Monthly Archives: March 2025

Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 392 of 406)

Devine, Dympna (2013). "Value"ing Children Differently? Migrant Children in Education. Children & Society, v27 n4 p282-294 Jul. This paper considers dilemmas around "value" and the "valuing" of children and childhood(s) in schools. I argue that in neo-liberal contexts, processes of children's identity making become aligned with the idea of the corporate citizen–value and worth derived from the capacity to produce, excel, self-regulate as well as consume in an ever expanding marketplace. Taking the positioning of migrant children as an exemplar, the paper explores the tensions in pedagogic practices between the valuing of migrant children and their "added value" that is communicated through spheres of re/action in schools. The paper argues for education that is radical and strategic; careful and nurturing. In its absence, being valued differently involves reproducing negative patterns in a circular dialectical loop that naturalises under achievement of migrant children and other children at risk, to deficiencies in culture and identity. (Contains 1 figure and 3 notes.)… [Direct]

de Villiers, M. Ruth (2007). An Action Research Approach to the Design, Development and Evaluation of an Interactive E-Learning Tutorial in a Cognitive Domain. Journal of Information Technology Education, v6 p455-479. The teaching and learning of a complex section in "Theoretical Computer Science 1" in a distance-education context at the University of South Africa (UNISA) has been enhanced by a supplementary e-learning application called "Relations," which interactively teaches mathematical skills in a cognitive domain. It has tutorial and practice functionality in a classic computer-aided instruction (CAI) style and offers considerable learner control. A participative action research approach was used to design, develop, evaluate, and refine the application over a longitudinal period. In this process the application was formatively and summatively evaluated by different methods–questionnaire surveys, interviews, heuristic evaluation and a post-test. This article explains the purpose, structure, and operation of "Relations" and notes how the various evaluation methods resulted in iterative refinements to its functionality, learning content, and usability. The… [Direct]

√ñzt√ºrk, Sevim (2016). Human Resources Management in Educational Faculties of State Universities in Turkey. International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, v11 n5 p931-948. This study aims to evaluate the human resources management in the faculties of education of state universities in Turkey within the context of Human Resources Management Principles. The study population consisted of 40 academic members in the faculties of education of 20 different state universities and 10 academic unit administrators at different positions. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews and analyzed using descriptive and content analysis. The findings showed that the academicians generally consider that these principles are not sufficiently taken into consideration during administrative implementations. It was found that human resources management is shaped according to the administrative cultures of faculties, personal characteristics, democratic attitudes and understandings of the administrators, and consciousness and awareness of the administered people and therefore significant differences exist between the faculties; and human resources management… [PDF]

Newstead, Karen, Ed.; Olivier, Alwyn, Ed. (1998). Proceedings of the Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education (22nd, Stellenbosch, South Africa, July 12-17, 1998). Volume 2. The second volume of this proceedings contains the first portion of the research reports. Papers include: (1) \Learning Algebraic Strategies Using a Computerized Balance Model\ (James Aczel); (2) \Children's Perception of Multiplicative Structure in Diagrams\ (Bjornar Alseth); (3) \A Discussion of Different Approaches to Arithmetic Teaching\ (Julia Anghileri); (4) \A Model for Analyzing the Transition to Formal Proofs in Geometry\ (Ferdinando Arzarello, Chiara Micheletti, Federica Olivero, Ornella Robutti, and Domingo Paola); (5) \Dragging in Cabri and Modalities of Transition from Conjectures to Proofs in Geometry\ (Ferdinando Arzarello, Chiara Micheletti, Federica Olivero, Ornella Robutti, Domingo Paola, and Gemma Gallino); (6) \The Co-Construction of Mathematical Knowledge: The Effect of an Intervention Program on Primary Pupils' Attainment\ (Mike Askew, Tamara Bibby, and Margaret Brown); (7) \Dialectical Proof: Should We Teach It to Physics Students?\ (Roberto Ribeiro Baldino);… [PDF]

