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Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 370 of 406)

Muir, William K., Jr. (1983). Teachers' Regulation of the Classroom. The nature of teachers' control in classrooms is explored in order: to understand the tension created when noneducators superimpose their rules on the regime of teachers at work and to learn something of a general nature about the antagonism between regulators and those they regulate. Teachers' regulatory powers are based on coercion, exchange, or authority. Coercion heightens antagonism to a regulatory regime in the classroom, whereas exchange (the \purchase\ of student compliance) tends to corrupt the regime. The only recourse left is the development of authority–a moralized means of control that transforms teachers' might into right and students' obedience into duty. When outside sources, such as the courts, have an effect on school authority, the moral basis of local classroom authority may be threatened. Outside officials must develop the prudence and eloquence to preserve traditional organizational purposes while imposing new demands. Regulation is political in the sense that… [PDF]

(1988). Welfare Reform. Hearing before the Committee on Finance. United States Senate, One Hundredth Congress, Second Session (February 4, 1988). Part 3 of 3. This hearing, the third of three on welfare reform, focuses on the problem of child support and ways to improve the current system. One child in four now lives with a single parent; these children must receive the support that they are due. The hearings also focused on the problems of unemployed parents, and how the welfare system can help prepare welfare recipients for the long term through training, education, and job placement. Among the witnesses were the following: (1) Jeff Bingham, Senator, New Mexico; (2) Thad Cochran, Senator, Mississippi; (3) Jim Mattox, Attorney General, Texas; (4) Pierce A. Quinlan; (5) Gerald W. McEntee, American Federation of State and County Municipal Employees; (6) Regina S. Lipscomb, West Virginia Department of Human Services; (7) Carl B. Williams, Greater Avenues for Independence; (8) Cindy C. Haag, Utah Department of Social Services; (9) Robert G. Williams, Policy Studies, Inc.; (10) Robert Greenstein, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; (11)… [PDF]

(1980). Parental Kidnaping. Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Crime of the Committee on the Judiciary. House of Representatives, Ninety-Sixth Congress, Second Session. This record of a Congressional subcommittee hearing on parental kidnapping begins with an introduction to the problems of approximately 25,000 children, who are abducted each year by a parent in violation of child custody and visitation court orders following divorce proceedings. Various legal technicalities are noted, including that parents are exempt from criminal prosecution under the federal kidnapping statute, i.e., when a parent kidnaps a child and takes him/her to another state, that state is not bound by the child custody decree issued in the first state. Several Congressional members introduce legislation to combat the problem of child snatching and describe experiences of their constituents who were victimized by child snatching. Testimony is provided by a panel of witnesses, comprised of members of Children's Rights Inc., a non-profit organization addressing the problems of child snatching as well as parents of kidnapped children. The motives of parental kidnappers are… [PDF]

Tijerina, Andres A., Comp. (1978). Human Services for Mexican-American Children. A compilation of five readings uses the Chicano perspective to analyze the interaction between Mexican American families, their children, and the institutions charged with the child welfare concerns of the society, and to attempt to reverse the existing negative and destructive views that lead to insensitive and ineffective services. A variety of strategies are suggested for policy makers and practitioners charged with serving the needs of Mexican American families and children: an eclectic approach to casework practice; emphasis on bilingual communication skills; awareness of ethnicity; and individualization of all interactions. Andres Tijerina provides a brief historical account of the patterns of strength and cultural loyalty of the Mexican American family. Guadalupe Gibson presents an overview of the child welfare concerns of Mexican Americans and the problems encountered by those who try to serve them. Marta Sotomayor addresses the critical issues in human service delivery to…

Lewis, Judith A.; Lewis, Michael D. (1978). Community Organization and Mental Health; The Woodlawn Experience. A paraprofessional training program designed to provide community controlled mental health services to the Woodlawn community of Chicago, Illinois, is described in this monograph. The neighborhood and The Woodlawn Organization (T.W.O.A), a self help project formed in early 1960, are described from an historical perspective. Some of the areas discussed in this history include the primarily black community's relationship with the adjacent University of Chicago, urban renewal and model cities, relationships between the community and local businesses, tenants' rights, the public school system, and social services. The goals and founding principles of the Woodlawn mental health program (co-sponsored by the National Institutes of Health and T.W.O.), as well as training activities designed to meet these goals are outlined. The competency based curriculum developed by T.W.O. to train community mental health leaders is presented. The program contains seminar, practicum, and individual study…

Lane, Shelley D. (1981). Empathy and Assertive Communication. A review of communication research was conducted to (1) describe and clarify the nature of empathy, (2) investigate the construct of assertiveness, (3) posit a possible relationship between empathy and assertiveness, and (4) provide possible suggestions for future research. The literature indicates that conceptualizations of empathy primarily stress an orientation toward others, while assertive communication most often places an emphasis upon the self. Although first analyses indicate a negative relation between the two constructs, empathy and assertiveness do share some essential defining characteristics. Both constructs are conceptualized as ways to facilitate human understanding, both entail recognition of another individual's thoughts and feelings, and both involve the notion of appropriateness and flexibility in manifesting empathic and assertive communication. Some research even offers \empathic assertion\ as a specific type of assertiveness to be used in appropriate… [PDF]

