Latest issue consulted: 1986-87. ; Description based on: 1925/26. ; Title varies slightly. ; Some reports issued in several parts, i.e., vol. for 1986-87 issued in 4 pts. called Vol. I(S), Vol. I(C), Vol. II, and Vol. III. ; None issued: 1926/1927, 1931/1932, 1939/1940-1946/1947. ; Supplements accompany some vols. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Issued by: Ministry of Education, Government of India, ; by: Ministry of Education & Social Welfare, Government of India,
Disbound original held in Oak Street Library Facility. ; At head of title: The government of the Philippine Islands. Department of public instruction. Bureau of education. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Der Autor stellt ein Modell Globalen Lernens vor, das von vier Säulen getragen wird. Globale Erziehung im Sinne des Autors vollzieht sich nicht allein durch die Beschäftigung mit globalen ökologischen oder ökonomischen Problemen, sondern muss von einer grundlegenden Veränderung unseres (industriellen) reduktionistischen Blickwinkels und Bewusstseins - hin zu einem holistischen Selbstverständnis begleitet werden. (DIPF/Orig.)
Teacher education program should be structured and modified based on the findings of the researches in the field of education. Content, pedagogy, and technology are to be integrated. Furthermore, at the time of planning for teacher education program, policies, legislations, needs of the society and students, futuristic perspective, employability, technological advancement, and infrastructural issues should be given due attention.
This article discusses the development of transnational activities in the Chinese secondary school sector, particularly at the senior level. It describes how growth has outpaced quality control, and discusses the role that the China Centralised Government is likely to take in terms of future quality management.
Parts 1 and 4 not published for 1968/69. ; Issued in 4 parts: 1. State governments (called 1948/49-1961/62 Federal Government and states); 2. Public school systems (called 1948/49-1961/62 Counties and cities); 3. Higher education; 4. Education associations (called 1948/49 Education associations and directories). ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Vols. for 1948/49-1952/53 issued by the Federal Security Agency; 1952/53-1967/68 by the U.S. Office of Education; 1968/69 by the National Center for Educational Statistics. ; Continued by: Education directory. State governments, ISSN 0083-2685; Education directory. Public school systems, ISSN 0083-2677; Education directory. Higher education, ISSN 0083-2669, and: Education directory. Education associations, 0083-2650.
Teacher education program should be structured and modified based on the findings of the researches in the field of education. Content, pedagogy, and technology are to be integrated. Furthermore, at the time of planning for teacher education program, policies, legislations, needs of the society and students, futuristic perspective, employability, technological advancement, and infrastructural issues should be given due attention.
Publicly funded institutions, such as NIH, NLM, and state-supported universities, have explicit public service missions that extend beyond the walls of a single institution. During the past few years, national organizations, such as NLM and AAMC, have funded studies and projects to measure how well universities are adapting to technological change and educational reform. The IAIMS models are evidence of universities fostering cooperative rather than duplicative effort. Opportunities and problems facing universities extending systems and services to the private practice setting, to community-based health care HMO's, and to state and local health care agencies are discussed in terms of political, economic, and geographic realities. Instilling lifelong learning concepts begins before the health professional enters practice and is dependent on the emphasis universities place on "excellence in teaching." Without cooperation among core facilities, such as libraries, computer centers, and excellent instructors, continuing education will remain a parochial issue instead of a national thrust toward the continuum of the learning process. If continuing education is to become a high priority for universities and take its place on the education spectrum, flexible policies must be established to accommodate individual practitioners' expectations and interests.
The condition of multicultural society in Indonesia can be said as two blades that can make positive value and negative value. In this era, there are more cases that can be seen about the heteroginity in the realistic of Indonesian society itself. Coming from those cases shows that there is a moral degradation in the middle of society especially youths. This thing exactly needs one real action that able become bridge for minimalizing bad probability that will happen next. Education gives contribution as pioneer that is counted by government through mental revolution movement in the form of moral education or character education. So, in this context the strengthnesss of moral value in multicultural social condition needs to be reformed through social changes that integrate two of moral problems and the multicultural in education institution. University holds the important role for bringing the social engineering; remember that the heap of youth majority can be met from university student that became the center of changing in social environment. Through this research, the researcher wants to examine between moral education and multicultural education that is intergrated in one of social engineering form in university. The purpose of this article research in the future can be looked forward as one solution for minimalizing the moral and multicultural problems as the form of nation unity defense that has " Bhinneka Tunggal Ika " Keywords: Social Engineering, Education, Moral Education, Multicultural Education, University
This report offers a cumulative review of Grantmakers for Education programming and research in the learning action series from the past two years and underscores the urgency of tackling the issue of equity in communities, schools, and within the U.S. social and democratic systems. It also provides an opportunity to reflect on this moment in history. ; Grantmakers For Education
The discussion of inclusive education has become a serious concern for researchers, education observers and education practitioners. However, several studies that have been conducted show that this is less positive for the practice of inclusive education in some educational institutions. This is because inclusive education policies have not been comprehensively understood by stakeholders and leaders of an educational institution. Therefore, the discussion of this article aims to construct education and inclusive education policies that are able to protect the right to education. This research was conducted through the use of library data sources and the use of policy documents such as draft policies and regulations related to inclusive education. The study in this article finds the fact that inclusive education policies do not yet have a strong commitment and fluency in discussing regulations and implementing inclusive education policies in every educational institution. Although on the one hand the right to education has actually been guaranteed by law and the mandate of the establishment of the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia. Inclusive education is education that is disability-friendly and anti-discrimination. Thus, this spirit becomes the basis and relevance for guaranteeing the right to education for every community. The conclusion of this article is that education is a right for every citizen that must be provided and guaranteed by the state. Therefore, inclusive education policies that are binding must be published and controlled by government authorities in their implementation in every educational institution
