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Belyakov, Alexander; Cremonini, Leon; Mfusi, Mankolo; Rippner, Jennifer – Institute for Higher Education Policy, 2009
Increased student access to higher education institutions has been associated with the recent proliferation of higher education opportunities throughout the world. Various countries have undertaken numerous initiatives to increase access, such as the Netherlands with its involvement in the Bologna Process and the United States with Achieve Inc.'s…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Access to Education, Transitional Programs
Ladd, Helen F.; Lauen, Douglas L. – Urban Institute (NJ1), 2009
Although the Federal No Child Left Behind program judges the effectiveness of schools based on their students' achievement status, many policy analysts argue that schools should be measured, instead, by their students' achievement growth. Using a ten-year student-level panel data set from North Carolina, the authors examine how school-specific…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Achievement Gains, Accountability, Educational Policy
Ackerman, Debra J.; Barnett, W. Steven – National Institute for Early Education Research, 2009
Finding affordable, high-quality child care for infants (children up to 12 months old) and toddlers (1- and 2-year-olds) can be difficult. As public support for the education and care of 3- and 4-year-olds has increased, questions have arisen about the extent this has helped or hurt the provision of care for young children. Concerns have been…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Supply and Demand, Toddlers, Infants
Gunter, Helen; Thomson, Pat – Educational Review, 2009
The authors focus on the investment into school leadership in England during the New Labour governments from 1997, and through this they make a contribution to an ongoing scholarly conversation about leadership development. They are concerned to both understand and explain leadership as a policy intervention into the professional practice and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Instructional Leadership, Principals, Leadership Training
Peters, Susan; Oliver, Laura Ann – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2009
While great progress has been made by the international community to promote inclusive education for all children, regardless of race, ethnicity, socio-economic status, gender or disability, many countries still continue to marginalize and exclude students in educational systems across the globe. High-stakes assessments in market-driven economies…
Descriptors: Inclusive Schools, Foreign Countries, High Stakes Tests, Educational Policy
Akyeampong, Kwame – Comparative Education, 2009
When Ghana became independent in 1957 it had one of the most developed education systems in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Over the next forty years its education system expanded to provide places for most, but not all, of its children. Since the education reforms of the late 1980s enrolments have grown steadily; this contrasts with some SSA countries…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Elementary Education
Chaocheng, Zhou – Chinese Education and Society, 2009
As economic globalization sweeps across the world, cross-border higher education cooperation has witnessed remarkable achievements. Quality improvements, however, have not stepped up accordingly due to reasons including imperfect and distorted policies, incomplete governance structures, and the absence of an effective internal quality assessment…
Descriptors: School Administration, Global Approach, Quality Control, Educational Cooperation
Hart, Doug; Livingstone, D. W. – Education Canada, 2009
Advocates for education have seized upon the current economic downturn as an opportunity to advance their cause. If governments are poised for an attempt to spend their way out of a deep recession, what better target than underfunded educational institutions, from daycare to universities? Public support for increased spending on education is…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Educational Change, Educational Finance, Policy Analysis
Narro, Amber Reetz – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2009
In a nationwide study of state legislative Web sites, Narro, Mayo, and Miller found that the communication tools (i.e., weblogs, electronic newsletters, online polling) that state legislators offer vary more from state to state than legislator to legislator. Taking their information into account, this article addresses regulations put on…
Descriptors: Legislators, Internet, Science and Society, Communication Strategies
Machawira, Patricia; Pillay, Venitha – Journal of Education Policy, 2009
In this paper we argue that education policy on HIV and AIDS is policy about life. As such, the contexts and the realities of teachers and learners in the classroom need to be embedded in the policy. We make a case that HIV and AIDS policy needs to extend beyond the prevention mode to one that includes care and support in the policy context.…
Descriptors: Prevention, Foreign Countries, Phenomenology, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)
Ingvarson, Lawrence – Professional Development in Education, 2009
The Scottish Chartered Teacher Scheme was designed to recognise and reward teachers who attained high standards of practice. The scheme emerged in 2001 as part of an agreement between government, local employing authorities and teacher organisations. Policies such as the chartered teacher scheme aim to benefit students in two main ways: by…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Instructional Leadership, Performance Contracts, Recognition (Achievement)
Vincent, Kerry – Improving Schools, 2009
Teenage mothers in the UK have been found to be at risk of early school leaving, low levels of educational achievement and low levels of post-compulsory educational participation. Current policy in the UK emphasizes the importance of education as a way of improving the life chances of those who become pregnant while young and, as part of that,…
Descriptors: Pregnancy, Foreign Countries, Educational Experience, Pregnant Students
Henig, Jeffrey R. – Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, 2009
Recent state and national policy has both reflected and helped to further an image of localities as parochial, reactionary, ineffective, and appropriately marginalized in the enterprise of school reform. Growing state and national roles (on one hand) and growing market and private sector inroads (on another) have the potential to undermine…
Descriptors: School Restructuring, Privatization, Private Sector, Obsolescence
Scott, Janelle; Villavicencio, Adriana – Peabody Journal of Education, 2009
This article explores the relationship between charter school racial composition, school environments, and student achievement. We offer an original framework for understanding school context and its influence on schooling outcomes. We conclude that policymakers could better attend to the persistent educational inequality that has shaped U.S.…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Equal Education, School Choice, Racial Composition
Papatsiba, Vassiliki – European Educational Research Journal, 2009
In this article, the author argues that European education policies and rhetoric are imbued with orthodoxy of agency and models of empowered, entrepreneurial actors, striving to surpass the limits of national boundaries. Free circulation of citizens has progressively underpinned a new construction of "the European", who is…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Student Mobility, Educational Policy, Policy Analysis