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Peer reviewedBeloin, Kim; Peterson, Michael – International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 2000
This article describes a framework for building more inclusive, effective, and successful schools in poor rural and urban communities called "Whole Schooling". Multiple barriers to inclusive schools are identified, the commonalties and differences between poor rural and urban schools are explored, and specific strategies for utilizing available…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Change, Educational Strategies
Peer reviewedLayzell, Daniel T. – European Journal of Education, 1998
Discussion of funding for public colleges and universities in the United States looks at different mechanisms for measuring institutional performance, recent experiences with performance indicators for purposes of funding and the pitfalls and limitations of their use, the current status of performance-based funding in public colleges, and…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Evaluation Criteria, Higher Education, Institutional Evaluation
Peer reviewedWest, Michael; Revell, Grant; Wehman, Paul – Education and Training in Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, 1998
Reports findings from a national survey of 385 day support providers regarding conversion of resources from segregated services to supported employment. Approximately 23% of all agencies and 37% of agencies with both facility-based programs and supported employment indicate that they had converted resources to community-based employment.…
Descriptors: Adults, Community Programs, Delivery Systems, Disabilities
Peer reviewedGoertz, Margaret E.; Hess, G. Alfred, Jr. – Journal of Education Finance, 1998
Uses data from four cities (Chicago, Fort Worth, New York, and Rochester) to explore schools' budgetary and personnel discretion under school-based budgeting; how resource-allocation decisions are made; and factors influencing expenditure decisions. A school-based-budgeting process may increase stakeholder involvement and satisfaction without…
Descriptors: Accountability, Budgets, Decentralization, Educational Equity (Finance)
Mangan, Katherine S. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1998
Increasingly, professional schools are addressing the issue of whether a financially successful program has a responsibility to support other, less financially successful programs, and how university fund raisers can assure donors that their gifts will benefit specific programs and not be siphoned into others. Law and business schools, often…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Donors, Financial Problems, Fund Raising
Goldhaber, Dan D.; Brewer, Dominic J. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1998
Although most public-school teachers have undergraduate degrees, only 68% to 76% possess at least a bachelor's degree in their area. Do advanced degrees enhance teacher productivity? A recent study of 8th- and 10th-graders' math and science achievement suggest that only advanced degrees specific to the subjects taught should be rewarded. (12…
Descriptors: Bachelors Degrees, Educational Attainment, Grade 10, Grade 8
Pulley, John L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2001
Contrasts the reactions of Swarthmore College and Pennsylvania State University as the endowments at both institutions topped the billion dollar mark in 2000. Swarthmore uses its endowment to assure that financial need is never considered in admissions decisions, but does not touch the principal. At Pennsylvania State, tuition is more affordable,…
Descriptors: Donors, Educational Finance, Endowment Funds, Higher Education
McNair, Stephen – Adults Learning (England), 1996
Issues in funding adult higher education in Britain include (1) complexity of methodology; (2) discrimination against part-time study; (3) reward for teaching quality; (4) need for guidance services; (5) resources for innovation; (6) funding for noncredit programs; and (7) open and flexible delivery. A funding model based on input, process, and…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Adult Education, Educational Finance, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedBanta, Trudy W.; And Others – Journal of Higher Education, 1996
A survey of 23 college and university coordinators who conduct assessment activities and report findings in connection with Tennessee's 15-year performance funding initiative reveals strengths and weaknesses associated with 10 indicators of institutional performance. Reasons for the program's longevity, designed to serve accountability and…
Descriptors: Accountability, College Administration, College Outcomes Assessment, Educational Improvement
Peer reviewedSalkever, D. S.; Domino, M. E. – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 1996
Visually impaired persons (n=871) with developmental disabilities, in 42 states, were surveyed to determine effects of separate state blindness-specific vocational rehabilitation agencies on the receipt of services. Results suggest that clients in states with specialized agencies were less likely to receive services, except when the agency in…
Descriptors: Accessibility (for Disabled), Adults, Delivery Systems, Developmental Disabilities
Lookatch, Richard P. – School Administrator, 1996
Educational media offer no unique benefits. Once research considers lesson content, instructional strategies, and overall resource allocation, student outcome differences will disappear. The multimedia "panacea" is no equalizer, as accessibility problems abound. Schools should invest in cheaper, less fashionable instructional strategies (field…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Computer Assisted Instruction, Educational Benefits, Educational Technology
Peer reviewedGarnett, Norma A. – Hispania, 1996
Discusses the need to start second-language learning in the primary grades and the budget constraints impeding implementation of early second-language education. The article advocates using the young children themselves to persuade school administrators and parents to support the teaching of second-language courses in the primary grades. (CK)
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Child Language, Class Activities, Consciousness Raising
Peer reviewedMora, Jose-Gines; And Others – Higher Education, 1995
A discussion of new financing models for Spain's public universities first looks at recent institutional changes; the evolution of the university system over the last decade in terms of student, financial, and human resources; its situation within the international context; student demand; graduate output; and labor market demand for graduates.…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Demand, Educational Finance, Financial Support
Peer reviewedWagner, Alan – Higher Education Management, 1996
New methods of financing higher education used in Australia, the United States, and the United Kingdom are summarized and compared. The paper concludes that while these approaches are designed to improve efficiency, realize specific outcomes, and leverage additional funds from other sources, they may have unanticipated, unintended, and, in some…
Descriptors: College Administration, Comparative Analysis, Educational Economics, Educational Finance
Peer reviewedYocom, Dorothy Jean; Beglau, Monica – Rural Special Education Quarterly, 1996
A survey of 34 Wyoming rural school districts examined how they make decisions regarding the allocation of resources for special education, particularly size of caseloads of special educators. In districts using only one service delivery model, the type of service delivery selected by the district appears to have the greatest impact on resource…
Descriptors: Delivery Systems, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Disabilities, Resource Allocation


