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Showing 1 to 15 of 18 results Save | Export
LaPlante, Arlene; Stearns, Roman – ConnectEd: The California Center for College and Career, 2010
This rubric was created to help pathway teams as they work together to develop and improve a comprehensive program of study. Specifically, the rubric can serve as a tool for: (1) Visioning; (2) Self-assessment; (3) Planning; and (4) Quality review. ConnectEd designed this rubric to be used in coordination with the Certification Criteria for Linked…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Comprehensive Programs, Information Technology, Certification
Guilinger, Jim – VocEd, 1982
In Sycamore, Illinois, preparing students for work in the agriculture-dominated economy is a natural part of education. The quality of the vocational program is determined by the level of involvement of those outside the agriculture department and in the community. (SK)
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, Comprehensive Programs, Educational Cooperation, High Schools
Shane, Catherine McKenzie; Shane, Harold G. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1979
Reports on the United Kingdom's experience with comprehensive secondary education as a method of providing equal educational opportunity. Concludes that the trend toward compulsory equality, as represented by the comprehensive secondary school seems irreversible. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Comprehensive Programs, Equal Education, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Monson, Robert J. – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
The "one-size-fits-all" approach to teaching and program delivery is indefensible. Minnesota has enacted a law specifying standards of knowledge and skills that high school students must demonstrate to qualify for a diploma via multiple pathways. All pathway programs (classical, postsecondary, interactive-technology evening school,…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Comprehensive Programs, Delivery Systems, Demonstration Programs
Finch, Andrew – Forum for the Discussion of New Trends in Education, 1981
From his 20 years experience in modeling a comprehensive school according to genuinely comprehensive principles, the author gives a considered statement of his objectives and experiences. (This article is part of a theme issue on comprehensive education in Britain.) (Editor/SJL)
Descriptors: Comprehensive Programs, Curriculum, Educational Principles, Grouping (Instructional Purposes)
Smith, Thomas J. – National High School Center, 2007
This "snapshot" illustrates how one school is managing to make a positive difference for ninth graders. It describes the Ninth Grade Success Academy, a school-within-a-school at Thomas A. Edison High School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which has a number of features specifically designed to help ninth-graders make successful…
Descriptors: Grade 9, Transitional Programs, High Schools, High School Students
Chaney, Janice L.; DeGennaro, Alan – Principal Leadership, 2005
Winters Mill High School is a typical comprehensive high school in most respects. Situated within the city of Westminster, Maryland, the school opened its doors to students in grades 9 and 10 in the fall of 2002. Historically, the Westminster area has had an agrarian culture that has coexisted comfortably with merchants and the McDaniel College…
Descriptors: Career Development, High Schools, Social Problems, Comprehensive Programs
Wu, Thomas Tain Fung; Tseng, Hsin Jung – Online Submission, 2005
A fundamental ideal of our democratic republic is that every person has some way through which she/he can participate in decisions which directly affect her/him. To some extent, most teachers are able to recognize this ideal in their private lives. It seems logical that this realization would also carry over and prevail in an individual's working…
Descriptors: Comprehensive Programs, Participative Decision Making, Teacher Participation, High Schools
Little, Judith Warren – 1992
This publication analyzes ways in which vocational teachers construct the content and purpose of vocational studies in comprehensive high schools. Data were gathered during a 3-year field study conducted in 5 comprehensive high schools. Findings suggest: (1) schools and teachers accommodate to an "academics first" policy, thereby…
Descriptors: Academic Education, College Bound Students, Comprehensive Programs, High Schools
Richmond Unified School District, CA. – 1990
The Richmond (California) Unified School District's System for Choice allows parents and students to select from a variety of programs designed to satisfy diverse interests and needs. This publication describes offerings at De Anza High School, a Paideia school. De Anza is the only high school in the district that offers Classical Studies, a…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Advanced Courses, Articulation (Education), College Preparation
Works, George A. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1925
This bulletin addresses the topics of agriculture in elementary schools, including the work of boys' and girls' clubs; secondary schools; and collegiate institutions. The development of a six-year elementary school and the growth of junior high schools have contributed to a clarification of the aims of education for these school periods. There has…
Descriptors: Educational Administration, Agricultural Education, Agriculture, Agricultural Colleges
Principal Leadership, 2005
In this age of greater school accountability, some the country's larger comprehensive high schools have lost their allure with the public. Because of significant achievement gaps between White and minority students, many of these schools have been blamed for not meeting the needs of poor and disadvantaged students. Detractors point out that these…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, High Schools, Urban Areas, Minority Groups
Gittman, Elizabeth – 1991
An alternative high school program was evaluated. In 1990 the Program for Alternative Comprehensive Education (PACE) enrolled 40 students in grades 9 through 12 from 20 school districts in Nassau County (New York). Students had been assessed as being at risk for dropping out. The curriculum emphasized self-paced learning in an individualized,…
Descriptors: Administrators, Comprehensive Programs, Dropout Prevention, High Risk Students
Ounce of Prevention Fund. – 1994
This report discusses the role that school health centers can play in providing comprehensive health care and health education services to adolescents and reviews the effectiveness of such health centers in three Chicago high schools. School-based health centers need to stress: (1) high-quality care; (2) parental, school, and community…
Descriptors: Birth Weight, Comprehensive Programs, Disease Incidence, Early Parenthood
Olson, Sharon; Buschjost, Patricia – Principal Leadership, 2006
Loveland (Colorado) High School is a comprehensive high school of approximately 1,500 students located 50 miles north of Denver. Two years ago, Loveland was not making annual yearly progress (AYP) in any subpopulation as required by the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB). The scores of the general population were not much to brag about either.…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Improvement, Test Results, Comprehensive Programs
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