Education, Industrial Democracy and the State
In: Economic and industrial democracy: EID ; an international journal, Volume 2, Issue 2, p. 243-260
ISSN: 0143-831X
6407804 results
Sort by:
In: Economic and industrial democracy: EID ; an international journal, Volume 2, Issue 2, p. 243-260
ISSN: 0143-831X
In: State Government: journal of state affairs, Volume 31, p. 32-35
ISSN: 0039-0097
In: A journal of church and state: JCS, Volume 26, Issue 1, p. 17-29
ISSN: 2040-4867
In: Leadership for learning
Examines the wider policy environment affecting schools and colleges, exploring the factors that shape policy and the implications of globalization on learning at all levels. This book provides a resource for students, practitioners, middle managers and educational leaders in various sectors
1 Introduction. - Theoretical Framework. - The Policy of Mother Tongue Education. - European Language and Education: State-Building in France and Britain. - 2 Language and Education in Africa under Mission and Colonial Influence. - Missions and the Transcription of African Languages. - Colonial Education Policy - Divergent Ideologies. - Selective Training and Restriction of the "Masses". - Mission and Colonial Language Influence in Senegal, Ghana, and Cameroon. - Conclusion. - 3 Language Choices in Independent African States. - Education and Literacy at Independence. - Independence Policies - Theory and Practice. - Continuing External Influence - la Francophonie and the Commonwealth. - Policy Inertia. - Understanding Leader Preferences. - 4 Opportunities for Policy Change: Ideas, Materials, and Advocacy Networks. - An Altered International Perspective. - Changed Causal Ideas. - Contradictory Anglophone Voices. - Expanded Domestic Possibilities. - Opportunities for Policy Change in Senegal and Ghana. - Conclusion. - 5 Incentives for Policy Change: Ruler Strategies for Maintaining Power. - Democracy and Multilingual Education. - Bargaining: Demographic and Subnational Variation. - My Explanation. - Economics as a Contributing Factor. - Incentives for Policy Change in Senegal and Ghana. - Conclusion. - 6 Language, Education, and "Democratization" in Cameroon. - Education Policy in the Early Independence Period. - Opportunities for Policy Change. - Material Opportunities. - Ideational Opportunities. - Ruler Incentives for Policy Change. - Electoral District Manipulation. - Restricting Voting Access. - Constitutional Recognition of Minority Rights. - Alternative Explanations. - Conclusion. - 7 Language and Contention: Violence and Participation in Contemporary African Politics. - Language, Nationalism, and Violence. - Language Literacy and Political Mobilization. - Written Language and Attachment (Senegal and Ghana). - Written Language and Mobilization in a Democratic Se
World Affairs Online
The gap between the demands placed on education in Australia and the resources allocated to it by government has increased dramatically in recent years. The education system is expected to absorb youth unemployment and play a key role in the modernisation of the economy, yet education spending as a proportion of GDP has declined. The notion of education as being important for its own sake and a key to equality in society seems to have been set aside, and economics now dominates debate on education policy. This book summarises and analyses the major issues in Australian education policy today: the relationship between education and work; the reform of higher education and vocational training; outputs, resources and class sizes; the role of government and the public/private debate in schooling. It also examines the main economic theories about education, including human capital theory and free market theory, and finds them seriously inadequate as a basis for policy. The author argues that economic rationalism has installed a free market agenda at the heart of public education policy, with deep consequences for the academic and democratic development of Australia's citizens
In: State Government: journal of state affairs, Volume 22, p. 135-139
ISSN: 0039-0097
"NCES 97-376." ; Includes index. ; "September 1997"--T.p. verso. ; Shipping list no.: 98-0014-P. ; Includes bibliographical references (p. 246-254). ; Mode of access: Internet.
BASE
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Volume 655, Issue 1, p. 6-15
ISSN: 1552-3349
This article introduces a collection of empirical work that examines the role of state policy in promoting students' progression into and through higher education. We provide an overview of U.S. state policy innovations that have occurred in recent years and we identify both the challenges and opportunities associated with studying public policy and higher education attainment in the states. The article concludes by outlining the perspectives of the articles included in this collection and provides a synopsis of each.
In: Explorations of Educational Purpose Ser. v.28
This book addresses the notion that education reform must be tied to issues of community inequality which are the principal contributors to low achievement. Bluntly put, education is not the way out of poverty, but reducing poverty is crucial to education.
In: Continuum studies in education policy
What is wrong with education? Why do educational reforms always miss their target? How can we create a better education system? And what can we learn from other countries? Reclaiming Education tackles the challenges facing education that really matter - hte ones that academics often ignore, parents demand solution to and politicians need to confront. Drawing on his global research, James Tooley shows that there is an alternative to poor quality and wasteful inefficiency in education, and that education can be radically transformed to guarantee freedom and higher standards. ""Tooley radically
In: Transformations of the State
In: Transformations of the State Ser.
This book investigates and discusses the phenomenon of internationalization of education policy and its consequences for national policymaking processes. By comparing educational outcomes and actors' reactions in different countries, it provides detailed insights into a highly contested policy field