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Peer reviewedSilverman, Morton M.; Felner, Robert D. – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 1995
Focusing on emerging models of population-level risk reduction, the authors discuss the essential ingredients for successful suicide prevention programs: comprehensiveness, fidelity, and intensity. Issues of feasibility, access, and effectiveness are discussed. The authors argue for nesting suicide prevention programs within existing public health…
Descriptors: Crisis Intervention, Higher Education, Population Trends, Prevention
Cook, Rena – Teaching Theatre, 1995
Defines five elements needed in the construction of a sound theater program: curriculum, artistic quality, program participation, community and parental support, and administrative and faculty recognition. Discusses the importance of these elements. Concludes that, although implementing this program takes time, the effort is worth it. (PA)
Descriptors: Curriculum, High Schools, Parent Participation, Program Development
Peer reviewedAllred, Susan G.; Holliday, Terry K. – NASSP Bulletin, 1995
A South Carolina high school received a three-year, $90,000 state grant to study a brain-based approach to helping students reach their full potential. Examination of faculty teaching styles and student learning styles revealed that only high achievers' learning styles matched their teachers' fact-based approaches. New programs and technologies…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Cognitive Style, Educational Change, High Schools
Peer reviewedSpurway, Maggie – Nurse Education Today, 1995
Describes a continuing education module that addresses care in the community, influences on patients' experience, current social policy, and the role of the carer. The module is designed to help trained nurses integrate patient care from hospital to community setting. (SK)
Descriptors: Community Health Services, Continuing Education, Nursing Education, Primary Health Care
Peer reviewedGlass, J. Conrad, Jr. – Educational Gerontology, 1995
Outlines development of the university-based Encore program of lifelong enrichment for older adults who pay an annual membership fee for participation in activities related to environmental literacy, state/national/international issues, arts and sciences, personal development, and health and fitness. An administrative champion and volunteers are…
Descriptors: Adult Education, College Programs, Higher Education, Lifelong Learning
Peer reviewedGarmston, Robert J. – Journal of Staff Development, 1995
Four actions are necessary when contracting to do staff development: recognize that a presenter is a consultant first, arrange for a group contracting conversation in order to completely understand the school's needs, work from a standard set of design questions, and work from a standard set of logistics questions. (SM)
Descriptors: Consultants, Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Development, Program Development
Peer reviewedYang, Raymond K.; And Others – Journal of Extension, 1995
To overcome agent resistance to issues-based programming, an extension service used a stakeholder task force to identify critical issues. A survey was constructed and conducted with a sample population to verify the importance of the issues for program development. (SK)
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Extension Agents, Extension Education, Program Development
Hiebert, Bryan – Canadian Journal of Counselling, 1992
Documents background events giving rise to Creation and Mobilization of Counselling Resources for Youth (CAMCRY), Canadian national initiative directed at effecting improvement in career counseling to enable more youth to enter labor market without serious difficulty. Highlights novel and collaborative aspects of the initiative. Notes there are 41…
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Counseling, Foreign Countries, History
Peer reviewedCourtenay, Bradley C. – Adult Learning, 1993
Focuses on the differences in managing in private and public organizations. Discusses those factors that affect management in adult education organizations. (Author)
Descriptors: Administration, Adult Education, Part Time Faculty, Private Agencies
Peer reviewedFlannery, Daniele D. – Community Education Journal, 1992
Community agencies must first understand the cultures for which they are programing, critique their current endeavors for learning style and point of view, and plan for inclusion of the culture(s) of their constituencies. (SK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Community Organizations, Cultural Differences, Intercultural Communication
Peer reviewedWaldo, Mark L. – WPA: Writing Program Administration, 1993
Discusses why writing centers are the best "home" for writing across the curriculum. Suggests that writing centers (1) provide a definable space for expertise, with identifiable goals and services; (2) encourage the dialogue between diverse rhetorical communities; and (3) offer a rhetorically neutral ground on which to carry out the program. (RS)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Program Development, Program Implementation, Writing Across the Curriculum
Peer reviewedSpicker, Howard H. – Educational Horizons, 1992
Standardized intelligence and achievement tests fail to identify gifted rural children because of a bias toward urban acculturation. In rural Indiana, Project SPRING identified 105 fourth and fifth grade disadvantaged gifted children and provided nontraditional learning experiences and enrichment activities to develop their talents. (SK)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Children, Disadvantaged Youth, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedShillington, Nancie M. – Middle School Journal, 1994
Middle-level instructional teams promote feelings of belonging and enhance student academic and social growth, teacher job satisfaction, mission clarity, and instructional program strength. A survey of Ohio middle-school teachers and principals disclosed four components promoting successful team development: including all participants in teamwork…
Descriptors: Intermediate Grades, Middle Schools, Models, Principals
Avellar-Fleming, Cyda – Executive Educator, 1994
Schools need clear, consistent, and equitable disciplinary practices. A Louisiana parochial school developed an effective discipline policy by assembling faculty and staff into natural work teams, appointing team leaders, having each group list and classify troublesome disciplinary problems, studying the school mission statement, developing…
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, Elementary Education, Parochial Schools, Policy Formation
McCarthy, Danny; Suggs, Del – Campus Activities Programming, 1993
Campus activities programers are encouraged to use creativity and to experiment in incorporating solo, or easily produced, acts into campus events. Ideas include using solo acts as openers or as part of larger special or traditional events. A sample campus survey, designed to discover campus preferences, is included. (MSE)
Descriptors: Extracurricular Activities, Higher Education, Planning, Production Techniques


