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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.
31

They've come a long way since P.L. 94-142 standards-based instruction and its impact on increasing school attendance rates for students with disabilities /

Siegler, Lywinda Anne. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Duquesne University, 2009. / Title from document title page. Abstract included in electronic submission form. Includes bibliographical references (p. 71-75) and index.
32

Pupils who leave school; factors accompanying early elimination from school in Oakland, California,

Palmer, Emily Godfrey, January 1930 (has links)
Thesis (PH. D.)--Columbia University, 1930. / Vita. Published also as University of California. School of Education. Division of Vocatioal Education, Division bulletin no. 24; Part-time education series, no. 17, under title: Pupils who leave school. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Bibliography: p. 127-131.
33

Effect of contingent visual arts experiences on attendance of students with behavior disorders

Bearden, Allen Eugene. Morreau, Lanny E. January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--Illinois State University, 1993. / Title from title page screen, viewed February 27, 2006. Dissertation Committee: Lanny Morreau (chair), Ron Halinski, Pamela Hardaway-Wheeler, Frances Anderson, Thomas Caldwell. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 99-108) and abstract. Also available in print.
34

The effects, if any, of transportation on attendance and achievement on the white schools of Seminole County

Unknown Date (has links)
The Seminole County Georgia Board of Education has made a special effort to provide adequate educational opportunities for all the children of the county. An important phase of this effort has been the provision of building facilities to house the children. Three years ago a new consolidated county-wide high school building was completed, along with a new elementary building in Donalsonville, and needed improvements in all the other elementary schools. / Typescript. / "August, 1952." / "Submitted to the Graduate Council of Florida State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science."
35

A study of pupil population and some factors concerning the reasons for failure and withdrawal of the junior high pupils of the McIntyre Park Junior High School, Thomasville, Georgia

Unknown Date (has links)
"The desire to live, to love, to be with people, to excel or achieve, and to believe in something lasting leads to problems, each of which requires a struggle of some type, either slight or great. It is during the period of life called adolescence that many human beings either successfully or unsuccessfully solve some of these problems. A teacher or parent will be more capable of helping the adolescent through this phrase of life if he understands the mental, motor, social, and emotional development of the adolescent. Therefore, the teacher and parents must not only be interested in the adolescent during school time, but must also have a knowledge of the activities in which the adolescent participates and of the facilities offered by the community which affect his out-of-school life"--Introduction. / "July, 1951." / Typescript. / "Submitted to the Graduate Council of Florida State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts." / Advisor: H. W. Dean, Professor Directing Paper. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 104-105).
36

Home and school factors associated with high school truancy in a southeastern Virginia urban school district

Jeter, DeWayne 14 October 2005 (has links)
The purpose of the study was to identify which additional factors that have been related to truancy are perceived by chronic truant students; additionally, the researcher wanted to know how demographic differences among chronic truant students (i.e., gender, socio-economic status, parental education, and their own education aspirations) related to these attitudes. The research questions were: (1) What are chronic truant students' perceptions of student participation in school activities? (2) What are chronic truant students' perceptions of school curriculum? (3) What are chronic truant students' perceptions of relationships with counse1ors? ( 4 ) What are chronic truant students' perceptions of relationships with teachers? (5) What are chronic truant students' perceptions with administrators (6) What are chronic truant students' perceptions of family education expectations and goals? (7) What are chronic truant students' perceptions of parental involvement? / Ed. D.
37

School attendance 1880-1939 : a study of policy and practice in response to the problem of truancy

Sheldon, Nicola January 2008 (has links)
The thesis covers two sides of the truancy problem in the period following compulsory school attendance - the truanting children and their parents, and the local authorities charged with enforcing the law. The introduction covers current concerns about truancy and school attendance, which have increased in prominence since the 1980s. Chapter 2 reviews the historiography, which has mainly debated working-class attitudes towards compulsory schooling in the nineteenth century. This study draws instead on the insights of development economists into household decision-making over children's schooling to investigate the effectiveness of enforcement in several contrasting localities - rural and urban, industrial and agricultural, and in a seaside resort. The thesis brings together evidence to show that local authorities could make an impact on attendance levels, even in unpropitious local circumstances. Chapter 3 considers the success of measures to improve attendance up to 1900. Chapter 4 offers a detailed case study of a sample of truants and their families from Coventry in the period 1874-99. Chapters 5 to 7 cover 1900-39 and demonstrate changes in the enforcement of attendance, within the context of growing local government services related to child welfare and the family. Attendance officers' local knowledge of working-class families supported the delivery of child welfare legislation in the period after 1906, including special education, assessment of families for free school meals, assistance with medical treatment and the policing of restrictions on children's street trading. Attendance officers also supervised children deemed at risk of offending, who were committed to institutions. These additions to the enforcement role led increasingly to a remedial, rather than punitive, approach to truancy during the 1920s and 30s. The conclusion returns to contemporary policy issues over truancy and sets in context the historical reasons why it has proved such a long-standing problem for government and schools.
38

A study of the factors affecting attendance at adult education short courses.