This paper discusses the issue of disability in universities that aims to discuss universities that must play a role and participate in the government and society to build and improve the lives of people with disabilities through the activities of Tridharma. The method used in this analysis is descriptive. The legal basis for persons with disabilities to obtain the right to education is the 1945 Constitution Article 31 paragraph 1 with the implementation of the paradigm of inclusive education in higher education reviewed by the Minister of Education and Culture No. 26 of 2014. In Islam, disability is implied in the letter of At-tin verse 4 and Al-Hujurat verse 13. Understanding disability-friendly education is one of the obligations that must be implemented about human beings and with the constitution through: (1) The equivalent to register; (2) freedom of choice of study program/department; (3) providing services as needed.Keywords: Disabilities', Streaming, dan Higher Educational. Abstrak Tulisan ini membahas isu disabilitas di perguruan tinggi yang bertujuan untuk membahas tentang perguruan tinggi yang harus berperan dan berpartisipasi bersama pemerintah dan masyarakat untuk membangun dan meningkatkan taraf hidup penyandang disabilitas melalui kegiatan Tridharma. Metode yang digunakan dalam analisis ini adalah deskriptif. Adapun landasan hukum bagi penyandang disabilitas mendapatkan hak pendidikan adalah UUD 1945 Pasal 31 ayat 1 dengan implementasi paradigma pendidikan inklusif di pendidikan tinggi yang diulas sesuai dengan peraturan Menteri Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan Nomor 26 Tahun 2014. Dalam Islam disabilitas di antaranya disiratkan dalam surat At-tin ayat 4 surat Al-Hujurat dan ayat 13. Memahami pendidikan yang ramah terhadap penyandang disabilitas merupakan salah satu kewajiban yang harus dilaksanakan dalam rangka hubungan dengan manusia dan dengan konstitusi melalui: (1) pemberian kesempatan yang setara untuk mendaftar; (2) kebebasan memilih program studi/jurusan; (3) pemberian layanan sesuai dengan kebutuhan.Kata kunci: Disabilitas, Pengarusutamaan, dan Perguruan Tinggi.
In the late twentieth century historians of education came to argue that the urban experience can only be fully understood through the social processes and social relations associated with schooling. The new 'social history' of education has thus often been closely aligned to the history of cities. In Australia the 'new' social history of the city has often been written in terms of family formation, sometimes related to the history of childhood, but there has only been marginal attention to the specific nature of education in Sydney as an urban phenomenon. This essay focuses on Sydney schools and other educational institutions, although it raises questions about social processes and social formations. It suggests that the history of education in Sydney can be understood in a number of phases and themes, each related to the changing social history of Sydney. Informal education had long been part of the culture of indigenous society prior to the British invasion of 1788. In the early colonial period, up to about 1830, governments established schools for the children of convicts based in Sydney and even for Aboriginal children. There were also 'private venture' schools for the sons and sometimes daughters of free settlers. In the period from 1830 to 1870 the city of Sydney emerged as a metropolitan centre of educational establishments including schools, colleges and the University. From around 1870 to the end of World War II, with the growth of the city of Sydney and its suburbs, schooling was increasingly related to social class, gender and religion as part of suburban life. From 1945, the 'neighbourhood' school and even the 'local' university has become part of a pattern of regional differences associated with the expansion of the city through migration and population growth.
Testimony issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Increasingly, the issues of distance education and federal student aid intersect. About one in every 13 postsecondary students enrolls in at least one distance education course, and the Department of Education estimates that the number of students involved in distance education has tripled in just 4 years. As the largest provider of financial aid to postsecondary students, the federal government has a considerable interest in distance education. Overall, 1.5 million out of 19 million postsecondary students took at least one distance education course in the 1999-2000 school year. The distance education students differ from other postsecondary students in a number of respects. Compared to other students, they tend to be older and are more likely to be employed full-time while attending school part-time. They also have higher incomes and are more likely to be married. Many students enrolled in distance education courses participate in federal student aid programs. As distance education continues to grow, several major aspects of federal laws, rules, and regulations may need to be reexamined. Certain rules may need to be modified if a small, but growing, number of schools are to remain eligible for student aid. Students attending these schools may become ineligible for student aid because their distance education programs are growing and may exceed statutory and regulatory limits on the amount of distance education an institution can offer. In general, students at minority serving institutions use distance education less extensively than students at other schools. Accrediting agencies play an important role in reviewing distance education programs. They, and Education, are "gatekeepers" with respect to ensuring quality at postsecondary institutions--including those that offer distance education programs."
Democratic education (DE) sees young people not as passive recipients of knowledge, but rather as active co-creators of their own learning and valued participants in a learning community. This study investigates tutors' understanding and implementation of DE in the Egyptian Higher Education (HE). It investigates HE tutors' conception about learners controlling their educational process by being fully embedded in it. Data for this qualitative paper was collected from 20 tutors from two Egyptian universities via one-to-one interviews and focus groups. This study highlighted the inference of political events in Egypt, since 2011, on HE students in their way of thinking and reflecting and addressed the need of DE to be a part of the educational paradigm. This paper concluded that DE is based on placing students in the centre of their learning and empowering them. Also, tutor-student dialogic approach and tutor-student trust are essential approaches to implement DE.