School Leadership and the Role of Consultative School Boards in Catholic Elementary Schools." Digital Commons at Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School, 2009. https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/etd/558.

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Catholic schools are important institutions in the United States educational system. They demand discipline, high academic standards, and religious moral values rooted in Catholic beliefs which are designed to have an impact throughout life (Ciriello, 1998). A critical component in determining school quality lies with the principals' leadership (Sergiovanni, 1997). Principals are critical to successful K-12 schools and must exercise considerable responsibility for establishing collegial learning cultures among the instructional team and stakeholders, including parents, community members, and students. The principal can no longer accomplish such a momentous task alone. Success of today's Catholic relies on the competent and committed performance of many people acting together with common goals. Catholic schools do not mirror those of twenty years ago (Cummings, 2003). Within the past five years, principals in Catholic schools have increasing job responsibilities and expectations. With the implementation of the Los Angeles Archdiocesan Strategic Plan in 2003, Catholic school principals in the Archdiocese must fulfill their primary function as instructional leader, and the additional roles outlined by the plan. Declining enrollment, lack of funds, and a perceived lack of quality, has forced principals to market their school to increase enrollment and solicit substantial funds for the school to remain viable. New roles create a problem for principals lacking training or knowledge in specialized areas. Based on a review of available literature, including (a) distributive leadership, (b) collaborative leadership, (c) shared leadership, and (d) school boards, this study investigated principal perceptions of collaboration and implementation of consultative school boards. This study employed a mixed method research design including a survey, interviews, and a document review of the Los Angeles Archdiocesan Strategic Plan to answer research questions. This study found a leader who needs collaborative leadership skills to lead a quality school involving all stakeholders to assist the school in remaining viable. Principals confirmed a need for greater participation by all stakeholders and assistance in forming consultative school boards. Information gathered contributes to the limited literature on Catholic school leadership, specifically a principals' role in implementing collaborative leadership in Catholic elementary schools through consultative school boards.
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Bertrand, Julie A. "New Brunswick approach to Comprehensive School Health: Healthy learners in schools and the community school." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/28173.

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In this thesis, a multiple case study methodology and semi-structured interviews are used to identify and describe the barriers and facilitators to the implementation of a Comprehensive School Health (CSH) initiative, Healthy Learners in Schools (HLS), in two elementary schools within the same Francophone school district in New Brunswick, Canada. The first article in this thesis identifies five categories of factors that influence the implementation of HLS in the two schools. The second article provides evidence that another initiative, the Community School, is an effective way of implementing the CSH approach in schools. Overall, there was found to be large differences pertaining to school health promotion in the two schools involved in this study; many refinements of the implementation process are necessary if the provincial government's goals are to be met.
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Estes, Ronald James. "California school administrators and school board presidents' perceptions of grade level organization in school districts." Scholarly Commons, 1996. https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/2772.

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The purpose of this study was to determine which factors associated with particular school configurations are considered when "reconfiguring" suburban and rural school districts. Superintendents, site administrators, and school board presidents from suburban and rural California school districts of no less than 800 and no more than 6,000 ADA served as the population for this study. A survey questionnaire was developed and sent to superintendents, site administrators and school board presidents in school districts that had considered reconfiguration in the last ten years. Within the questionnaire, perceptions towards factors related to grade configuration were explored. Open-ended questions and in-depth interviews were also conducted by the researcher. The typical survey respondent was between 45 and 49 years of age, Caucasian (over 90%) and had an average education at the master's degree level. The typical school district of the respondents had an enrollment between 2,000 and 2,999. Respondents indicated that their districts had been reconfigured within the last three years. The five most cited factors were: To better meet the needs of children, Desire to improve academics, Overcrowded conditions, Building a new school, and Evaluation of the education program. Responses to the open-ended questions revealed that there is not consistent support for any particular grade level organization. Responses to the open-ended questions also revealed that overcrowding and a lack of adequate facilities significantly hastened district efforts in reconfiguration. The recommendations from this research to district policy makers are: (1) Be thorough in the study of district reconfiguration, survey all groups but remain focused on the issues brought forth in this study, (2) Decision makers should consider the research but not allow the dialog regarding district reconfiguration to become muddled by its conflicting findings and recommendations, (3) Prioritize what you wish to accomplish when reconfiguring and stay focused on those issues, and (4) Decisions should be based on local concerns and needs.
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Tillman, Gerald David. "Teachers' and principals' perceptions of the variables school leadership, school curriculum, school building facilities, teacher expectations, parental involvement, and school discipline in the Dekalb County School System." DigitalCommons@Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, 2001. http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/dissertations/1458.

