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Gieseke, Ludwig; Eilsberger, Rupert – 1977
Comprehensive universities, which came into existence in the Federal Republic of Germany in 1970, combine the aims of a number of traditional types of institutions of higher education, particularly universities, colleges of education, and higher vocational and technical colleges. The development of the concept of the comprehensive university and…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Comparative Education, Comprehensive Programs, Decentralization
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Husen, Torsten – Comparative Education, 1989
Reviews educational changes in Sweden since the 1962 Education Act, which expanded educational opportunities through introduction of comprehensive schools. Discusses the effects of Swedish reforms on educational policy debates in Great Britain and West Germany and on comparative education research in Europe and the United States. Contains 32…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Comprehensive Programs, Educational Change, Educational History
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Kamens, David H.; And Others – Comparative Education Review, 1996
Analyzes approximately 500 published curricular timetables for upper secondary, college preparatory programs from over 100 countries, 1920-89. Virtually all timetables analyzed fell into four categories--classical, mathematics and science, arts and humanities, and comprehensive--consistent between countries and over time. Much programmatic change…
Descriptors: College Preparation, Comparative Education, Comprehensive Programs, Educational Policy
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Rusak, S. T. – Comparative Education, 1977
In both Sweden and Ontario the attempt to create a comprehensive school system, during the 1960s especially at the secondary level, was the occasion for disputes between the governments and their respective opponents. Asks some relevant questions in studying the movement toward comprehensivization. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Comprehensive Programs, Educational Administration, Educational Change