Goldman, Juliette D. G. (2015). UNESCO's Guidance on Puberty and Sexual Health Education for Students Aged 9-12 Years Compared to an Upper Primary School Curriculum. Health Education Journal, v74 n3 p340-350 May. Background: Children and young adolescents are reaching puberty earlier. Providing information about such changes before puberty can help them develop in a more competent and informed manner. Context and Objective: UNESCO's "International Technical Guidance on Sexuality Education" forms a comprehensive, evidence-based, authoritative document. This review analyses the Guidance for children and young adolescents aged 9-12 years who attend upper primary school. These students are very likely to be experiencing puberty, but are very unlikely, in many countries, to receive sufficient sexuality health information or education from parents or school at this crucial time. Design: This review analyses the text and narrative of this internationally-acknowledged sexuality education curriculum, and the relevant learning objectives/key ideas of a comparable state-designed health and physical education curriculum. Setting: Children and young adolescents who attend upper Primary school…. [Direct]

Wang, Li (2012). Social Exclusion and Education Inequality: Towards an Integrated Analytical Framework for the Urban-Rural Divide in China. British Journal of Sociology of Education, v33 n3 p409-430. The aim of this paper is to build a capability-based framework, drawing upon the strengths of other approaches, which is applicable to the complexity of the urban-rural divide in education in China. It starts with a brief introduction to the capability approach. This is followed by a discussion of how the rights-based approach and resource-based approach can supplement the capability model; this framework is then employed to draw out new insights regarding the case of urban-rural inequality in China. It concludes by highlighting the contribution of this framework in terms of mapping out the interlocked processes that create the urban-rural divide in education by taking account of children growing up under the influence of a wider socio-economic context. In doing so, it sheds light on issues which tend to be otherwise overlooked. (Contains 1 note, 1 table, and 6 figures.)… [Direct]

(2019). U.S. Department of Education FY 2019 Agency Financial Report. Office of Finance and Operations, US Department of Education The purpose of the United States Department of Education's (the Department) Fiscal Year (FY) 2019 "Agency Financial Report" (AFR) is to inform Congress, the President, other external stakeholders, and the American people on how the Department used the federal resources entrusted to it to promote student achievement and preparation for global competitiveness by fostering educational excellence and ensuring equal access. The Department accomplishes its mission and the related strategic goals and objectives by administering programs that range from preschool education through postdoctoral research; enforcing civil rights laws to provide equal access and treatment; and supporting research that examines ways that states, schools, districts, and postsecondary institutions can improve America's education system. The AFR provides high-level financial and performance highlights, assessments of controls, a summary of challenges, and a demonstration of the Department's stewardship. It… [PDF]

Atkinson, Kim (2019). British Columbia Early Learning Framework. British Columbia Ministry of Education This revised Early Learning Framework is the culmination of a collaborative process that included early childhood educators, primary teachers, academics, Indigenous organizations, Elders, government, and other professionals. The first Early Learning Framework published in 2008 changed the landscape of early years practice in British Columbia. It presented an image of the child as capable and full of potential, and introduced pedagogical narration as a process for reflecting on the knowledge and understandings of childhood. Since 2008, there have been significant developments in the social, political, economic, and cultural context of B.C. that have created new realities for children, families, and communities. This revised Early Learning Framework acknowledges these new realities and the changing perspectives and relations they bring. The revised Early Learning Framework: (1) Expands the focus on children from birth to five years in the original framework to children birth to eight… [PDF]

Ost, Suzanne (2013). Balancing Autonomy Rights and Protection: Children's Involvement in a Child Safety Online Project. Children & Society, v27 n3 p208-219 May. Researchers who involve children in their research are faced with the challenge of choosing between differing theoretical approaches which can prioritise children's autonomy rights or their "vulnerability" and their need to be protected. Somewhat confusingly, ethical guidelines seem to reflect a combination of these approaches. Even when researchers have settled on their preferred approach, they may find that this then has to be modified in accordance with gatekeeper requirements. In the context of children's involvement in a child safety online project, this paper highlights the difficulties encountered because of a tension between children's autonomy rights, educational norms in a school setting and child protection concerns and considers whether an appropriate balance was achieved. (Contains 5 notes.)… [Direct]

