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Peer reviewedMosley, Michael – Impact of Science on Society, 1988
Describes the work behind one successful popular science program which does not trivialize the image of science. Discusses areas including science and broadcasting, one of the longest running science and technology programs on television, the mass media and health, and media fellowships for scientists. (RT)
Descriptors: College Science, Films, Foreign Countries, Futures (of Society)
Gibbons, John H.; And Others – Scientific American, 1989
Discusses the efficient use of energy. Compares reserves and pollutants generated by natural gas, oil, and coal. Points out some alternative energy sources and ways for improving energy efficiency in buildings, industrial processes, and transportation. Describes some problems in developing and developed countries. (YP)
Descriptors: Alternative Energy Sources, Building Operation, Developed Nations, Developing Nations
Peer reviewedHamilton, Scott B.; And Others – Journal of Social Psychology, 1988
Compares the extent to which adolescents worry about nuclear war to their frequency of worry about other issues. Looks at the empirical relationships among worry and grade level, gender, trait emotionality, and drug use. Results indicate that adolescents worry more often about school performance and social interactions than about nuclear war.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Affective Behavior, Age Differences, Anxiety
Peer reviewedSimmons, Deborah – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 1995
Maintains that the United States needs an environmentally literate citizenry capable of taking individual action and making informed public policy decisions. Asserts that environmental education is interdisciplinary and draws from the social studies, the sciences, language arts, and the fine arts. (CFR)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Elementary Education, Environment
Peer reviewedLeigh, James E.; And Others – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1995
Special education teachers (n=407) were surveyed regarding coverage of 45 controversial or sensitive topics in their instruction of students with learning disabilities, mental retardation, or behavior disorders. Topical issues were addressed only to a very limited extent, but were addressed more with students having behavioral disorders and at the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Behavior Disorders, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Course Content
Peer reviewedHarris, Rosalind W. – Social Education, 1994
Describes the history and role of nongovernmental organizations within the United Nations structure. Discusses how the United Nations Economic and Social Council has recognized more than 1,000 organizations as consultants in its work to improve economic and social conditions throughout the world. (CFR)
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Futures (of Society)
Peer reviewedDoane, Catherine – Educational Leadership, 1993
Suburban Chicago middle school teachers designed a month-long unit to foster global education, guided by research on integrated, self-selected, and collaborative learning strategies. Teachers initiated brainstorming activities, grouped students by interest, and demonstrated how to be investigative researchers, informative writers, effective…
Descriptors: Brainstorming, Cooperative Learning, Curriculum Development, Global Approach
Peer reviewedRiechard, Donald E.; Peterson, Sandra J. – Journal of Environmental Education, 1998
Examines how students' perception of risk for 20 environmental hazards are related to gender, community socioeconomic setting, age, and locus of control. The sample was drawn from a large metropolitan area in the southeast. Females had significantly higher risk-perception scores than males. Participants with an internal locus of control posted the…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education, Environmental Education
Peer reviewedGreene, Alanda – Green Teacher, 1998
This activity allows students to explore the gray areas that lie between polar opposites on an issue. Recognizes the knowledge, opinions, and values supporting various positions that emerge as current positions and discusses the reasons for choosing them. Learning to be flexible and open is the goal of this activity. (PVD)
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Consciousness Raising, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedHodgkinson, Christopher – Journal of Educational Administration and Foundations, 2000
The values of the short-term future are implicit: an unholy Apollonian-Dionysian mix of rationalistic, legalistic, bureaucratic, scientific pragmatics, and a reactive, postmodern, relativistic, hedonistic, narcissistic, materialistic nihilism. For education, this might imply a skew toward the digital, the mathematical, the marketable, and the…
Descriptors: Bureaucracy, Capitalism, Elementary Secondary Education, Environment
Peer reviewedBajah, Sam Tunde – Science Education International, 1999
Discusses the role of science education in light of the needs of developing countries. Presents the Early Learning Science Series for Africa (ELSSA) project as an example of a developing country's attempt to produce students who are scientifically and technologically literate. (WRM)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Educational Change, Educational Improvement, Elementary Secondary Education
John Daniel; And Others – 1993
The ten essays in this book examine issues related to academic freedom and university autonomy. Chapter 1 serves as an introduction, providing an overview of the situation in universities worldwide, including national and international initiatives to promote academic freedom. It also discusses the role of the World University Service in this…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Censorship, Civil Liberties, College Environment
US Agency for International Development, 2009
The Doorways training program was designed by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)-funded Safe Schools Program (Safe Schools) to enable teachers, community members and students to prevent and respond to school-related gender-based violence (SRGBV). Teachers can play a central role in violence prevention, and they can also help…
Descriptors: Program Evaluation, Prevention, Faculty Development, Reference Materials
Ornstein, Allan – Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2007
Class differences and class warfare have existed since the beginning of western civilization, but the gap in income and wealth between the rich (top 10 percent) and the rest has increased steadily in the last twenty-five years. The U.S. is heading for a financial oligarchy much worse than the aristocratic old world that our Founding Fathers feared…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Democratic Values, Western Civilization, United States History
Gruenewald, David – Appalachian Collaborative Center for Learning, Assessment, and Instruction in Mathematics (ACCLAIM), 2006
In quoting Ivan Illich's observation that "people who have been schooled down to size let unmeasured experience slip out of their hands," the author of this article contends that this is what is happening in education --- that we are being assimilated and schooled "down to size." Unmeasured experience, he says, is slipping out of our hands as a…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Educational Research, Mathematics Teachers, Instructional Effectiveness

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