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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.
51

Free higher education policy network viewed through power, cooperation and conflict in South Africa

Molokwane, Masibane John January 2019 (has links)
Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Commerce Law, and Management, School of Governance, University of Witwatersrand, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree Master of Management in Public Policy (MMPP), Johannesburg, South Africa 2019 / The notion of policy networks is an integral instrument of policy-making in democratic states. Significant policy challenges are deemed often too complex to be dealt with only through traditional hierarchal government structures. The notion of policy networks is used to analyse and evaluate policy processes and their outcomes. The knowledge gap that the study is dealing with is on the role and effects the interplay of power, cooperation and conflict has in the policy networks and the policy-making process. The aim of this study was to explore the interplay between power, conflict and cooperation in the free higher education policy network in South Africa. A dialectical approach to analysis of policy networks was applied to inform the conceptual frame used in the study. The methodology followed the interpretivist-constructivist paradigm, which then informed the use of qualitative methods in the study. A snowballing sampling approach was employed to identify the study participants. The study analysed the results by using a thematic analysis approach. Findings in the study confirmed that free higher education policy-making was happening through a complex policy network. This free higher education network was characterised by a dominance of power, along with high levels of conflict and cooperation among actors who tended to share the same interests. The presence of power, conflict and cooperation had an influence on the network’s structure, interactions, context and the policy outcome. The influence of power, conflict and cooperation demonstrated that there is an iterative and dialectical relationship between network structure, interactions, context and policy outcome. / XL2019
52

An Analysis of the Impact of Private Funding on Selected Texas Public Institutions of Higher Education

Pokorny, Ronald E. 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of private funds on selected Texas public institutions of higher education by identifying and comparing the specific ways these institutions are affected by private funds. Conclusions: 1. Private contributions to institutions of higher education will continue to increase in the immediate future. 2. Private contributions to public institutions of higher education come from a variety of sources. 3. Private contributions make a greater impact on programs and projects involving people rather than on buildings and equipment in public institutions of higher education. 4. Future uses of private money in public institutions of higher education also appear to be related to people rather than to capital spending. 5. Public institutions of higher education in Texas will depend upon private funds to a greater extent in the foreseeable future.
53

Leadership orientations of area campus administrators in Florida's state university and community college systems : a frame analysis

Borden, Margaret Paige 01 October 2000 (has links)
No description available.
54

Florida University Faculty Compensation: Market Competitive or Not?

Unknown Date (has links)
The most important asset of any organization is its people (Danish & Usman, 2010). Whatever the market segment, they are the driving force behind creating and delivering on the organization’s strategic and financial objectives. The ability to attract, retain and motivate the necessary workforce, through use of financial rewards, is a main determinant in the degree to which these objectives are met (Fong & Tosi, 2007; Gomez- Mejia & Balkin, 1992b; Newman, Gerhart, & Milkovich, 2016). While there are many approaches to pay strategy, a key aspect, and the focus of this dissertation, is the market positioning of cash compensation. Specifically examined was the stated policy narrative of market positioning compared to actual pay practice. While compensation practices in the private sector have received significant research attention, much less focus has been given to pay in academia. This work seeks to address this apparent gap and extend our knowledge in this area. Utilizing faculty pay at Florida’s ten major public universities, this dissertation analyzes consistency between the narrative and practice at the levels of university, department, rank, size and region. The findings demonstrated a significant difference between pay and university but inconsistencies across all levels with the stated narrative. Additionally, the results indicate a widening gap between actual pay and the market average between the 2005- 2006 academic year to present. / Includes bibliography. / Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2016. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
55

The Politics of Funding State Senior Higher Education in Texas: An Analysis of the Pressure Group-Policy Process

Wilson, Samuel Paschal 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to provide research on the funding of state senior higher education in Texas. The focus of this work is on the pressure group-policy process. At the beginning of the study, several questions were raised to assist in establishing boundaries for the research, the collection of data, and the construction of a heuristic model to conceptualize the policy process. The historical and legal factors which affect the funding of higher education were then examined. Attention was focused on the constitutional and statutory provisions which pertain to general appropriations and capital outlays for public higher education. Formula and non-formula items were examined as well as the sources of capital funds.
56

Factors that influcence African Americans to enroll in agricultural science programs

Graham, Levar Desmond, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Mississippi State University. Department of Agricultural Information Science and Education. / Title from title screen. Includes bibliographical references.
57

The Value of Visual Media in the Achievement of Instructors' Objectives as Perceived by Instructors in Predominantly Black State-Supported Colleges and Universities in the State of Louisiana