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This quantitative study described the perceptions of teachers and school administrators related to six variables in the Dekalb County School System. The study involved a population of 200 teachers and 75 school administrators employed in a large metropolitan school system in Georgia. The respondents from the population of 200 teachers and 75 school administrators consisted of 202 total subjects. The sample of the population was analyzed during the 1998-99 academic school year. There were a total of six variables in the study. The statistical procedures involved a t-test for Equality of Means and a Pearson Correlation Analysis. There were six significant findings according to the t-test results. The statistical review of the survey data revealed that teachers and school administrators had significantly different perceptions on all six variables. The overall mean scores were consistently higher for school administrators showing that they were more likely to agree on the tested variables than teachers. According to the Pearson test, all of the variables had a ( r ) value less than .397. The Pearson Analysis produced a weak but significant relationship between teachers and school administrators on all of the variables, thereby supporting the ttest analysis and rejecting all six hypotheses.
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Davis, Felicia. "School-based Health Centers in High Poverty Schools." Scholar Commons, 2018. https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7493.

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This capstone project was part of a team project completed by two school principals in Hillsborough County, Florida. The project began because of our passion for meeting the needs of our students in urban high poverty schools being supported by varying district turnaround initiatives. We looked at our district’s previous and current attempts to increase student success in high poverty schools. We questioned the ways in which supports and resources were provided, and we explored ways through which success in high poverty schools might be increased by redefining the supports and resources provided. Our appreciative exploration of the topic was guided by the question, what successful examples of services and supports have contributed to an increase in success for students in high poverty schools? Considering that the majority of SBHCs exist in schools with high poverty rates, I was interested in what services were provided and how accessible they were. I looked for literature using the following keywords: wrap around services, school based health centers, health and student achievement. School-Based Health Centers improve access to healthcare, which can help to identify and address health risk behaviors and contribute to more stable attendance at school. More instructional seat time can contribute to improved academic outcomes. The preventative role played by SBHCs can reduce barriers to learning, such as treating undiagnosed mental and physical illnesses. School-Based Health Centers provide wraparound services so that issues impacting students such as obesity or asthma can be addressed on a school’s campus where key mental health, medical and school professionals can collaborate to meet the needs of students.
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Books on the topic "School: School of Education"

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M, Mason Charlotte. School education. Wheaton, Ill: Tyndale House, 1989.

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Clifton, Johnson. Old-time schools and school-books. Detroit: Omnigraphics, 1999.

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Brouillette, Liane. Charter schools: Lessons in school reform. Mahwah, N.J: L. Erlbaum Associates, 2002.

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Parliament, Great Britain. Education (School Premises). London: HMSO, 1992.

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European Commission. Directorate-General for Education and Culture and Socrates Programme, eds. Comenius: School education. Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, 2002.

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Elmore, Richard F. Choice in public education. [United States]: CPRE, 1986.

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Holmes, George Mark. Does school choice increase school quality? Cambridge, Mass: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2003.

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Mulcahy, D. G. Transforming schools: Alternative perspectives on school reform. Charlotte, NC: Information Age Publishing, Inc., 2013.

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O'Higgins-Norman, James. Ethos and education in Ireland. New York: P. Lang, 2003.