(1992). "English Only": The Attack on Minority Language Speakers in the United States. The Fund for Free Expression: A Committee of Human Rights Watch, v4 n1 Mar. The aim of the "English-Only" movement is to make English the official national language. The Constitution of the United States does not mention the English language, and therefore the country has no official language. The legacy of the nation's founders is one of linguistic tolerance. The increase in immigrants from Asia and Latin America has generated a nativist backlash. Within the "English-Only" movement, U.S. English (USE) is more sophisticated and successful than groups like "English First" that are overtly much more nativist and virulently anti-immigrant. Eighteen states and numerous cities and towns have official English laws. These laws can be attacked on First, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment grounds. The "English-Only" movement's rhetorical focus on the laudable goals of national unity and English proficiency has brought considerable financial and political success. Yet the movement is driven by cultural insecurity and…

Maude, Alaric Mervyn (2014). Developing a National Geography Curriculum for Australia. International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, v23 n1 p40-52. Australia is in the process of implementing a national geography curriculum to replace the separate state and territory curriculums. The paper describes the process of curriculum development, and identifies the different groups that were involved. These included the board and staff of the national curriculum authority, geography teachers across Australia, the state and territory curriculum bodies and a great variety of interest groups. It analyses some of the issues on which there were differences of opinion, such as how to describe the concepts, and some of the debates over what content to include, such as what place knowledge or skills to teach. The paper ends with a brief assessment of the curriculum and of the roles of the various groups in determining its content…. [Direct]

Haubenreich, John E. (2012). Education and the Constitution. Peabody Journal of Education, v87 n4 p436-454. The last 50 years have seen a massive increase in the federal role in public education in the United States and a marked increase in the tension between the federal government and the states with respect to control over education. This article investigates the history of education in America, particularly with respect to federal versus state power. By examining primary sources from the colonial and postcolonial periods, we can glimpse the thoughts and motivations of the United States' most influential thinkers and leaders, as they were helping build a new country. Furthermore, the decisions of the Supreme Court on education shed light on the history and role of education in our society today. Fundamentally, this article asks the question, Because the federal government plays such a large role in public education, where is education in the Constitution? (Contains 17 footnotes.)… [Direct]

(2018). Department of Research & Evaluation Plan of Work, 2018-2019. DRE Publication Number 18.01. Online Submission Each year, Austin Independent School District Department of Research and Evaluation (DRE) staff develop a plan of work to describe the scope of work for the coming year. The plans that make up this document identify programs to be evaluated and services to be provided by DRE staff and provide the blueprints for evaluation that staff will follow throughout the year…. [PDF]

Jin, Yanhong H.; Mjelde, James W.; Musumba, Mark (2011). Factors Influencing Career Location Preferences of International Graduate Students in the United States. Education Economics, v19 n5 p501-517. Using primary survey data, factors influencing preferences of international graduate students in the United States as to whether they prefer to stay in the United States or go back to their home country to start their careers are examined employing discrete choice analysis. Career opportunities and social climate are critical factors. Students prefer to start their careers in the country where they have more and better career opportunities, receive higher salaries, and have increased civil liberties. Differences between students who are sure and those who are not sure as to where they prefer to start their career are noted. (Contains 1 note, 2 tables, and 2 figures.)… [Direct]

(2013). New Jersey Primer on Special Education & Charter Schools. New Jersey Department of Education This document has been developed by the New Jersey Department of Education with the assistance of the TA Customizer Project funded by the U.S. Department of Education Charter Schools Program (CSP) and conducted by the National Association of State Directors of Special Education (NASDSE). Its focus is on providing information and technical assistance related to special education and the education of students with disabilities for developers and operators of New Jersey's charter schools from pre-application through all the life stages of the charter school. The New Jersey Charter School Program Act of 1995 (N.J.S.A. 18A:36A) recognizes only one authorizer for charter schools in the state–the Commissioner of Education. All application activities are managed through the Department of Education and each charter school is its own LEA for all matters pertaining to special education. Appendix includes: Glossary of Terms for the New Jersey Primer on Special Education and Charter Schools…. [PDF]

