Examples of Education reform in the following topics:
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- Education reforms aim at redressing some societal ills, such as gender-, and class-based inequities, or instructional ineffectiveness.
- Education reform has been pursued for a variety of specific reasons, but, generally, most reforms aim at redressing some societal ills, such as poverty-, gender-, or class-based inequities, or perceived ineffectiveness.
- Education Segregation in the U.S.
- Board of Education
- Educational reforms during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s focused on civil rights, especially desegregation and affirmative action.
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- Education is the process by which society transmits its accumulated knowledge, skills, customs and values from one generation to another.
- Education is the means through which the aims and habits of a group of people is transmitted from one generation to the next.
- Education is perceived as an endeavor that enables children to develop according to their unique needs and potential.
- It was after World War II, however, that the subject received renewed interest around the world: from technological functionalism in the US, egalitarian reform of opportunity in Europe, and human-capital theory in economics.
- Education also performs another crucial function.
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- The data gathered from the Virtual Educational Organization case study describes how one school district was in the formative stage of developing a virtual organizational structure based upon a convergence of high quality software, Internet connectivity, and capacity building to support digital teaching and learning.
- Various interest groups have continually called for education reform.
- Towards the Virtual K-12 Educational Organization: An Emerging Framework with Technology
- Discuss the critical issues and historial origins of school bureaucratization, particularly in relation to educational reform and deliverance of service
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- It was active in advocating for the reform of public and private policies, particularly as they impacted the lives of impoverished people.
- It was a merger of the Federal Council of Churches, the International Council of Religious Education, and several other interchurch ministries.
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- Education prepares each social class differently, with different skills and values taught to each class.
- The dominance of foreigner investors in even the industries that supply the most basic needs, such as water, are a result of policies of privatization, a key element of neoliberal and Washington Consensus economic "reforms. " And the International Monetary Fund continues to push its privatization drive demanding that Cape Verde privatize its few remaining public enterprises, including the national airlines, the national oil supply company, the national transportation company, and others.
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- Education economics is the study of economic issues relating to education, including the demand for education and the financing and provision of education.
- Educational technology is the study and ethical practice of facilitating learning and improving performance by creating, using, and managing appropriate technological processes and resources.
- Educational technology is intended to improve education over what it would be without technology.
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- Educational attainment is tied to social class, with upper class individuals acquiring higher degrees from more prestigious schools.
- Education is a major component of social class, both directly and indirectly.
- Educational attainment refers to the level of schooling a person completes — for instance, high school, some college, college, or a graduate degree.
- Educational inequality is one factor that perpetuates the class divide across generations.
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- The diagram below illustrates how a social movement may either be alternative, redemptive, reformative or revolutionary based on who the movement strives to change and how much change the movement desires to bring about .
- Scope: A movement can be either reform or radical.
- A reform movement advocates changing some norms or laws while a radical movement is dedicated to changing value systems in some fundamental way.
- A reform movement might be a trade union seeking to increase workers' rights while the American Civil Rights movement was a radical movement.
- Based on who a movement is trying to change and how much change a movement is advocating, Aberle identified four types of social movements: redemptive, reformative, revolutionary and alternative.
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- Education is becoming increasingly international.
- Education in its broadest, most general sense is a means through which the aims and habits of a group of people is passed from one generation to the next.
- Private groups, like Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, are also working to improve access to education through such programs as the Perpetual Education Fund.
- Education is becoming increasingly international, and mass schooling has promoted the fundamental idea that everyone has a right to be educated regardless of his/her cultural background.