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Western Australia. Ministry of Education. School renewal. East Perth, WA: Ministry of Education, 1991.

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Book chapters on the topic "School: School of Education"

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Wilson, John. "School." In Philosophy and Practical Education, 19–32. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003291251-3.

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Burridge, Nina, and Christine Evans. "Carmine School." In Indigenous Education, 77–86. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6091-888-9_7.

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Dixson, Adrienne D., Camika Royal, and Kevin Lawrence Henry. "School Reform and School Choice." In Handbook of Urban Education, 120–47. 2nd ed. Second edition. | New York, NY : Routledge, 2021.: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429331435-10.

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Wilson, Terri S. "Charter Schools, Free Schools, and School Choice." In International Handbook of Philosophy of Education, 1279–92. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-72761-5_88.

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Mason, Charlotte M. "Some Unconsidered Aspects of Intellectual Training." In School Education, 113–25. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429290930-11.

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Mason, Charlotte M. "Certain Relations Proper to a Child." In School Education, 79–90. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429290930-8.

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Mason, Charlotte M. "Some Educational Theories Examined." In School Education, 56–67. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429290930-6.

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Mason, Charlotte M. "Docility and Authority in the Home and the School." In School Education, 13–24. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429290930-2.

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Mason, Charlotte M. "A Great Educationalist (A Review)." In School Education, 91–100. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429290930-9.

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Mason, Charlotte M. "Suggestions Towards a Curriculum." In School Education, 240–47. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429290930-22.

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Conference papers on the topic "School: School of Education"

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Alonso-Monasterio, Pau, and Laura Uixera Cotano. "Community School Museums as a tool for education." In HERITAGE2022 International Conference on Vernacular Heritage: Culture, People and Sustainability. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica de València, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/heritage2022.2022.15054.

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Community Schools Museums (COSMUS) is an initiative that has been developing an approach to school education from a perspective of multi-dimensional diversity, creativity and community involvement under the Erasmus+ programme in six different countries (Portugal, Greece, Italy, Romania, Poland and Turkey) and in different kinds of schools (arts, music, primary school, high school, VET).This initiative, relies on different educational and multicultural principles, such as the European Youth Charter on Inclusion and Diversity in Education or the European Education Area, and uses a combination of three dimensions that compose the new concept of Community School Museum.The first dimension refers to the local community in which each of the schools is located. This not only enhances concepts such as local traditions, society, or sense of belonging, but also connects with them and involves them in the school activity and curricula content.The second dimension is the school, where education curricula and physical space interact to support those types of knowledge that are essential to sustaining human development, using critical thinking, using creativity or cooperation to promote multicultural meanings.The third dimension is the museum, understood as a flexible tool acting as a communication channel (bi-directional), with elements that act as significance bearers. It uses the approach of learning by doing in order to learn to be, one of the four pillars of learning. It also employs the recommendations of the International Committee for Education and Cultural Action and applies the seven areas of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network.Results of the Community School Museum projects show a sound diversity of approaches, which points to the success of the methodology, given that diverse educational, social and cultural contexts give rise to diverse museum contents and designs. One of these results focuses on vernacular heritage.
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Filer, Janice. "INTENTIONAL SCHOOL LEADERSHIP IN UNCERTAIN TIMES." In International Conference on Education and New Developments. inScience Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36315/2022v2end103.

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"In this study of elementary and secondary school administrators, interviews were conducted to determine effective strategies before, during, and after online learning during the pandemic. California public schools began whole school online learning during March 2020 and most schools returned to in person learning one year later in 2021. Challenges during online learning included providing sufficient technology to all students, the online learning platform, and academic rigor. When students returned to school one year later many students suffered academically and socially. School leaders were required to refocus and plan accordingly. Administrators shared their strategies and philosophy for success in times of continued uncertainty."
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Šimčíková, Tereza, and Leona Mužíková. "Analysis of the projected curriculum of the educational field of Health Education." In Život ve zdraví 2021. Brno: Masaryk University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p280-0076-2021-7.