15 | 2485 | 21540 | 25031400

Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 393 of 406)

(2018). U.S. Department of Education FY 2018 Agency Financial Report. Office of the Chief Financial Officer, US Department of Education The purpose of the United States Department of Education's (the Department) Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 "Agency Financial Report" (AFR) is to inform Congress, the President, other external stakeholders, and the American people on how the Department used the federal resources entrusted to it to promote student achievement and preparation for global competitiveness by fostering educational excellence and ensuring equal access. The Department accomplishes its mission and the related strategic goals and objectives by administering programs that range from preschool education through postdoctoral research; enforcing civil rights laws to provide equal access and treatment; and supporting research that examines ways that states, schools, districts, and postsecondary institutions can improve America's education system. The AFR is designed to focus on use of federal resources provided to or distributed by the Department to support its mission, with a particular emphasis on the challenges… [PDF]

Au, Josephine; Konrath, Sara; Ramsey, Laura R. (2012). Cultural Differences in Face-ism: Male Politicians Have Bigger Heads in More Gender-Equal Cultures. Psychology of Women Quarterly, v36 n4 p476-487 Dec. Women are visually depicted with lower facial prominence than men, with consequences for perceptions of their competence. The current study examines the relationship between the size of this \face-ism\ bias (i.e., individual or micro-level sexism) and a number of gender inequality indicators (i.e., institutional or macro-level sexism) at the cross-cultural level. In one of the largest known face-ism databases to date, the authors used politicians' official online photographs as stimuli (N = 6,610) to explore how face-ism (as an example of individual-level sexism) covaries with institutional sexism across 25 cultures. The authors found that the face-ism bias was greater in cultures with lower levels of institutional gender inequality, demonstrating that institutional equality does not necessarily imply equality on the individual level. The authors offer a number of potential speculations for this mismatch. For example, it may be due to \postfeminist\ backlash that occurs in response… [Direct]

Alberts, Heike C. (2010). Using Cocoa and Chocolate to Teach Human Geography. Journal of Geography, v109 n3 p105-112. Food topics are uniquely suited to increase students' interest in human geography. A highly processed food like chocolate can be studied in a variety of different ways, making it possible to include chocolate examples and activities at various points in a human geography class. The goals of this article are to provide sufficient background knowledge about cocoa and chocolate to instructors and to make concrete suggestions how chocolate examples and activities can be used in human geography classes at the college/university and high school level. (Contains 1 figure and 3 notes.)… [Direct]

Calland, David R. (2012). Organizational Commitment among Employees at a Private Nonprofit University in Virginia. ProQuest LLC, Ph.D. Dissertation, Capella University. The purpose of this quantitative study was to investigate the similarity between the human resource strategies (benefits, due process, employee participation, employee skill level, general training, job enrichment, social interactions, wages) currently utilized at a private, nonprofit university in Virginia, and those reported in the research conducted by J. M. Buck (1999) in public colleges and universities. This study also sought to determine differences in organizational commitment levels (affective, normative, continuance) as reported by the participants in the J. M. Buck (1999) study and the current study. The secondary purpose was to study the impact of job position (faculty/staff) on organizational commitment levels (affective, continuance, normative) of university employees at a private, nonprofit university. Three research questions were considered in this study. First, are the human resource strategies (benefits, due process, employee participation, employee skill level,… [Direct]

Pai, Grace (2013). Particularizing Universal Education in Postcolonial Sierra Leone. Current Issues in Comparative Education, v16 n1 p62-73 Win. This paper presents a vertical case study of the history of universalizing education in postcolonial Sierra Leone from the early 1950s to 1990 to highlight how there has never been a universal conception of universal education. In order to unite a nation behind a universal ideal of schooling, education needed to be adapted to different subpopulations, as the Bunumbu Project did for rural Sierra Leoneans in the 1970s to 1980s. While the idea of "localizing" education was sound, early program success was undermined by a lack of clarity behind terms like "rural" or "community." This was exacerbated by a change in the scope of the project beyond its original objectives. Only by well defining the specific constituents of a target group and fulfilling their precise needs can myriad small-scale programs ultimately aggregate to meet the diverse demands and desires of society writ large…. [PDF]

