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Showing 1 to 15 of 81 results Save | Export
English, Fenwick W.; Hill, John C. – 1990
Different groups have different ideas about how schools should be restructured. Although decision-making and control are increasingly shared with other groups, the principal remains most accountable. Innovative leadership styles, such as the inhouse critic and the master generalist, address issues of curriculum totality, function, and goals.…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational Innovation
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Reid, P. Nelson; Peebles-Wilkins, Wilma – Journal of Social Work Education, 1991
A discussion of the relevance of the liberal arts to social work education examines the "content" and "perspective" controversies. Social work is seen as applied human values, therefore intertwined with the liberal arts. It is proposed that social work education recast and strengthen its relationship with the liberal arts. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Higher Education, Humanistic Education, Liberal Arts
Saveland, Robert – Curriculum Review, 1987
Discusses problems with existing social studies curriculum, including the dichotomy between in-depth studies and coverage studies, lack of correlation with other fields of instruction, and uncertainty about the appropriate sequential development of concepts. A master plan for social studies curriculum, focusing on grades five through eight, is…
Descriptors: Area Studies, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Guidelines
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Howe, Irving – Liberal Education, 1991
The past is the substance from which the present is formed, but college curricula based on this cultural heritage need not exclude the present. Major classical writers and social thinkers must be central to it but should be accompanied by critical engagement with living texts from powerful and active minds. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classical Literature, College Curriculum, Cultural Pluralism, Curriculum Design
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Woiceshyn, Jaana – Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 1992
It is argued that empiricism and pragmatism in business administration education and its curriculum are to blame for deficiencies in leadership, decision making, and ethical conduct among business managers and that supplementing the business curriculum with humanities courses is insufficient. An objective philosophical approach is proposed as an…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Curriculum Design, Educational Philosophy, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Takaki, Ronald – Liberal Education, 1991
Higher education can resist the need to open the U.S. mind to greater cultural diversity by ignoring the changing ethnic composition of student bodies and larger society, or realize this opportunity to revitalize the social sciences and humanities with a new sense of purpose and more inclusive definition of knowledge. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Core Curriculum, Cultural Pluralism, Curriculum Design
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Hardy, I. Trotter – Journal of Legal Education, 1991
Response to criticism of law students' legal research skills makes three observations: (1) the legal research curriculum may be adequate already; (2) the faculty reward structure favors research and works against teaching; and (3) law school administrators will not change the legal research curriculum until they feel pressure to do so. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Educational Quality
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Soper, Mary Ellen – Cataloging and Classification Quarterly, 1987
This discussion of the inclusion of descriptive cataloging as part of library education describes the descriptive cataloging segment of the curriculum at the University of Washington, including the sequence of courses and the content and objectives of each course. (CLB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cataloging, Course Content, Course Objectives
English, Fenwick W. – Spectrum, 1986
Three approaches to defining curriculum balance are examined: the imposed "a priori" model, the social utility model, and the phenomenological model. Contends that the current social utilitarian approaches to reform the school curriculum may produce an unbalanced curriculum that ignores the socialization process and aesthetic qualities.…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Athletics, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development
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VanTassel-Baska, Joyce – Educational Leadership, 1989
Educators can provide sound interventions for gifted students if they carefully consider their special needs, based on their characteristics. The learning needs of gifted students are delineated, based on their characteristics, and curriculum implications are derived. (TE)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education
Sudermann, David P. – 1992
This paper addresses the issue of defining the concept of core curriculum by first examining some of the literature on the subject, discussing why there is resistance to defining "core," citing common uses for the term "core curriculum," and exploring the historical roots of core curriculum. Next, the paper describes eight…
Descriptors: Background, College Curriculum, College Instruction, Core Curriculum
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Lisensky, Robert P. – New Directions for Higher Education, 1993
The current discipline-based organizational structure of the college curriculum in which general education is treated as an isolated learning experience should be replaced with a more integrated curriculum. In addition, general education should take different forms in institutions with different missions. Such a curriculum redesign could help…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, College Administration, College Curriculum, Costs
Hubbard, Dean L. – AGB Reports, 1990
Until governing boards take a more proactive stance regarding their institution's general education program, critics are likely to continue to question the quality of American higher education. Because of campus politics, it can be difficult for administrators to lead a movement toward curricular change without persistent board support.…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Educational Quality, General Education, Governance
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Willinsky, John – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1992
Discusses the issues of a curriculum of literacy in Canada. Describes the influence of educational trends in the United States and Great Britain. Suggests that the literacy problem is not such a crisis as the media makes it appear. Urges a union of educational and scholarly concerns, building on lessons of history and theory. (DK)
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Curriculum Design, Educational History, Educational Trends
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Koch-Priewe, Barbara – Zeitschrift fur Padagogik, 1991
Argues that equal educational opportunity has never been realized nationally or internationally. Suggests that the degree of selection is higher in Germany and other German-speaking countries than elsewhere. Concludes that exceptional curricular and structural factors in Bielefeld's experimental Oberstufen-Kolleg helped achieve equal educational…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Curriculum Design, Educational Change, Educational Discrimination
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