January 1993 (has links)
by Chiu Mo Chi. / Includes questionaire in Chinese. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1993. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 73-80). / ABSTRACT --- p.i / ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS --- p.ii / LIST OF FIGURE --- p.v / LIST OF TABLES --- p.vi / Chapter CHAPTER ONE --- INTRODUCTION / Chapter A --- BACKGROUND --- p.1 / Chapter B --- RESEARCH QUESTION --- p.11 / Chapter C --- SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY --- p.12 / Chapter CHAPTER TWO --- LITERATURE REVIEW AND THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK / Chapter A --- THEORIES OF MOTIVATION FOR ADULT LEARNING --- p.14 / Chapter B --- THEORIES OF PARTICIPATION --- p.24 / Chapter C --- THEORIES OF ADULT STUDENT'S RETENTION --- p.33 / Chapter D --- CONTEXTUAL VARIABLES --- p.36 / Chapter E --- CONCEPTION OF THE STUDY --- p.38 / Chapter CHAPTER THREE --- RESEARCH METHODOLOGY / Chapter A --- DEFINITIONS --- p.42 / Chapter B --- HYPOTHESES --- p.45 / Chapter C --- INSTRUMENTATION --- p.46 / Chapter D --- SAMPLING --- p.49 / Chapter E --- DATA ANALYSES --- p.52 / Chapter CHAPTER FOUR --- FINDINGS / Chapter A --- CONTEXTUAL VARIABLES --- p.53 / Chapter B --- "RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN STUDENT SELF-ESTEEM, STUDENT EXPECTATION, CLASSROOM ENVIRON- MENT AND RATE OF CLASS ATTENDANCE" --- p.56 / Chapter CHAPTER FIVE --- DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS --- p.63 / REFERENCES --- p.73 / APPENDICES --- p.81
39

Dropout syndromes : a study of individual, family and social factors in two Montreal high schools

Zamanzadeh, Djavad. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
40

Achieving equity in educational outcomes for students with chronic illness

Shiu, Shiona, University of Western Sydney, College of Arts, School of Education January 2008 (has links)
This portfolio documents an investigation of both parent and educator perspectives of managing a chronic illness at school with the aim of developing a framework to ensure that students with chronic illness have equitable access to the same educational outcomes as their healthy peers. This study provides an in-depth exploration of a number of facets of the impact of having a chronic illness, including social, emotional, cognitive and physical aspects. The use of both parent and teacher perspectives provides insights into the realities of having a child with chronic illness at school, and offers some understandings of the risks and challenges parents face as they relinquish care of their ill child into the hands of educators. It also examines the role of educators as they assume much of the responsibility for providing educational, social and emotional support for these students, as well as monitoring their medical needs and health status whilst at school. The evidence from research in the field of child chronic illness suggests that students with chronic illness are at risk academically, emotionally and socially. The effectiveness of any strategy that aims to achieve equity in participation and outcomes for this group of students will depend upon understanding the complex factors that impact on students with chronic illness at school such as absenteeism, relationships with peers and individual resilience. This study addresses the research questions: What are the concerns of parents, educators and students with chronic illness in the educational context? What strategies are consistently being identified as effective in supporting students with a chronic illness at school? And what are the barriers to chronically ill students accessing educational services? Two, two part questionnaires were used to elicit responses from parents and educators of students with chronic illness. The parent respondents consisted of 121 parents of students with chronic illness attending Department of Education schools across NSW, Australia. The teacher respondents consisted of 111 teachers of students with chronic illness in Department of Education schools across NSW. The insights that emerged from the research suggest that the needs of this group of students remain unrecognised and under-resourced. Major findings indicate that many students with chronic illness have high levels of absenteeism, are underachieving academically, have difficulties keeping up and catching up with missed school work, are challenged in their relationships with their peers, and their medical needs are not recognised nor resourced adequately. Teachers of students with chronic illness are inadequately trained, and lack the time and resources to meet the individual needs of these students. The results demonstrated that students with chronic illness are not accessing educational services in the same ways as their healthy peers. The findings of this study suggest schools can make a difference to how well a student and a family cope with chronic illness. The provision of appropriate support, resources and the demonstration of positive attitudes by school communities can foster an environment that facilitates the academic and social growth of the student. The study includes recommendations in the areas of: building communication between home, school and medical professionals; maintaining academic achievement; building peer relationships; managing student medical needs; supporting students returning to school; reducing absenteeism; and supporting emotional health of student and family. The findings of this study have raised an awareness of the needs of students with chronic illness at school, and identified strategies for their support and inclusion. The findings also provide a framework for the provision of educational services for students with chronic illness. Hence, this portfolio represents an exploration of the journey much traveled by parents and educators of students with a chronic illness, with the intent of raising awareness of their needs, and providing direction for policy makers in the field of education, to ensure that students with chronic illness have equitable access to the same educational outcomes as their healthy peers. / Doctor of Education (Ed.D.)

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