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Heins, Marilyn; And Others – Journal of Medical Education, 1984
A survey of medical, law, and chemistry and psychology graduate students' perceived stresses (academic activities, personal relationships, time pressures, and financial concerns) contradicted the expectation that medical students' stress level would be highest. Time restrictions and economic and academic issues produced the highest stress. (MSE)
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Anxiety, Chemistry, Comparative Analysis
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Scarlett, Melvin G. – College and University, 1984
Admissions officers and registrars will have greater opportunities for institutional leadership because of the institution-wide scope of their work, the importance of recruiting and retaining students, and the growth of external responsiblities among other administrators. These officers should increase their professional development efforts in the…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Admissions Officers, College Admission, College Role
Dickeson, Robert C. – Lumina Foundation for Education, 2004
One of the most critical issues affecting higher education access today is the rising cost of going to college. Symptoms of the trend include dramatic increases in tuition and fees, reduced state higher education budgets, declines in the purchasing power of student grant aid, increasing student debt burdens and heightened demand for institutional…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Higher Education, Educational Finance, Funding Formulas
Smyth, John, Ed. – 1995
This collection of papers examines what academics do as a work process and how that is changing dramatically with the fiscal crises being experienced by most governments around the world. It explores how academic work is organized, how it is enacted, in whose interests, and with what ultimate effects. Papers include: "Markets in Higher…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, College Administration, College Faculty, College Instruction
2003
In Ontario, nearly half of the elementary schools have fewer than 300 students, and one quarter of the high schools have fewer than 600 students. However, the province's funding formula was designed for larger schools. Small schools in Ontario are operating without adequate staff and resources and are at risk of being closed. Since 1999, 192…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Elementary Schools, Elementary Secondary Education, Enrollment
Tollefson, Terrence A. – 1997
This paper examines the financial problems of California's community colleges caused by reduced local property tax support. In 1978 California voters enacted Proposition 13, a constitutional amendment that reduced taxes on real estate. The proposition's immediate effect on community college funding was a statewide, fifty-percent reduction in local…
Descriptors: College Transfer Students, Community Colleges, Educational Finance, Enrollment
Nussbaum, Thomas J.; Cabaldon, Christopher L. – 1999
This document discusses the principles that guide the development of the contingent funding methods and the implementation criteria for the Partnership for Excellence Program, as well as significant issues and questions for the system to resolve. The first principle states that the level and pace of progress toward the Partnership goals are not…
Descriptors: Accountability, Community Colleges, Educational Finance, Educational Planning
Ream, James A. – CASE Currents, 1981
After two decades of increase, state funding for higher education is drying up because of inflation and declining state revenues due to recession. States need to reemphasize the importance of higher education. Political action may be the way to reverse the downward trend in state financing of higher education. (MLW)
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Federal Aid, Financial Problems, Financial Support
Wood, R. Craig, Jr.; And Others – School Business Affairs, 1989
Summarizes responses from 263 districts from 37 states drawn from a sample of districts with student enrollment of less than 800. The study found there is an overwhelming inability of local districts to fund capital outlay at levels needed to keep their buildings adequate, safe, and accessible. (MLF)
Descriptors: Capital Outlay (for Fixed Assets), Educational Facilities Improvement, Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education
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Cabrera, Alberto F.; And Others – Research in Higher Education, 1992
A survey of 466 students in a large, urban commuter college investigated the relationship of student finances to academic persistence. Results suggest that financial aid (1) equalizes opportunities for students, thus decreasing attractiveness of alternatives, (2) facilitates academic and social integration, and (3) increases student commitment to…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Access to Education, College Students, Financial Problems
Izumi, Ronald – AGB Reports, 1992
Widespread efforts by colleges and universities to reduce expenses and raise revenues can increase the institution's exposure to risk. Common risks arise from neglect of physical plant, government regulation, financial burdens, campus security and crime, sexual harassment, third-party contracts, staff reduction, failure to educate, and…
Descriptors: College Administration, Contracts, Crime, Economically Disadvantaged
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Kimmey, James R. – CUPA Journal, 1994
A discussion of the implications of health care reform for academic health centers (a complex of institutions which educate health professionals) looks at problems in the current system, the role of academic health centers in the current system, financial pressures, revenue sources other than patient care, impact on health research, and human…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Change Strategies, College Administration, Educational Finance
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Wallace, Thomas P. – Educational Record, 1993
Inadequate financial support for higher education is not due to a poor economy or lack of tax dollars, but to the low priority given to higher education by state legislatures. The issue at state and institutional levels is not low or high tuition but finding a planning model that integrates tuition income, tax support, and student aid. (MSE)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Economic Climate, Educational Finance, Financial Problems
Goldstein, Amy – School Administrator, 1992
Stress accompanies most superintendencies, but how much strain a superintendent experiences hinges on personality traits and coping ability. Superintendents are pressured by innercity work environments, changing demographics, tightening finances, confrontational school boards, and dissatisfied constituents. For some, the answer is early…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Coping, Early Retirement, Elementary Secondary Education
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Kerlin, Scott P.; Dunlap, Diane M. – Journal of Higher Education, 1993
A case study of faculty morale at the University of Oregon as an example of a university experiencing an extended period of fiscal austerity found faculty morale, collegiality, and allegiance have been negatively affected by the inadequacy of financial resources; a history of chronic neglect by the Oregon legislature; and inequities among academic…
Descriptors: Case Studies, College Faculty, Compensation (Remuneration), Employer Employee Relationship
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