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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.
41

Ideologie und Leibeserziehung im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert

Moosburger, Siegfried, January 1970 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Munich. / Vita. Bibliography: p. i-xxvi.
42

Exporting international student mobility neoliberal globalization, higher education policies and Chinese graduate student perspectives on pursuing higher education in Canada /

Zheng, Jie. January 2010 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.) -- University of Alberta, 2010. / "A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Education in Theoretical, Cultural and International Studies in Education, Educational Policy Studies, University of Alberta. Title from pdf file main screen (viewed on May 19, 2010) Includes bibliographical references.
43

A profile of doctoral graduates in educational administration from Illinois State University June 1966-August 1986 /

Parke, Scott J. Laymon, Ronald L. January 1987 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Illinois State University, 1987. / Title from title page screen, viewed August 17, 2005. Dissertation Committee: Ronald L. Laymon (chair), Patricia H. Klass, Mary Ann Lynn, John R. McCarthy, Rodney P. Riegle. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 225-240) and abstract. Also available in print.
44

Politicas de educação e saude no estado do Ceara : mudanças no "Governo de Mudanças"? / Politics of education and health in the state of Ceara: changes in "Government of the changes"?

Souza, Sandra de 31 March 2003 (has links)
Orientador: Pedro Luiz Barros Silva / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Economia / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-07T01:13:10Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Souza_Sandrade_M.pdf: 812395 bytes, checksum: 11367533d721f10e2bb73cd4153d1867 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2003 / Resumo: Este trabalho apresenta um breve histórico sobre o processo de transformação política-administrativa ocorrido na administração pública do estado do Ceará no período de 1963 à 2002, período este marcado por duas fases distintas. A primeira (1963 a 1987), representada pelos ¿três coronéis¿ Virgílio Távora, César Cals e Adauto Bezerra e a segunda, pelo chamado ¿Governo das Mudanças¿ (1987-2002) liderado por Tasso Jereissati ( três adminstrações) e Ciro Gomes. Apresenta também as principais ações implementadas pelo executivo estadual, enfocando mais detalhadamente as políticas de educação e saúde, com destaque para os resultados alcançados, limites existentes e os desafios que ainda devem ser enfrentados / Mestrado / Economia Social e do Trabalho / Mestre em Desenvolvimento Econômico
45

A organização da oferta a educação infantil no municipio de Amparo na decada de 1990 / The organization of the offer to the primary education in the municipal district of Amparo in the 1990's

Pereira, Alessandra Maria Aquino Canivezi 12 September 2009 (has links)
Orientador: Vicente Rodriguez / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Educação / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-15T06:24:55Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Pereira_AlessandraMariaAquinoCanivezi_M.pdf: 1040129 bytes, checksum: aac0c4a910eccb617cae011f16110c48 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2009 / Resumo: A pesquisa teve como eixo a identificação dos princípios neoliberais de descentralização, de focalização e de privatização na organização municipal para oferta de vagas à Educação Infantil, no cenário político da década de 1990. O objeto de nosso estudo foi a ação do Estado voltada à Educação Infantil, por isso buscamos primeiramente entender o papel desempenhado pelo Estado frente ao pensamento liberal e neoliberal para posteriormente descrevermos como esse atendimento se organizou no país. Nosso trabalho se desenvolveu no sentido de conhecer a organização pública e gratuita para acolhida à criança pequena e de compreender como as políticas educacionais foram formuladas em um município, do estado de São Paulo, durante o período em que o Brasil esteve inserido no reordenamento e nos ajustes neoliberais. O trabalho de campo envolveu o levantamento de dados quantitativos e qualitativos, por meio de planilhas para levantamento do número de matrículas na rede pública, de entrevistas e de questionários com os atores sociais envolvidos no processo. Os resultados expressaram as novas formas pelas quais, na década de 1990, a esfera pública respondeu às demandas sociais e explicitaram que as decisões tomadas sofreram influência do cenário político e das ordenações neoliberais. / Abstract: The research aimed at the identification of the neoliberal principles of decentralization, focalization and privatization in the municipal organization to the offer of places to the Primary Education in the political setting of 1990's. The object of our study was the action of the State in the face of the Primary Education, so we first tried to understand the part performed by the State with relation to the liberal and neoliberal thought, and then describe how this service was organized in the country. We developed our assignment in order to get to know the public and free organization to the welcome to little children and to understand how the educational policies were drawn up in a city, in the state of São Paulo, during the period which Brazil had been inside of the neoliberal reordering and adjustments. The fieldwork involved the survey of the quantitative and qualitative data through spreadsheets, in order to know the number of registrations in the public education, and the interviews and questionnaires with social factors involved in the process. The results showed the new ways which the public sphere dealt with the social demands in the 1990's and made explicit that the political setting and the neoliberal ordinances had influence on the decisions that were made. / Mestrado / Educação, Sociedade e Cultura / Mestre em Educação
46