(2004). Spotlight on Transition to Teaching Music. MENC: The National Association for Music Education The latest title in the popular Spotlight series, this timely book focuses on issues involving recruitment and retention of music teachers, a crucial issue in these days of budget constraints. Arranged chronologically, it features a collection of articles from state journals focusing on issues such as mentoring, teacher shortages, burnout, and professional development options. After an introduction, this book is divided into five sections. Section 1, Is There a Teacher Shortage?, contains the following chapters: (1) \Teacher Shortage: Salaries and a Whole Lot More\ (Brian Anderson); (2) \More Students, Fewer Teachers = Teacher Shortage\ (Carolynn A. Lindeman); and (3) \There Is a Music Teacher Shortage in Arizona–I May Have Caused It!!!\ (Larry Mabbitt). Section 2, How Can We Recruit and Retain More Music Teachers?, includes: (4) \What Happens to Our Beginning Teachers?\ (Dwayne Dunn); (5) \Teacher Shortage\ (Betty Ellis); (6) \Our Dilemma: Raising Music Teacher Preparation…

Witonsky, Trudi (2013). To Be a Co-Worker in the Kingdom of Culture. CEA Forum, v42 n1 p179-207 Win-Spr. In 1903, in the introduction to his ground-breaking, seminal work, "The Souls of Black Folks", W.E. B. Du Bois calls for a vision of our country in which African Americans can become "co-worker[s] in the kingdom of culture." In this article I make the case that the use of a novel like "Gods Go Begging" by Alfredo Vea can help us better understand what is required in implementing Inclusive Excellence, an initiative of the American Association of Colleges and Universities, that takes us a little farther down the road toward Du Bois' vision. (Contains 10 notes.)… [PDF]

(2017). U.S. Department of Education FY 2017 Agency Financial Report. Office of the Chief Financial Officer, US Department of Education The purpose of the United States Department of Education's (the Department) Fiscal Year (FY) 2017 "Agency Financial Report" (AFR) is to inform Congress, the President, other external stakeholders, and the American people on how the Department used the federal resources entrusted to it to promote student achievement and preparation for global competitiveness by fostering educational excellence and ensuring equal access. The Department accomplishes its mission and the related strategic goals and objectives by administering programs that range from preschool education through postdoctoral research; enforcing civil rights laws to provide equal access and treatment; and supporting research that examines ways that states, schools, districts, and postsecondary institutions can improve America's education system. The AFR is designed to focus on use of federal resources provided to or distributed by the Department to support its mission, with a particular emphasis on the challenges… [PDF]

Aviles de Bradley, Ann M. (2011). Unaccompanied Homeless Youth: Intersections of Homelessness, School Experiences and Educational Policy. Child & Youth Services, v32 n2 p155-172. School districts are faced with the challenge of how best to serve the needs of a growing homeless student population. As the numbers of homeless children and youth continue to rise, it is imperative for educators and others to understand the experiences of unaccompanied homeless youth. A qualitative research project was undertaken to obtain the perspectives of six high school students experiencing homelessness. These perspectives illuminate the various and multiple factors intersecting with student's educational lives. Their narratives uncovered the following themes: (a) Homelessness as a misnomer, (b) Homelessness is not a choice, (c) Caring adults, and (d) Student agency. Their counternarratives challenge adults working with unaccompanied homeless youth to rethink and reimagine the manner in which homelessness is understood and framed; this is especially critical in educational spaces. Schools often are the primary contexts in which youth spend their time and can be instrumental… [Direct]

Essex, Nathan (2010). The U.S Supreme Court Raises the Bar for Strip Searches in Public Schools. Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, v83 n3 p105-108. Strip searches should be considered searches of last resort based on the intrusive nature of the search and the resulting impact it may have on a student. It is well established by the courts that as the intrusiveness of the search intensifies, the standard of the Fourth Amendment reasonably approaches probable cause which is a higher standard than the reasonable suspicion standard that applies to non-intrusive searches. This article discusses a recent case involving a strip search in which the U.S. Supreme Court applied a more stringent standard that school officials must meet to justify initiating a strip search. The importance of the High Court's decision is that it resulted in a national standard by which actions of school officials will be judged in conducting intrusive searches during their investigation of alleged violations of school policies…. [Direct]