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The Analysis of the projected curriculum of the educational field of Health education dealt with the current projected curriculum of Health education in connection with current conceptual materials. The main goal of the research was the analysis of school educational programs at selected elementary schools. The theoretical basis for this research was the curriculum, its forms and conducted researches on the curriculum. Then the research was based on the development of the field of Health education and projects and programs related to this educational field. It also contains basic methodological data on research, which focuses on the projected form of Health education curriculum evaluated based on a deeper analysis of school educational programs of selected elementary schools. At the end, the results are summarized and conclusions and recommendations especially for school practice are formulated. The acquired results show that the time allocation for Health education ranges from 1 to 4 hours per week, most schools teach Health education as a separate subject, almost all schools have all the thematic areas of Health education included and each school provides interdisciplinary relationships. The result of the presented research is the formulation of starting points for the improvement of Health education.
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M. Abu-Samaha, Ala, and Rima Shishakly. "Assessment of School Information System Utilization in the UAE Primary Schools." In InSITE 2008: Informing Science + IT Education Conference. Informing Science Institute, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/3260.

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This paper presents an assessment of School Information Systems (SIS) Utilization in the United Arab Emirates’ (UAE) primary schools through a holistic descriptive approach that involves explaining, studying and analyzing the current technical status of the schools’ SIS. To do so, the researchers used a series of case studies (documents analysis, questionnaires and interviews) of a number of primary schools representing the educational zones of the UAE to acquire an understanding of SIS level of utilization. According to the research results, the majority of primary schools have computerized their administrative activities at different levels via the Ministry of Education’s suggested system or individually procured systems. Though, the use of Information and Communication Technologies, including SIS, is in its initial stage despite the adopted strategy by the UAE government to accelerate the effective utilization of educational management and automation technologies in the educational institutions and the Ministry of Education itself.
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STRATAN, Valentina. "Strengthening the school – family educational partnership to ensure quality inclusive education." In Probleme ale ştiinţelor socioumanistice şi ale modernizării învăţământului. "Ion Creanga" State Pedagogical University, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.46728/c.v1.25-03-2022.p182-187.

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The school-family partnership is an important current issue. The role of the school-family educational partnership is amplified in the context of the development and promotion of inclusive education. The study focused on strengthening the school-family educational partnership in the context of ensuring a quality inclusive education. We appreciate the school-family partnership not as an extension of the participation of the actors involved, but as a governing relationship of the actions orchestrated by a purpose and idea. We identify two main dimensions in the involvement of both the school and the family for the benefit of the child: the dimension of the child / parent relationship and the dimension of the school / family relationship. The school's collaboration strategy with the family in ensuring quality inclusive education is included in the school's Family Cooperation Program and includes the following areas: communication, parent information activities ¸ support for parents; learning together - at home, at school and in the community; decision making; volunteering,; collaboration with the community. A school-family partnership will ensure the success and full development of the child's potential, if they are respected: acceptance of the family, respect for the family and the connection with the family.
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Miulescu, Miruna Luana. "Youth at Risk of Early School Leaving: Exploring Educational Strategies." In 17th Education and Development Conference. Tomorrow People Organization, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.52987/edc.2022.016.

