Decision-making in education: the education policy process in Tasmania
In: The Education policy process at state level : an Australia-United States comparative study monograph no. 4
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In: The Education policy process at state level : an Australia-United States comparative study monograph no. 4
In: International journal of sustainability in higher education, Band 23, Heft 4, S. 940-959
ISSN: 1758-6739
Purpose
This paper aims to present a methodology for analysing the extent to which students of a university degree perceive that they have received a good education for sustainable development (ESD). The methodology enables us to quantify this perception, which, in turn, allows us to determine: to what extent the objectives related to ESD are achieved in the degree, and to compare the learning in ESD perceived by students of different degrees. The methodology is applied to nine engineering degrees and nine education degrees in the Spanish university system.
Design/methodology/approach
ESD is analysed from the students' learning perception. This perception is measured by comparing the responses of first- and fourth-year students to a questionnaire about their sustainability competencies. Two indicators have been designed to analyse the results. The first indicator, learning increase, measures the declared learning difference between fourth- and first-year students. The second indicator, learning percentage, measure the amount of learning as reported by fourth-year students compared to how much they could have learned.
Findings
The results show that the average learning percentage perceived by students is higher in engineering degrees (33%) than in education degrees (27%), despite the fact that the average learning increase declared by students at the end of their studies in both areas of knowledge is similar (66%). Engineering students report having achieved higher learning than education students in all sustainability competencies, with the exception of ethics.
Originality/value
This paper analyses ESD from the student's perspective. Furthermore, to the knowledge of the authors, this is the first study that compares the perception of ESD between engineering and education students. This comparison allows us to determine the different approaches that university Professors take to ESD according to the discipline they teach.
In: Annual Report on Education
... for 1971. - June 1973. - 30 S. : 4 Tab. - (No. 12 of 1973) - 31619S; ... for 1974 and quinquennial report 1970-74. - April 1976. - 39,16 S. : 4 Tab. - (No. 10 of 1976) - 31620S; ... for 1977. - October 1980. - 47 S. : 6 Tab. - (No. 12 of 1980) - 31137S
World Affairs Online
In: International Journal of Child, Youth and Family Studies: IJCYFS, Band 11, Heft 3, S. 167-191
ISSN: 1920-7298
Child and youth care practitioners are likely to encounter issues of suicidality. Practitioners play an important role in the well-being of youth; thus, mental health literacy, and suicide prevention education in particular, should be an integral part of child and youth care pedagogy and curricular practices in higher education programs. With the aim of explicating a social process of learning and applying mental health literacy, this grounded theory study examined how a curriculum specifically designed for child and youth care practitioners is subsequently applied in suicide or mental health interventions. Thirteen students enrolled in youth work courses at a large university in Eastern Canada participated in the 18-month study in 2015 and 2016. Informed by critical and social literacy theories, conceptualizations of mental health literacy, and experiential pedagogy within higher education, analysis of the data identified a process of becoming and being in youth work comprising two subcategories: struggling to become a youth worker, and being a youth worker. Conditions, such as particular pedagogical strategies and specific content, served to shape and influence the process and, consequently, participants' movement therein. The inclusion of a suicide intervention learning activity was a condition that influenced participants' learning processes, yet also reflected a struggle with the dialectical position of presence and procedure. Recommendations and insights are discussed with the aim of enhancing pedagogical approaches to suicide intervention within child and youth care higher education programs.
The need for a new profession devoted to environmental matters is asserted. The qualities of such a profession are sketched, and it is argued that new initiatives in environmental education are needed in the form of graduate, professional programs with primary emphasis on practice. An example 2-year program is presented. A fundamental requirement is scientific competence; undergraduate preparation in the sciences or engineering is mandatory. The graduate curriculum itself is built on three primary cores: environmental science and engineering, business and management, and public policy. Additionally, an environmental round table is proposed as a focal point for academic, industrial, governmental, and public discussion on environmental matters. The round table would provide oversight for the professional educational program and an affiliated research institute.
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Text from van Zanten A., Legavre A. "Engineering access to higher education through higher education fairs", in Goastellec G., Picard F. (ed.) The Roles of Higher Education and Research in the Fabric of Societies, Leuven, Sense Publishers, 2014 (in press). Transition to higher education is a major social process. This transition has been mostly studied by French sociologists of education and higher education from perspectives focusing predominantly on the role of the socio-economic status, academic profiles and different tracks followed by secondary school students (Merle 1996, Duru-Bellat and Kieffer 2008, Convert 2010), and, to a lesser extent, on the types of secondary schools attended (Duru-Bellat and Mingat 1998, Nakhili 2005) and the local higher education provision (Berthet et al. 2010, Orange 2013). Although these structural determinants play a major role in explaining significant regularities, they provide more powerful explanations for individuals representing the extremes of the different variables considered, leaving room for the influence of other major factors for those students in intermediate situations. In addition, even in the case of students occupying extreme positions, structural perspectives better explain the distribution of students between different higher education tracks than they do between institutions and disciplines. In this chapter, we adopt a perspective that we see as complementary to and interacting with the perspective centred on structural determinants by focusing on the role of the devices that mediate the exchanges between students and higher education institutions, and more specifically on one device: higher education fairs. Our purpose in doing so is not only to document how these various devices frame, in ways that remain largely unexplored by researchers, exchanges between providers and consumers of higher education but also to point out - and further explore in future publications - how these devices, and the specific features of fairs, contribute to the reproduction and transformation of educational inequalities in access to higher education (Benninghoff et al. 2012).