Performance Funding of State Public Higher Education: Has it Delivered the Desired External Accountability and Institutional Improvement?

Polatajko, Mark M. 30 November 2011 (has links)
No description available.
47

Mathematical modeling in algebra textbooks at the onset of the Common Core State Standards

Germain-Williams, Terri January 2014 (has links)
Student achievement in mathematics continues to be compared internationally, with the results indicating that students in other developed countries are outperforming students from the United States. Mathematical modeling is an expectation in both the new Common Core State Standards and the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA). This study seeks to find the differences in expectations for students in mathematical modeling between the United States and Singapore, which is one country that regularly outperforms the U.S. on international assessments. Since teachers and students regularly use textbooks for curriculum, homework, and other resources, this study compares two textbooks from the U.S. with the high school series adopted in Singapore. More specifically, the aim of this study is to compare frameworks of mathematical modeling and code to-be-solved problems in algebra textbooks using characteristics common to all frameworks. While the U.S. textbooks explicitly state which word problems address the expectation of mathematical modeling, the Singapore program does not have this attribute. So, an equivalent chapter (in objective and number of to-be-solved problems) in all three textbooks will be coded for evidence of the expectations of mathematical modeling. The results of this study indicate that no standard framework for mathematical modeling exists, but there are multiple areas of overlap. This study found that the ratio of word problems to numerical problems was comparable in the three textbooks, although the U.S. algebra textbooks used in a one-year course had the same number of to-be-solved problems as the four-year Singapore series. Results also indicate that to-be-solved problems in the Singapore textbook series do not provide students with more explicit mathematical modeling instructions than do the U.S. textbooks. This study also found that the interpretation of to-be-solved problems differed according to the experience of the rater. None of the textbooks in this study provided to-be-solved problems that asked students to engage in the mathematical modeling cycle as delineated by any of the four frameworks.
48

Mathematical Modeling from the Teacher's Perspective

Huson, Christopher John January 2016 (has links)
Applying mathematics to real world problems, mathematical modeling, has risen in priority with the adoption of the Common Core State Standards for Mathematics (National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers, 2010). Teachers are at the core of the implementation of the standards, but resources to help them teach modeling are relatively undeveloped. This multicase study explored the perspectives of teachers regarding mathematical modeling pedagogy (the modeling cycle), instructional materials, and professional collaboration, with the assumption that understanding teachers’ views will assist authors, publishers, teacher educators, and administrators to develop better support for modeling instruction. A purposeful sample of six high school mathematics teachers from a variety of school settings across the country was interviewed using a semi-structured protocol. A conceptual framework developed by applying the theories of Guy Brousseau (1997) to the modeling literature guided the analysis. Qualitative methods including elements of grounded theory were used to analyze the data and synthesize the study’s results. The research showed that teachers structure their instruction consistently with the modeling cycle framework, but it also uncovered the need for additional detail and structure, particularly in the initial steps when students make sense of the problem and formulate an approach. Presenting a modeling problem is particularly important and challenging, but there is inadequate guidance and support for this teaching responsibility. The study recommends the development of additional materials and training to help teachers with these steps of the modeling cycle. Furthermore, teachers find that modeling problems are engaging, and they help students make sense of mathematical concepts. Teachers would employ modeling problems more often if they were more available and convenient to use. The study recommends that features for an online depository of modeling materials be researched and developed, including a course-based, chronological organization, a diverse variety of materials and formats, and tapping teachers to contribute their lessons.
49