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ABSTRACT There is general agreement among scholars and policy makers that Early School Leaving (ESL) represents a serious social phenomenon that has many negative consequences on the individual, economic development, and on society as a whole. ESL is considered a serious social problem, as well as an important phenomenon on the public agenda and education policies of Romania. As part of the Erasmus+ project Orienta4YEL, a multidimensional study was conducted and the data shows that Romania also experiences unpreparedness of school and community to embrace the whole spectrum of early school leaving. The study design employed individual interviews for members of school leadership team and administration (N=9), focus groups for general and vocational secondary schools and high schools teachers/trainers (N=63), and focus groups for young people representatives (N=91) as data collection tools. The empirical findings of the study revealed that in Romania there is a convergence of opinion on the most relevant factors that cause young people to leave school before completing compulsory education. Therefore, personal challenges are the one that contribute the most to the risk of early leaving, followed closely by family reasons and institutional factors. Therefore, this paper explores the challenges that are aimed at improvements in the early school leaving rate. Specifically, the analysis will shed light on the prevention strategies that have been developed and implemented, as well as on the deficit perspective on early school leaving within institutional and national policies. By addressing the existing supporting educational actions in areas where economic and social conditions are an obstacle for pupils, this paper will furthermore particularly analyse the potential barriers which arise on the system’s ways of reducing the early leaving rate in order to better identify, prepare for, and respond to this phenomenon. Keywords: early school leaving, risk factors, support strategies, education policy
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Gunawan, Imam, Ibrahim Bafadal, Ahmad Nurabadi, and Juharyanto. "School Leadership Strategy in Excellent Schools." In 6th International Conference on Education and Technology (ICET 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.201204.038.

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Świętek, Agnieszka, and Wiktor Osuch. "Regional Geography Education in Poland." In 27th edition of the Central European Conference with subtitle (Teaching) of regional geography. Brno: Masaryk University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9694-2020-14.

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Education in regional geography in Poland takes place at public schools from the earliest educational stages and is compulsory until young people reach the age of adulthood. Reforms of the Polish education system, resulting in changes in the core curriculum of general education, likewise resulted in changes in the concept of education in the field of regional geography. The subject of the authors’ article is education in regional geography in the Polish education system at various educational stages. The authors’ analysis has two research goals. The first concerns changes in the education of regional geography at Polish schools; here the analysis and evaluation of the current content of education in the field of regional geography are offered. The second one is the study of the model of regional geography education in geographical studies in Poland on the example of the geographyat the Pedagogical University of Cracow. Although elements of education about one’s own region already appear in a kindergarten, they are most strongly implemented at a primary school in the form of educational paths, e.g. “Regional education – cultural heritage in the region”, and at a lower-secondary school (gymnasium) during geography classes. Owing to the current education reform, liquidating gymnasium (a lower secondary school level) and re-introducing the division of public schools into an 8-year primary school and a longer secondary school, the concept of education in regional education has inevitably changed. Currently, it is implemented in accordance with a multidisciplinary model of education consisting in weaving the content of regional education into the core curricula of various school subjects, and thus building the image of the whole region by means of viewing from different perspectives and inevitable cooperation of teachers of diverse subjects. Invariably, however, content in the field of regional geography is carried out at a primary and secondary school during geography classes. At university level, selected students – in geographical studies – receive a regional geography training. As an appropriate example one can offer A. Świętek’s original classes in “Regional Education” for geography students of a teaching specialty consisting of students designing and completing an educational trail in the area of Nowa Huta in Cracow.
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Adonis, Tracey-Ann, and Shaheed Hartley. "Enhancing learning environments through partnerships in an attempt to facilitate school effectiveness." In Fifth International Conference on Higher Education Advances. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/head19.2019.9132.

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South Africa (SA) is a developing country struggling to address educational transformation inherited from a previous apartheid regime and created by the current democratic government. Education is an area which is struggling within a SA context. Many schools in disadvantaged communities are faced with inadequate infrastructure and lack of resources yet the expectation is for schools to show evidence of effectiveness irrespective of these challenges. This context prompted an investigation into the development of the school learning environment utilising a participatory action research design at a disadvantaged primary school in the Western Cape, SA. The major findings included that the school learning environment was influenced by the unique challenges and pressures in the school context; that collaborative efforts between stakeholders contribute to school effectiveness irrespective of context through acknowledging the school as an organisational system which requires the principal, educators, parents and community to effectively collaborate through open channels of communication in order to facilitate optimal teaching and learning environments which contribute to school effectiveness. The community component in the school learning environment needed to be acknowledged as the validation of the experiences of educators, learners, parents, principal and community is important in the South African context.
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Surikova, Svetlana, and Manuel Joaquín Fernández González. "School Staff and Parents’ Beliefs About the Role of School for Pupils’ Character Education in Latvia." In 79th International Scientific Conference of University of Latvia. University of Latvia, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22364/htqe.2021.42.