(2016). Department of Research & Evaluation Plan of Work, 2016-2017. DRE Publication Number 16.01. Online Submission Each year, Austin Independent School District Department of Research and Evaluation (DRE) staff develop a plan of work to describe the scope of work for the coming year. The plans that make up this document identify programs to be evaluated and services to be provided by DRE staff and provide the blueprints for evaluation that staff will follow throughout the year…. [PDF]

Strait, John B. (2010). Geographical Study of American Blues Culture. Journal of Geography, v109 n1 p30-39. Music is not often utilized in teaching geography, despite the fact that many scholars orient their research around analyzing both the historical and spatial dimensions of musical expression. This article reports on the use of a teaching module that utilizes blues culture as a lens to understand the geographical history of the United States. The relevance of this geographical history to the U.S. South is emphasized. The content of this module incorporates several themes and concepts critical to developing and facilitating a geographical perspective. Educators are encouraged to use this module as a model to develop creative ways in which the geography of music can be effectively incorporated within any educational curriculum. (Contains 4 notes and 4 figures.)… [Direct]

Daly, Alan J.; Ong-Dean, Colin; Park, Vicki (2011). Privileged Advocates: Disability and Education Policy in the USA. Policy Futures in Education, v9 n3 p392-405. Since the establishment of educational rights for children with disabilities in the 1970s, special education in the US has included a growing share of students and has constituted an ever-growing share of education budgets. Previous research has focused on the disproportionate assignment to special education of low-income and minority students, concluding that special education mainly reproduces social disadvantages. This article argues that privileged parents–by virtue of their ability to navigate complex legal and scientific practices and discourses that are seen as guarantees of fairness and neutrality in special education–are able to secure advantageous resources for their children through special education. Through analysis of the distribution and content of "due process" hearing requests in the California special education system, this article shows how advocacy in this part of the system depends on parents' cultural and economic capital. Specifically, reimbursement… [Direct]

Meiners, Erica R., Ed.; Quinn, Therese, Ed. (2012). Sexualities in Education: A Reader. Counterpoints: Studies in the Postmodern Theory of Education. Volume 367. Peter Lang New York With germinal texts, new writings, and related art, "Sexualities in Education: A Reader" illuminates a broad scope of analysis and organization. Composed of a framing essay and nine sections edited by established and emerging scholars and addressing critical topics for researchers and students of sexualities and education, the text provides a timely overview of sexualities considered through a variety of educational lenses and theoretical frameworks. Threads woven throughout include visual, literary, and performing arts; youth perspectives; and an emphasis on justice work in education. The volume provides entry points for students and practitioners at a range of levels. Research-based articles, essays, interviews, poetry and ready-to-reproduce visual materials from the Americas, Europe, and Asia are linked to a resource section to facilitate deep learning, on-going investigation, and informed action. Contents include: (1) Introduction: Love, Labor, and Learning–Yours in… [Direct]

Mabbutt, Richard (1991). Prejudice Reduction: What Works?. Social Science Research of the past several decades provides valuable insight into the processes of prejudice acquisition and reduction. This paper lists and briefly describes the following 15 findings based on this research and their implications regarding prejudice and what works to reduce it: (1) attitudes about interpersonal differences begin to be acquired in infancy; (2) attitudes may be set or softened by relationships and experiences; (3) the relationship among attitudes, perceptions, motivation, feelings, judgments, and behaviors is complex and much of it is socially mediated and highly contingent on \setting\; (4) because of this, some would approach the problem through macro-strategies rather than strategies focused on individual behaviors; (5) many researchers from minority communities emphasize strategies that reduce the adverse impact of dominant institutions on minority communities, while leaving the dominating majority to deal with their own biases; (6) social… [PDF]

15 | 2438 | 21224 | 25031400