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A study of certain Virginia teachers' utilization of library facilitiesSmith, 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.
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An exploratory study of certain phases of the teaching of reading in the Territory of GuamLintner, Mary Cole January 1954 (has links)
M.S.
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A comparison of educational and social outcomes of two schools in Bland County, 1939-1949Thomas, Joseph M. January 1951 (has links)
M.S.
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A study of certain high school graduates in relation to their elementary school originsRichards, George G. January 1952 (has links)
M.S.
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Trends in education as revealed in periodical literature published from 1946 to 1953 inclusiveWalters, Reba Price January 1954 (has links)
M.S.
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A study of safety practices of the public schools of Franklin County, 1944-1949January 1951 (has links)
M.S.
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Modification of a physical education experimental teaching unitKeller, Joseph G. January 1982 (has links)
This study was undertaken to research and modify the Georgia Project hockey/golf Physical Education Experimental Teaching Unit (PEETU). The PEETU is a short instructional unit involving a pre-test, instructional period, and posttest. The object of the PEETU instructional skill is to hit a tennis ball into a hoop in the least amount of strokes (hits). The modification of the PEETU consisted of simply lengthening the distance between the starting line and the hoop from thirty yards to forty-five yards.
It was hypothesized that the reverse chaining method of teaching would not cause greater significant learning than the lecture/demonstration method, and that Academic Learning Time-Physical Education(M) (Motor ALT) would not be a better student process indicator for achievement independently of instructional method or length of the PEETU.
The results indicated there were no significant differences between teaching methods or instructional periods within the PEETU. The results also indicated that Motor ALT is an important student process indicator when the student received between two and seven minutes of Motor ALT during the instructional period of the PEETU. / Master of Science
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DISCIPLINE-BASED ART EDUCATION GUIDELINES FOR OLDER ADULTS (GERONTOLOGY)Riggs, Coragene, 1938- January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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DISCIPLINE-BASED ART EDUCATION FOR PRESERVICE ELEMENTARY TEACHERS.Myers, Sally Ann, 1948- January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
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Über die Zusammenhänge von Herrschaft und Bildung / About the correlations of authority and educationKlaehr, Alexander January 2008 (has links)
Kann die Schule demokratisch sein? Wie kann in einer demokratischen Gesellschaft – d.h. in einer Gesellschaft, die sich vom modernen Staat Rechte in jahrhundertelangen Kämpfen erstritten hat – Bildung so organisiert werden, dass am Ende der Schulzeit die Schüler den Weg aus ihrer Unmündigkeit gefunden haben und somit tatsächlich zu demokratischen Bürgern geworden sind? Der Staat spielt hierbei als Bildungsträger in der Betrachtung dieser Frage eine entscheidende Rolle, denn er ist es, der Herrschaft ausübt, womit auch die Schule – als Institution des Staates – automatisch in den Prozess von Herrschaftsausübung miteinbezogen wird und ihr eine signifikante Rolle in der Erziehung und Formung künftiger Herrschaftsempfänger zukommt. Daher kann sich die Frage nach einer demokratischen Schule nicht auf Regeln des Miteinanders beschränken, sondern muss sich jenen komplexen Strukturen annehmen, in die die Schule eingebettet ist. / Can school be democratic? How can education be organized in a democratic society, a society which has fought for rights from the modern state for centuries, in a way that allows students to find out of their nonage and thus become democratic citizens by the end of their schooldays? Here, the state plays a significant role as an educational institution, since it is this state that is in authority. Consequently, school as a state institution, is drawn into the process of wielding power and takes over an essential role in the education and shaping of future recipients of authority. Thus, the question of a democratic school system cannot be limited to communal rules but has to consider those complex structures the school system is embedded in.
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