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Foreword by Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO ; Incl. bibl. ; Arabic version pub. in 2018
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We investigated Yemen's higher education challenges by focusing on the English teacher education program. Interpretative analysis of policy statements and interviews revealed several factors that are hindering the quality of the program. Deeply aware of the socio-political dimensions impeding progress, the university lecturers shared convoluted visions for improving higher education and, in reflecting on the mission and realities of their program, voiced their quest for social justice and recognition by university administrators. The administrators acknowledged key problems in teacher education, but proposed no specific corrective measures. The findings highlight the urgent need for systemic change in Yemeni higher education. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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With special focus on laying the foundations for a European Education Area by 2025, "The first European Education Summit˝, held on 25 January 2018, aimed at determining how quality, inclusive and values-based education can fight the current challenges and contribute to a successful Europe. Although the primary competence for education policies lies with the Member States, the European Commission has explicitly advocated that joint efforts should be made to strengthen the European identity through education. In particular, a number of initiatives were proposed in order to foster employability in the common market, improve the international competitiveness, promote common values and develop critical thinking for an active citizenship. For all these reasons, this paper aims at determining how Croatian legal education, taking into account its tradition, can contribute to achieving those objectives. Therefore, by analyzing its history and tradition, the first part of the contribution will try to identify the specific features of Croatian higher legal education. Keeping in mind that the success of the process is often influenced by various social, political, economic and historical factors, the central part of the paper will examine the importance of education for shaping the national legal culture and, consequently, efficient harmonization. Considering the challenges that the Croatian educational system is currently facing, as a conclusion, an attempt will be made to offer some preliminary solutions in the debate on how the potential of education can be used to ensure the goals of the European Education Area.
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Text from van Zanten A., Legavre A. "Engineering access to higher education through higher education fairs", in Goastellec G., Picard F. (ed.) The Roles of Higher Education and Research in the Fabric of Societies, Leuven, Sense Publishers, 2014 (in press). Transition to higher education is a major social process. This transition has been mostly studied by French sociologists of education and higher education from perspectives focusing predominantly on the role of the socio-economic status, academic profiles and different tracks followed by secondary school students (Merle 1996, Duru-Bellat and Kieffer 2008, Convert 2010), and, to a lesser extent, on the types of secondary schools attended (Duru-Bellat and Mingat 1998, Nakhili 2005) and the local higher education provision (Berthet et al. 2010, Orange 2013). Although these structural determinants play a major role in explaining significant regularities, they provide more powerful explanations for individuals representing the extremes of the different variables considered, leaving room for the influence of other major factors for those students in intermediate situations. In addition, even in the case of students occupying extreme positions, structural perspectives better explain the distribution of students between different higher education tracks than they do between institutions and disciplines. In this chapter, we adopt a perspective that we see as complementary to and interacting with the perspective centred on structural determinants by focusing on the role of the devices that mediate the exchanges between students and higher education institutions, and more specifically on one device: higher education fairs. Our purpose in doing so is not only to document how these various devices frame, in ways that remain largely unexplored by researchers, exchanges between providers and consumers of higher education but also to point out - and further explore in future publications - how these devices, and the specific features of fairs, contribute to the reproduction ...
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This paper expresses the meaning of democracy in Islamic education in depth by using a content study approach that is an in-depth analysis of the content of information from education experts. In an educational democracy, the values contained in the implementation of educational practices and programs of an educational institution consist of several stakeholders such as educators, education staff, students, principals and school committees or the community in order to achieve the same goals as contained in the vision. and the mission of educational institutions. Through efforts to implement democratic values, education is expected to be able to encourage people to become active, independent, creative, innovative, critical, productive individuals and respect others. The essence of democracy in Islamic education is to place the human position proportionally or there is a balance between educators and students in placing themselves and being able to carry out the educational process properly, by putting aside individual differences that are brought from birth and there is no element of compulsion or self-awareness in following education and eliminate all things that hinder the educational process to gain knowledge in order to achieve a high degree before Allah SWT and to achieve happiness in this world and in the hereafter. Keywords: Education Democracy, Islamic Education Philosophy
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Education business is a potential business, but it still needs to be studied more deeply so that the essence of non-formal education that can answer all problems in education does not disappear and eliminate its functions. The purpose of this study is to analyze the implementation of non-formal environmental education business. This research used a qualitative approach which was carried out in Semarang City. The data collection technique used was interview. The validity of data was done through source triangulation, while the data analysis techniques were done through data reduction, data display, and conclusion drawing/verification. The implementation of non-formal education was based on the perspective that it can be a promising business opportunity and have a long-term income generating orientation. Teachers and learning process are adjusted to the needs and the potential of the students. Business capital used by tutoring institutions in developing the education business included internal capital and external capital. Politics has a great influence in the implementation of non-formal education business. The value of character conservation in the implementation of non-formal education has not been the main priority in most education institutions in which education must have the value of innovation, creative, fair, caring, and honest.
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In: IJRAR September 2023, Band 10
SSRN
In: [Publication] [3143]