Military Education – History, Vision and Innovation
In: Journal of the Academy of National Security Sciences (2019/1)
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In: Journal of the Academy of National Security Sciences (2019/1)
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In: Education in the Asia-Pacific Region: Issues, Concerns and Prospects Series v.63
Intro -- Series Editors Introduction -- Foreword -- Preface and Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Contributors -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1: Japan´s International Cooperation in Education: An Overview -- 1.1 Purpose and Scope of the Book -- 1.2 International Education Cooperation in Japan´s ODA -- 1.2.1 Features of Japan´s Educational Cooperation in Comparison to Overall ODA -- 1.2.2 Previous Literature on Japan´s International Cooperation in Education -- 1.3 Chronological Overview of Japan´s International Cooperation in Education: A 65-Year History of Cooperation -- 1.3.1 The Emergence of Educational Cooperation in Japan: Early Focus on TVET and Higher Education (1950s-1970s) -- 1.3.2 Period of Hitozukuri Cooperation Under the Rapid Expansion of ODA (1980s) -- 1.3.3 Shift to Basic Education (1990s) -- 1.3.4 Period of Global Governance of Educational Cooperation (2000s and Thereafter) -- 1.4 The Development of Japan´s International Education Cooperation Through Basic Education, TVET, and Higher Education -- 1.4.1 Basic Education Cooperation -- 1.4.2 Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Cooperation -- 1.4.3 Higher Education Cooperation -- 1.5 Analytical Perspectives on Japan´s Educational Cooperation -- References -- Part I: International Education Cooperation Policy -- Chapter 2: Japan´s International Education Cooperation Policy Before 1990: Controversy and Hesitancy Toward Interventions for ... -- 2.1 Postwar Reconstruction and the Beginnings of International Cooperation in Education -- 2.1.1 The Beginnings of International Cooperation in Education -- 2.1.2 Starting of the Karachi Plan and Japan´s Involvement -- 2.2 Activities of the Ministry of Education and Review of ODA Policy -- 2.2.1 Efforts of the Ministry of Education on Educational Cooperation Projects.
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Part I: History -- 1 An Argument for Practice-Based Evidence in Reading Education -- 2 The National Writing Project: The Heart and Soul of a Reform that Works -- 3 Fiction or Reality? The Reciprocity of School Film Literacy Representations and Educational Policy, 1955-2017 -- 4 Limiting EL Students to a Monolingual Education: A Movement of Failure -- Part II: Effects -- 5 How Close Is Too Close? The Ethics of Reading and Neoliberal Education Reform -- 6 The Effects of High-Stakes Testing: A Narrowing of Student Writing -- 7 The Impact of Portfolio-Based Performance Assessments on the Development of Preservice Literacy Teacher Reflection -- 8 The "Real World" of Schooling: The Market as Ethic in Education Practice and Policy -- Part III: Advocacy -- 9 "Tell Them I Can Do This Test in Spanish": Re-envisioning Literacy Assessment Practices for Young Bilingual Learners -- 10 Teacher as Advocate for Social Justice: Integrating Advocacy into the Theory and Pedagogy of Literacy Education -- 11 "You Can't Just Wave a Flag in This Place": Using Social Justice Literacies for Reform -- 12 Preservice Teacher Inquiry into Histories of Education Reform and Advocacy in Clinical Sites -- 13 Finding the "Brave Spaces": Reclaiming Teacher Professionalism -- Contributor Biographies -- Index
In: Social research and educational studies series 22
In: Voprosy istorii: VI = Studies in history, Band 2021, Heft 4-1, S. 193-198
The article devoted to the disclosure of historical facts in distance learning of musical art. Analyzes the methodological and technological problems that teachers faced at different stages of Internet technologies and their implementation in process of teaching music. Revealed the effectiveness of distance learning future musicians. Described the main limitations of online training and ways to avoid them. A conclusion was about the current trends and prospects for development of distance music education.
In: Primary curriculum series
In: Studien zur vergleichenden Berufspädagogik, 6
World Affairs Online
In: Dissent: a journal devoted to radical ideas and the values of socialism and democracy, Band 54, Heft 3, S. 44-51
ISSN: 0012-3846
Draws on personal involvement in the New Orleans (LA) School District to examine the origins & development of the Recovery School District (RSD), wherein the state took responsibility for running the New Orleans schools tagged as failing at the end of the last testing period before Hurricane Katrina. Background to the crisis of New Orleans public education is provided, & the US government's Katrina response is compared to certain of its actions in Iraq, highlighting problems engendered by the ideological conviction that the private sector outperforms the public sector. How a market-based approach was applied to the New Orleans public education crisis is explained, identifying the problem with market-driven education as chiefly one of unequal market access. The arrival of the RSD in the wake of Katrina & the struggling market-based charter school experiment is then discussed, highlighting problems stemming from the lack of administrative leadership. The current state of the New Orleans education system is described, giving attention to the arrival of Paul Vallas from the Philadelphia, PA, school system to take over RSD. D. Edelman
In: Dissent: a quarterly of politics and culture, Band 54, Heft 3, S. 44-51
ISSN: 1946-0910
When hurricane Katrina (or, more accurately, the failure of the levees) washed away the New Orleans Public Schools (NOPS) at the end of August 2005, there was relief in many quarters. Within days of the storm, the acting public school superintendent, Ora Watson, declared that the "fiscal crisis of the New Orleans Public Schools" was now over. In hastily assembled meetings, members of the State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE), state and local politicians, and leaders of the state's education bureaucracy convened to examine the situation. Representatives of the charter school movement, as well as providers of ancillary education services and materials, also convened. The chance to recreate public education in New Orleans from the ground up was an irresistible consequence of Katrina, as well as a dream come true. Before the first waves of refugees began returning to the drowned city, these newly energized social engineers had decided that no public school would reopen (though public schools did open relatively quickly in the neighboring parishes of Jefferson and St. Bernard); that all 7,500 employees of the system (the majority of them teachers) would be terminated; and that whatever schools did open would be charter schools, operating under the aegis of either BESE or NOPS, depending on the type or timing of the charter application.
In: Spencer , S 2021 , ' Out of the classroom : 'informal' education and histories of education: History of Education Society presidential address, November 2019 ' , History of Education , vol. 50 , no. 4 , pp. 468-484 . https://doi.org/10.1080/0046760X.2021.1900407
Historians of education are well placed to engage in applied historical approaches providing authoritative evidence of the past to inform policy and practice. This article is based on the presidential keynote delivered at the History of Education Society (UK) annual conference in 2019. As such it reflects on possible future directions for the history of education and considers the role of informal educational activity that takes place outside the classroom, including that of children's reading for pleasure. Stories in the interwar British, Canadian and Australian Girl's and Boy's annuals provide an example of how appropriate gender roles were presented to their young readers at a time of intense social and political change for Britain. With Brexit heralding a similar significant moment of change and the pandemic lockdowns resulting in children spending more time at home, it is concluded that the significance of 'informal' education, both historically and today, requires our attention.
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In: Dissent: a journal devoted to radical ideas and the values of socialism and democracy, S. 44-51
ISSN: 0012-3846