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Holgersson-Shorter, Helena – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2010
However much the recession might be receding, the effects remain deep and cruel to families living in poverty. Many have fallen through their communities' social safety nets. Today, families with young children comprise 41% of the nation's homeless population. According to the Institute of Children and Poverty, more than 1.35 million kids in the…
Descriptors: Poverty, Homeless People, Student Mobility, Social Work
Ozek, Umut – National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research, 2012
How to incorporate mobile students, who enter schools/classrooms after the start of the school year, into educational performance evaluations remains to be a challenge. As mandated by the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB), all states currently require that a school is accountable only if the student has been enrolled in the school for a full…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, Accountability, Eligibility, Enrollment
Hossler, Don; Shapiro, Doug; Dundar, Afet; Ziskin, Mary; Chen, Jin; Zerquera, Desiree; Torres, Vasti – National Student Clearinghouse, 2012
It is widely acknowledged that many postsecondary students no longer follow a traditional path from college entry to degree at a single institution. Increasingly more students attend multiple institutions, transferring once, twice, or even three times before earning a degree. Standard institution-based reporting tends to ignore these students,…
Descriptors: College Transfer Students, Student Mobility, Enrollment, Transfer Rates (College)
Pall, Allan; Xhomaqi, Brikena; Bartolo, Daniela; Palomares, Fernando Miguel Galan; Kaiser, Florian; Charonis, George-Konstantinos; Ufert, Karina; Malnes, Magnus; Simola, Mari; Jasurek, Miroslav; Maljukov, Monika; Vuksanovic, Nevena; Cincyte, Rasa; Santa, Robert; Primozic, Rok; Moisander, Taina – European Students' Union (NJ1), 2012
The Bologna Process is one of the largest endeavours ever undertaken aimed at reforming higher education continent-wide. It has created a framework of measures and policies aiming to foster greater compatibility and comparability of the national systems of higher education across Europe. Despite the impact reforms and change in higher education…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Surveys, Student Attitudes
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Dwenger, Nadja; Storck, Johanna; Wrohlich, Katharina – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Several German states recently introduced tuition fees for university education. We investigate whether these tuition fees influence the mobility of university applicants. Based on administrative data of applicants for medical schools in Germany, we estimate the effect of tuition fees on the probability of applying for a university in the home…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Medical Schools, High School Graduates, Probability
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Dey, Niradhar – European Journal of Higher Education, 2011
Quality assurance (QA) and accreditation in higher education include the systematic management and assessment of procedures to monitor performance and to address areas of improvement. In the context of globalization, without assuring the quality of higher education programmes it is not possible to ensure credit transfer and student mobility, to…
Descriptors: Quality Assurance, Accreditation (Institutions), Evaluation Criteria, Global Approach
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Damian, Radu Mircea – European Education, 2011
This paper describes the development of the Bologna process in Romania. The historical context covers the last years of the communist regime through 1989. From 1990 free elections of university leadership, the foundation of private universities and new democratic legislation, and projects for reforming higher education funded by different sources…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Universities, Quality Control, Foreign Countries
Molony, John – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2011
International learning mobility is a strategic and operational priority for both the federal government and the majority of universities in Australia. Dating back over a decade, successive governments have stressed the public good to be derived from having an increased proportion of students participating in mobility programs. It is seen as…
Descriptors: Program Development, Foreign Countries, Scholarships, Labor Force Development
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Rodriguez Gonzalez, Carlos; Bustillo Mesanza, Ricardo; Mariel, Petr – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2011
The Erasmus Programme for higher education students is supposed to play an important socio-economic role within Europe. Erasmus student mobility flows have reached a relevant level of two million since 1987, boosted in recent years by the enlargement of the programme to eastern countries. Thereafter, it seems that flows have staggered. In this…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Foreign Countries, Student Mobility, Educational Background
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Wang, Lihua; Holland, Tracey – Comparative Education, 2011
Around the world there is a growing consensus that migrant children's rights must be protected, regardless of where they have emigrated from. One of these rights is the right to a public education of equal quality to that granted to non-migrant children regardless of where one's family is registered or pays taxes. This article focuses on migrant…
Descriptors: Migrant Education, Equal Education, Childrens Rights, Migrant Children
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Fong, Anthony B.; Bae, Soung; Huang, Min – Regional Educational Laboratory West, 2010
Using data from an Arizona Department of Education dataset that includes all students enrolled at an Arizona public school at any time during 2004/05-2007/08, this study looks at three types of student mobility: students who transferred between public schools in Arizona, students who had breaks in enrollment of at least 19 days, and students…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Public Schools
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Fong, Anthony B.; Bae, Soung; Huang, Min – Regional Educational Laboratory West, 2010
Using data from an Arizona Department of Education dataset that includes all students enrolled at an Arizona public school at any time during 2004/05-2007/08, this study looks at three types of student mobility: students who transferred between public schools in Arizona, students who had breaks in enrollment of at least 19 days, and students…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Public Schools
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Oketch, Moses; Mutisya, Maurice; Ngware, Moses; Ezeh, Alex C.; Epari, Charles – International Journal of Educational Research, 2010
This paper examines pupil school mobility in urban Kenya using African Population and Health Research Centre (APHRC) household survey data which contain information on pupil transfers between schools. The aim is to identify which school characteristics attract the greatest demand for incoming transfers. The analysis reveals that there are frequent…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Elementary School Students, Slums, Foreign Countries
Holgersson-Shorter, Helena – Teaching Tolerance, 2010
Homeless children can be hard to identify and even harder to help. But teachers can do a great deal to make sure that they do not fall through the cracks. Teachers of highly mobile students must develop the skills to make these children and youth feel welcome while quickly weaving them into classroom routines. They must rapidly assess new…
Descriptors: Homeless People, Student Mobility, Social Work, Teaching Methods
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de Rudder, Helmut – Higher Education Review, 2010
This article does not follow the widespread assumption or even conviction that the Bologna process is the most important reform of higher education in Europe in modern times. Instead it analyses the Bologna process in the context of previous and ongoing programmes, measures and activities by European bodies and national governments aiming at…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Educational Policy, Academic Degrees
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