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Melaville, Atelia I.; Blank, Martin J. – 1991
Real progress toward large-scale comprehensive service delivery to children and their families is possible only when community agencies move beyond cooperation to genuinely collaborative ventures at both the service delivery and system level. The following factors that affect the success of collaborative efforts were developed from an analysis of…
Descriptors: Agency Cooperation, Child Welfare, Comprehensive Programs, Cooperative Planning
Miedema, Rients; And Others – 1981
This description of a project in the Netherlands concentrates on the progress made by participating schools since 1974, inhibiting and success factors, and the outlook for the future. The MAVO project provides secondary students with training for administrative functions. One of the characteristics of the program is that it provides a three-year…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Comprehensive Programs, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
Persons, Edgar A. – 1980
Adult education in agriculture is not restricted to persons established in farming, but has the prospect of being applicable to the whole of the agricultural industry. However, adult education has primarily been for young and adult farmers. Since 1965, in both agriculture and all vocational programs, there has been a reduction in the proportion of…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Farmer Education, Agricultural Education, Agricultural Production
Kallos, Daniel; Lundgren, Ulf P. – 1976
In this presentation, the authors attempt to approach the field of curriculum theory, development, innovation, and planning from the perspective of the basic principles of pedagogics. The authors use Sweden's development of a comprehensive school system as a case study of curriculum planning and development. This case study serves as an…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Comprehensive Programs, Curriculum Development, Curriculum Research
Admiral Peary Area Vocational-Technical School, Ebensburg, PA. – 1975
The report covers the second year of a three-year project to develop a career education continuum for grades K-14 in participating Pennsylvania school districts. Emphasis was on dissemination procedures to schools for the major project components: curriculum infusion for grades 1-8, Singer Carrels exploratory component for grades 6-8, career…
Descriptors: Career Awareness, Career Development, Career Education, Career Exploration
Marvin, Michael D.; Ferderbar, Joseph – 1974
This report discusses the results of a five-year effort to develop a comprehensive planning process that would enable school districts to initiate and maintain a self-sustaining planning capability. In addition to examining the general principles and procedures of the comprehensive planning approach to school district planning, the author…
Descriptors: Comprehensive Programs, Curriculum Development, Educational Objectives, Educational Planning
Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare. – 1971
This document presents Part Two (pages 433-672) of the joint hearings held May 25 and 26, 1971 before two subcommittees of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare. The hearings were designed to ammend the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 to provide for a comprehensive child development program in the department of Health, Education and Welfare…
Descriptors: Budgets, Child Development, Child Welfare, Community Role
Bragstad, M. Bernice – 1971
The primary function of the reading consultant is to work with teachers in effecting change in attitude, method, and curriculum so that all students move toward their full potential in learning. To accomplish this function, the consultant can assist teachers in several ways. First, he can help teachers conceive of reading as a thinking process…
Descriptors: Comprehensive Programs, Content Area Reading, Corrective Reading, Reading Consultants
Millard, Richard M. – 1972
This speech emphasizes the thesis that the major function of education should be to prepare students for a vocation. Some implications for community colleges are: (1) the need for comprehensiveness, including communication and cooperation with high schools and 4-year colleges; (2) the need for statewide planning, clear identification of…
Descriptors: Career Education, Career Guidance, College Role, Comprehensive Programs
Petersen, Judy – 2002
When the State of Utah implemented a comprehensive guidance program, it began with a state-sponsored training of school guidance teams. Successfully identifying and displacing non-guidance activities (NGAs) in the comprehensive guidance program was a complicated process and was dependent upon communication and building positive relationships with…
Descriptors: Comprehensive Guidance, Comprehensive Programs, Efficiency, Elementary Secondary Education
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
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Whittaker, David J. – Comparative Education, 1983
Overviews Finnish schools before 1970 and highlights subsequent reforms. Groups reform problems under four headings: conceptual, attitudinal, administrative, and geographical. (BRR)
Descriptors: Administrative Problems, Comparative Education, Comprehensive Programs, Educational Change
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Randolph, Linda – Social Policy, 1994
The report by the Carnegie Corporation of New York, "Starting Points: Meeting the Needs of Our Youngest Children," presents a comprehensive strategy for child well-being. Parent education and universal health coverage are but two aspects of an approach that considers the needs of all families. (SLD)
Descriptors: Child Health, Childhood Needs, Children, Comprehensive Programs
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Setran, David P. – History of Education Quarterly, 2005
In the early twentieth century, many American educators pinned their hopes for a revitalized nation on the character education of "youth," especially adolescent boys. Although the emphasis on student morality was far from novel--nineteenth-century common and secondary schools operated as bastions of Protestant republican virtue--new perceptions of…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Democracy, Values Education, High School Students
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Erickson, Cecelia DuPlessis; Splett, Patricia L.; Mullett, Sara Stoltzfus; Heiman, Mary Bielski – Journal of School Nursing, 2006
A significant number of children have chronic health conditions that interfere with normal activities, including school attendance and active participation in the learning process. Management of students' chronic conditions is complex and requires an integrated system. Models to improve chronic disease management have been developed for the…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Public Health, Diseases, Attendance
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