The Common Core State Standards as Applied to the Instruction of Students With Disabilities: Special Education Teachers' Perceptions

LaRock, Damien Etienne January 2018 (has links)
The Common Core State Standards are a set of challenging learning goals in English language arts/literacy and math and their use in special education has been a controversial topic. On the one hand, many special education advocates have been pleased that the standards were written for all students, including students with disabilities. On the other hand, many special education teachers have been concerned that an overemphasis on the Common Core State Standards is limiting their students’ access to the full benefits of an Individualized Education Program, which is the central component of special education that makes it so special. Recent research conducted on teachers across the United States has shown that, overall, they believe that the Common Core State Standards are beneficial for students. However, there is a gap in the research documenting the specific views of special education teachers. It is important to understand their experiences because they have the unique task of balancing the general education curriculum with individualized instruction that may include skills not covered by the Common Core. This study aims to address this gap by answering several key questions about the experiences of special education teachers who use the Common Core State Standards with students with disabilities. A total of 476 special education teachers from across the United States were surveyed. This study found that they have a moderately strong understanding of the standards and they frequently used them to guide their teaching. The results of this study showed that while the majority of these teachers echoed the general belief that the Common Core State Standards are beneficial for students without disabilities, they did not believe that they are beneficial for students with disabilities. Strikingly, 86.9% did not believe that the standards provide adequate information about their application to students with disabilities. Of concern, 70.9% reported that, when using these standards, they are unable to address their students’ individualized goals—especially in the areas of social and functional skills. Moreover, when asked if they believed that the Common Core State Standards would help their students to be prepared for independent life, 79.1% said “no.” These results yield important information regarding current practice using the Common Core State Standards in special education and suggest important implications for teacher training courses related to the Common Core State Standards and students with disabilities as well as how the Common Core State Standards document and guidance materials may be revised to better meet the needs of students with disabilities.
50

The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in postmodernity : a grounded systemic analysis of children's rights educational policies in Scotland and Canada

Mitchell, Richard Charles January 2006 (has links)
As a contribution towards the UN Decade for Human Rights Education (1995-2004), this qualitative, comparative policy study investigated the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) within the Scottish and Canadian educational systems. The researcher adopted an inductive, grounded methodology which is argued to be most congruent when building theory is the chief aim (Glaser and Strauss, 1967; Glaser, 2005). During 20 months of fieldwork, 50 key informant interviews were obtained in Geneva, New York, Scotland and Canada. The author contends that postmodern thinking has contributed much towards contemporary childhood research, yet an underlying deconstruction of the CRC constrains theoretical development. To address this breakdown of overarching leitmotifs within the social sciences (Esping-Andersen, 2000), the sociology of human rights is utilised as a conceptual framework (Luhmann, 1965, 1982, 1997; Q'Byrne, 2003; Verschraegen, 2002). Furthermore, through the integration of grounded and autopoietic coding (Glaser, 2005), the interview texts revealed six thematic categories that contradict dominant theoretical approaches in the child rights literature. While descriptive and comparative analyses revealed the study's core category of participation, an interpretive analysis further yielded its core distinction of power. The author argues that Scottish efforts to implement the CRC within educational policies are more widespread than any of those currently underway within Canadian jurisdictions (Mitchell, 2002, 2003a, b). Finally, a grounded systemic child rights model developed from the study's methodological and epistemological integration illustrates how CRC knowledge and power are balanced within and across educational systems (Mitchell, 2005).

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