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This paper presents a mixed-method research aimed at identifying how school and teachers’ role for character education at school is understood in Latvia. The theoretical framework of the study is based on the principles of virtue ethics. The viewpoints of 1116 respondents (parents, teachers, and school leaders) from all five regions of Latvia were collected in 2018-2020, using two questionnaires containing closed and open questions. The results provided new insights into how parents and school staff perceived the role of the school and the teachers in pupils’ value and virtue education in Latvia. Schools should promote pupils’ character development alongside academic excellence, but, while teachers should encourage good morals and values in pupils, using both ‘caught’ and taught’ strategies, the main responsibility for children moral growth is on parents and families, not on teachers and the school. The majority of both school staff and parents were favourable to a shared responsibility and collaboration between school and family to promote character education inside and outside of the classroom.
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Reports on the topic "School: School of Education"

1

Chatterji, Aaron, Joowon Kim, and Ryan McDevitt. School Spirit: Legislator School Ties and State Funding for Higher Education. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, July 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w24818.

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Frisancho, Verónica. The Effects of School Based Financial Education. Inter-American Development Bank, February 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0001578.

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Bettinger, Eric, Michael Kremer, Maurice Kugler, Carlos Medina, Christian Posso, and Juan Saavedra. School Vouchers, Labor Markets and Vocational Education. Banco de la República de Colombia, August 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.32468/be.1087.

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Glewwe, Paul, and Karthik Muralidharan. Improving School Education Outcomes in Developing Countries. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), October 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-wp_2015/001.

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Carneiro, Pedro, Oswald Koussihouèdé, Nathalie Lahire, Costas Meghir, and Corina Mommaerts. Decentralizing Education Resources: School Grants in Senegal. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, April 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w21063.

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Lahire, Nathalie, Corina Mommaerts, Costas Meghir, Oswald Koussihouèdé, and Pedro Carneiro. Decentralizing education resources: school grants in Senegal. Institute for Fiscal Studies, March 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1920/wp.cem.2015.1515.

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Masters, Geoff. Time for a paradigm shift in school education? Australian Council for Educational Research, November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.37517/91645.2020.1.

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The thesis of this essay is that the current schooling paradigm is in need of review and that the answer may lie in a shift in how we think about teaching and learning. Under the prevailing paradigm, the role of teachers is to deliver the year-level curriculum to all students in a year level. This mismatch has unfortunate consequences for both teaching and learning. Currently, many students are not ready for their year-level curriculum because they lack prerequisite knowledge, skills and understandings. The basis for an alternative paradigm and a 'new normal' is presented. The essay addresses concerns raised about changes to curriculum, including that: changing the structure of the curriculum will mean abandoning year levels; teachers will be unable to manage classrooms in which students are not all working on the same content at the same time; some students will be disadvantaged if students are not all taught the same content at the same time; a restructured curriculum will result in ‘streaming’ and/or require the development of individual learning plans; a restructured curriculum will lower educational standards; and it will not be possible to do this in some subjects.
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Ridley, Matthew, and Camille Terrier. Fiscal and Education Spillovers from Charter School Expansion. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, September 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w25070.

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Chuang, Rachel, Tom Kaye, Caitlin Moss Coflan, and Björn Haßler. Back-to-School Campaigns Following Disruptions to Education. EdTech Hub, June 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.53832/edtechhub.0019.

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Case, Anne, and Motohiro Yogo. Does School Quality Matter? Returns to Education and the Characteristics of Schools in South Africa. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, October 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w7399.

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