Pennywell, Phillip 12 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study was to determine the extent to which instructors perceived visual media as being valuable in achieving their classroom objectives in predominantly black, state-supported colleges and universities in the State of Louisiana. Questionnaires were mailed to 165 college and university instructors in colleges of education in predominantly black state-supported universities in Louisiana. Of the 165 questionnaires mailed, 139 were returned. All participants used in the study were teaching at least one course in education during the time the questionnaire was administered. The study is descriptive. The data were collected by means of a questionnaire, and analyzed by percentages, means, and standard deviations. One-way analysis of variance was used to test the differences in attitudes among the faculty members in the study. The level of significance was set at .05.
58

Evaluation criteria for selected administrative and support systems in South African higher education institutions

Weideman, Renee January 2008 (has links)
Dissertation prepared in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Magister Technologiae (Quality) CAPE PENINSULA UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY 2008 / The aim of this research is to identify criteria for the evaluation of support systems applicable to public higher education institutions from a limited international and national perspective. The objectives of the research are to identify the criteria available from existing and related fields through a literature review and to validate the evaluation criteria using an empirical study. The existing literature describes the relevant academic processes, but very little has been written on criteria for evaluating support systems. The research for this study attempts to address this deficiency. The criteria from the Coetzee Model were used as a basis for this research and other models in the existing literature were also referred to, including the Baldrige National Quality Program for Education Criteria, ISO 9001:2000, European Foundation Quality Model and the South African Excellence Model. This research also draws on information deemed important by the Higher Education Quality Committee and the South African Qualifications Authority. Both qualitative and quantitative data collection methods were used in the investigation. The research instruments used included questionnaires and interviews. Questionnaires were distributed to all public universities, universities of technology, and one technikon in South Africa. The results of the study revealed that most respondents agreed with the generic criteria against which units should be evaluated; namely “leadership”, “strategic goals and performance indicators”, “resourcing and funding”, “policies and procedures” and “self-evaluation guidelines”. Statistical analysis was done on the criteria. The two main findings of the research showed that the first five generic criteria were valid and reliable and that there was good internal consistency among the items in each of these criteria, which confirms that the results were valid. It is recommended that for future research, the study should be expanded to support units in higher education not included in this study. The suitability of generic criteria and the development of further specific criteria should be determined. Quality-related arrangements for community engagement, where appropriate, should be adequately resourced and monitored for each unit. Once evaluations and surveys have been conducted on support units using the criteria, the process of benchmarking should be used for preventing potential problems and improving results. KEYWORDS Administration, audit, core processes, criteria, customer, evaluation, higher education, key performance indicators, principles, quality, support processes, systems
59

The development of student assessment policy in Virginia

Aper, Jeffery Paul January 1989 (has links)
The primary objectives of this study were to provide detailed understanding of: (1) the processes by which Virginia's student assessment policy developed; (2) the current expectations and intentions of policy makers in regard to assessment; and (3) the anticipated direction of state policy in regard to uses of and further requests for information documenting institutional processes and quality. Primary data for this study included over 100 document sources, supplemented by interviews with 61 individuals involved in the policy making process. Virginia's assessment policy was shaped by a national trend toward state efforts to stimulate reform and "quality assurance" procedures in higher education, as well as the interests of the State Council of Higher Education staff in using assessment to advance an agenda for review and renewal of undergraduate curricula. Student assessment has been marked in Virginia by efforts to maintain an institution-centered approach to the process. As a result of the desire not to characterize assessment as an accountability mechanism, these activities have been guided by general and somewhat vague guidelines and expectations from SCHEV and other state officials. Assurances that institutions have meaningful and appropriate programs in place were desired, but most officials had limited concepts of what would constitute such processes and further indicated little concern with obtaining or using specific data. Assessment and related activities were seen by state officials as positive and logical components of necessary self-evaluation undergone by any agency or organization. As SCHEV officials awaited the first full institutional reports in summer 1989, it was apparent that only a very negative report on the quality of institutional efforts might spur prescriptive action on the part of the General Assembly. / Ph. D.
60

The Historical Development of the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine as a State Medical School, 1960-1975

Rafes, Richard S. (Richard Scott) 12 1900 (has links)
This study is a historical analysis of the significant events from 1960 leading to the establishment of Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine (TCOM) in 1975 and a depiction of the actions of key individuals contributing to the development of the College. Included is a description of the environment and the controversy between the allopaths and osteopaths that resulted in a request in 1961 by the American Osteopathic Association to establish more osteopathic medical schools.

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