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The growth of women's education in modern Egypt /Guirguis, Fayek Shoukry January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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The growth of women's education in modern Egypt /Guirguis, Fayek Shoukry January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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National policy and popular education in Egypt, 1919-1958Ebeid, Ahmed Hassan January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
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Education and training under the MamlūksManjikian, Sevak Joseph. January 1998 (has links)
This work analyzes the methods the Mamluk Sultanate (1250--1517) used to train and educate its military and religious elite. Three separate classes of people are examined: the Mamluks, the religious elite (' ulama') and finally the children of the Mamluks (awlad al-nas). It is demonstrated that in order for the Mamluk Sultanate to function properly, both military and religious scholarship were needed. During the Mamluk period, these methods of training and education were not applied in a uniform manner.
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Education and training under the MamlūksManjikian, Sevak Joseph. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Discourse on women's education in Egypt during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries : a convergence of proto-feminist, nationalist and Islamic reformist thoughtPiquado, Laura. January 1999 (has links)
This thesis explores the development of women's education in pre-independence Egypt from the mid-nineteenth century to 1922. It looks at women's educational facilities and women's access to education through the reigns of Muhammad Ali, Said, Ismail and the British occupation. While the rise in women's educational concerns on a formal level parallels the growth of modernist, Islamic reformist, and proto-feminist thought in the late nineteenth century, the relationship among the three groups vis a vis their respective positions on women's education differs and is therefore examined in the thesis. / Research on this topic reveals a correlation between the early women's movement, a strong proponent of women's education, and Egypt's national and Islamic reform movements. As each group espoused a vision of change for Egypt, one secular and the other decidedly more religious, the common denominator for social progress was the unanimous support for advancements, although conditional, in educational policies regarding women. Couched in a context of modernism, the pursuit of freedom from foreign control and the desire for Egypt to develop into a fully productive society, were indispensable aspects of the development of women's education.
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Discourse on women's education in Egypt during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries : a convergence of proto-feminist, nationalist and Islamic reformist thoughtPiquado, Laura. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Teachers' attitudes towards working with students with special educational needs in mainstream classes in EgyptMomberg, Naadia 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEdPsych)--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / Recent developments in education have focused on exploring different ways of
responding to the diverse learning needs of students. The international trend has
been to move towards an inclusive approach based on democratic principles in
education, including students with special educational needs in mainstream schools
and classrooms.
Egypt, an initial signatory to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, has not
escaped the prominence of inclusive education on the international education
agenda. No legislation on inclusion in schools has been promulgated in Egypt.
Furthermore, information is lacking regarding teachers' attitudes towards working
with students with special educational needs in mainstream classes, despite the fact
that teacher attitude are instrumental in determining the success or failure of
inclusive education. The aim of the research, therefore, was to identify teachers'
attitudes towards inclusive education.
For the purpose of this study, a non-experimental quantitative research design with
specific reference to survey research was chosen. The population consisted of
teachers in five schools in Alexandria and Cairo and a questionnaire was designed.
Data was analysed using the statistical programme SPSS (14.0 for Windows).
Results indicate that teachers in Egypt have serious reservations about the feasibility
of accommodating students with special educational needs in their classrooms.
Curriculum development, educational support, funding opportunities, as well as the
training of teachers, need to be addressed in order to facilitate the development of
inclusive educational strategies.
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The establishment of the American Presbyterian Mission in Egypt, 1854-1940 : an overviewBurke, Jeffrey Charles. January 2000 (has links)
This dissertation examines the educational contributions of the American Mission in Egypt using previously untapped archival documents from the Presbyterian Historical Society in Philadelphia. The principal focus of this research is on the establishment of American Mission schools in Egypt. The successes and failures of this missionary movement's work with Copts and Muslims are examined within the context of demographic data and political history. The study also discusses Egyptian anti-missionary sentiments directed against the American Mission in the 1920s and 30s, and constitutes an exploration of Christian-Muslim relations in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Egypt.
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Educational administration's role in economic and social development plans in developing countries : the Egyptian case studyBayoumy, Kamal Hosney 01 January 1983 (has links)
This study represents an attempt to answer the question: How can educational administration contribute to the economic and social development plans in developing countries? Although major emphasis must be given to this question, some
thought will be given to the educational problems and needs that face developing countries and the new techniques of educational administration which can be used to meet them. Moreover, in an attempt to apply the findings acquired the research will eventually focus on· Egypt, as one of the developing countries, to identify to what extent Egypt's educational administration addresses the needs of the economic and social development plans.
Objectives of the Study
The purpose of the study was fourfold as follows:
1. To investigate the role of educational administration in the economic and social development plans in developing countries.
2. To delineate the educational problems and needs of developing countries and to determine how educational administration can help to meet them.
3. To identify new trends and techniques in educational administration which may be helpful to the economic and social development plans in developing countries.
4. To develop a case study and some models which will provide direction to educational administrators who wish to contribute to Egypt's economic and social development plans.
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