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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
81

Vocational Guidance

Jackson, James Harry 04 1900 (has links)
[missing pages 62, 74, 92 and 110] / Master of Arts (MA)
82

The utilization of adventure-based programs in Christian education

Case, Timothy M. January 1986 (has links)
Participants in a Christian adventure program (Liberty Expeditions) were tested to investigate the effectiveness of this type of program in causing spiritual change. Specific areas of spirituality measured in this study were identified in six study hypotheses. These areas were: sense of self-worth and purpose within God's creation, acceptance of doctrinal teachings, interest in Bible reading, intent to share religious faith, attitudes towards prayer, and perception of acceptance within the testing group. Pre- and post-program spirituality was self-reported using a 55-item Likert-type Scale instrument which was developed specifically for the study. Paired t-test comparisons of pre-post test scores of the 4 groups comprising the sample showed slight, but not statistically significant, gains in 22 of 24 analyses. Hypotheses with the largest gains were the hypotheses addressing intent to share religious belief (mean gain for all groups), sense of self-worth and purpose, and interest in Bible reading. Additional analyses included an analysis of variance between group scores and the Cronbach's test of instrument reliability. Due to overall lack of statistical significance, conclusions were limited. Positive gain scores in 22 of the 24 analyses, however, implied that the program was effective. Limitations of the study and implications for Christian adventure-based programming are discussed. / M.S.
83

Education and rural community development: a conceptual model and Jamaican case

Hancock, Samuel Lee January 1979 (has links)
Rural citizens in developing countries are becoming the focal point of social, economic and political development efforts. These people traditionally have been left out of the developmental process. National leaders have now realized that the citizens of rural areas have the potential to contribute significantly to developmental efforts of their nations. One important part of most developing nations' strategies for social and economic development is education. The principal form of education has been that of formal education, the trappings of which were borrowed from the nations' former colonial masters. The education systems increasingly have been seen as working against national development objectives, particularly in rural areas. Educational planners and policymakers have found an alternative in non-formal education, whereby rural people theoretically obtain the skills, knowledge, and attitudes necessary to initiate their own development projects. However, developing nations lack the human, financial, and material resources needed to concurrently offer both formal and non-formal education programs. Outside funding sources have been sought pursuant to United States foreign policy. The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has given impetus to experiments in non-formal education in some 60 countries of Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America. The purpose of this dissertation is to examine relationships between education and rural community development, particularly as these relationships have been reported in underdeveloped nations. The methods of inquiry involved: 1. a substantive analysis and synthesis of the development literature, and 2. a detailed case study of non-formal education and rural development in Jamaica. The dissertation develops a thesis, namely that three general relationships may be observed between education and rural development. They are: 1. Formal education is intended to raise rural children to literacy and productivity in the development of their native areas. Instead, it tends to raise students' expectations towards employment in urban centers, thus bleeding rural areas of trained skills. Formal education has become an entrenched system both as a monopoly of central government bureaucracy, and as the one road recognized by rural adults as leading to a better life. There is a conflict between expectation and delivery, complicated by lack of realistic means for appraisal and change. 2. Alternatively, certain forms of non-formal education may hold promise for improving the quality of living in the rural areas of developing nations; however, the conditions necessary for a definitive test of non-formal education in rural community development are not likely to be developed under the sponsorship of the education establishment of the developing nations, even when such test is stimulated and heavily supported by outside agencies such as the United States Agency for International Development. 3. Moreover, the idiosyncratic policies, organization, and funding practices of USAID, the principal source of financial aid for development projects among developing nations, themselves influence the design and outcome of development projects in ways that mitigate against successful development. Clearly, this poses a dilemma for those governments that seek to develop their rural areas. Traditional institutions and programs have been used to improve conditions in rural areas. Yet these very institutions and programs may be part of the development problems. International development literature is replete with theoretical and promising new programs that cannot be fairly tested. There is no indication that national governments could or would assimilate these programs into standard practice, moreover, the status quo is supported by rural populations. / Ed. D.
84

A study of safety practices of the public schools of Franklin County, 1944-1949

Renick, Jack Brown January 1951 (has links)
M.S.
85

A study of certain Virginia teachers' utilization of library facilities

Smith, Nona Martin January 1953 (has links)
In an effort to determine the extent and type of usage of the libraries of the various high schools in District "M," a questionnaire was formulated. The group of students who composed the Graduate Seminar at Radford College during the Summer Session, 1950, cooperated with the study by responding to the first draft of the questionnaire; then by offering constructive criticisms. With the incorporation of their suggestions, the resulting instrument; found in Appendix "C," was mailed to all of the schools included in the study. The questionnaire was divided into two sections: first, Organization and Administration of the Library; second, Kind and Extent of Library Usage. / M.S.
86

An exploratory study of certain phases of the teaching of reading in the Territory of Guam

Lintner, Mary Cole January 1954 (has links)
M.S.
87

A comparison of educational and social outcomes of two schools in Bland County, 1939-1949

Thomas, Joseph M. January 1951 (has links)
M.S.
88

A study of certain high school graduates in relation to their elementary school origins

Richards, George G. January 1952 (has links)
M.S.
89

Trends in education as revealed in periodical literature published from 1946 to 1953 inclusive

Walters, Reba Price January 1954 (has links)
M.S.
90

A study of safety practices of the public schools of Franklin County, 1944-1949

January 1951 (has links)
M.S.

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