Perry, William G., Jr.; And Others (1968). Patterns of Development in Thought and Values of Students in a Liberal Arts College: A Validation of a Scheme. Final Report. As a contribution toward understanding intellectual and moral growth in late adolescence in a pluralistic society, a developmental scheme representing an evolution in forms of thought and values was abstracted from students' reports of their experience. The raw data consisted of transcripts of recorded \open\ interviews held with volunteer students at Radcliffe and Harvard Colleges at the end of each college year. Two samples were used. Of the 9 \positions\ in the scheme's main line of development, the first 3 represent a simple right-wrong structure and their adjustment to diversity, the middle 3 trace the move to a generalized relativistic structure in which students face the issue of identity through personal commitment in a relative world, the last 3 represent stages in the growth of commitment. Included in the scheme are 3 conditions of delay or alienation expressing defection from the main line. Testing the validity of the scheme, judges rated interviews under 4 conditions…. [PDF]

Tomasi, Lydio F. (1973). The Ethnic Factor in the Future of Inequality. The paper analyzes how the attempt to assimilate ethnic groups into American society has contributed to social, economic, and political inequality. The hypothesis is that the official model of classical sociology has blinded us to a vast range of social phenomena which must be understood if we are to cope with the problems of contemporary America. While not often explicit, the American ideal that ethnic groups should be incorporated into the melting pot has created a society in which many observable forms of inequality are perpetrated. This stratification analysis extends the concept of poverty beyond the narrow limits of income to include political and personal relations. Among issues addressed are immigrant history, social acceptance, power and elitist vs. minority perspectives on education, religion, opportunity, and self-concept. A theory of ethnicity is advanced which explains ethnic identification as an integration of belongingness, self-esteem, the need for community… [PDF]

Hooten, David E., Ed. (1975). Proceedings of the Patterns Seminar (Rochester Institute of Technology, April 10-11, 1975). Patterns, v2 n1 May. This document contains the proceedings of a seminar concerned with the systematic development of the concept of life-long learning. The three most critical issues were identified as the adult learner, organization, and finance. Five major addresses and the reports of the workshops on the three issues are presented. Keynote speaker E. E. Dubois presents the concept of "androgogy"–adult education methodology–as a basis for human resources development. This concept calls for a new breed of adult educator, the manager of instruction. S. M. Grabowski looks at community needs assessment for colleges and suggests a needs identification and implementation process based on a dynamic operational philosophy for the college. J. Freeman explains the methods of Xerox Learning Systems and outlines an approach to college-industry cooperation in industrial training. H. Lisson reviews the relationship between education and industrial training and describes a "typical" industrial… [PDF]

Fendrich, James M.; Krauss, Ellis S. (1975). Student Activism and Political Socialization: A Causal Model of Socialization Stages and Adult Left-wing Politics in the United States and Japan. The relative influence of stages of political socialization on the adult political orientation and activities of former American and Japanese student activists is examined. A causal model of the stages of political socialization, including family and school, student activism, and adult roles, is compared with the political fate of student activists who participated in the 1960 antisecurity treaty movement in Japan and the civil rights movement in the American South. The results indicate that student activism in college is the best predictor of adult politics in both countries. Family and early school political socialization are only weak predictors of future adult politics. Adult political socialization can be either a facilitator or a constraint for maintaining political commitments. In the United States, career choice has no direct effect because student activism strongly affects career choice. In Japan, career choice has a strong effect on adult politics. Former Japanese students… [PDF]

Westerlund, Stuart R.; Whitlock, Eileen S. (1975). Humane Education: An Overview. This booklet traces the historical development of human education as it has been instilled into the young people of America from colonial times to the present and provides a future prognosis of humaneness in the schools. Humane education promotes humane behavior and is an important part of the humane movement in the United States, although until recently it has remained largely outside the education community. The authors explore various methods of inculcating humane ideals in children, such as formal instruction in just, kind, and compassionate behavior for all living creatures; dealing directly with animals, either by owning and caring for a pet or collecting scrapbook pictures and stories about animals; and reading animal stories. Topics discussed include Why Humane Education?; Humane Education and Its Subsystems (Conservation Education, Environmental Education, Outdoor Education); Humane Education–An Overview of Development; and Contemporary Humane Education (The George… [PDF]

Aubry, William E. (1974). Life Style Assessment: So What!. The construct life style was used by Alfred Adler to describe the characteristic way in which individuals act and think. Followers of his theories are now collecting evidence to support or validate his contentions. The assessment of client life styles serves: (1) to make the client aware of his misconceptions, (2) as a reference point for therapy, and (3) as the focal point of personality change. Thus, the assessment procedure–done one-to-one or in groups–constitutes for Adlerians an important part of therapy. Bringing into awareness the clients misconceptions implies respect for his ability to correct his mistakes; it is a form of encouragement. A counselor, to encourage, must respect the client's right to choose. Adlerians and others think that with proper information the individual will decide more effectively. Ideal thinking and behaving is a function of a healthy interest in others; this is termed social interest. A social interest index is used to measure the extent to which… [PDF]

Leeper, Robert R., Ed. (1971). Curricular Concerns in a Revolutionary Era. Readings from \Educational Leadership.\. Sixty-six articles and two poems, selected from \Educational Leadership\, comprise this book. Major emphasis is on curricular concerns and instruction in the schools of today and the future. Authors provide insightful, comprehensive understanding about educational issues and concerns rather than attempt final answers to complex problems. Re-examination of educational goals is necessary before future curriculum is reshaped. The materials, divided into 11 sections, are arranged partly in chronological order by date of publication and partly in accordance with logical treatment of the instructional concern represented. The divisions are: 1) Values; 2) Individualization; 3) Social Involvement; 4) The Search for Theory; 5) Integration; 6) Ethnic Studies; 7) Student Rights and Responsibilities; 8) Whorls in a Revolutionary Society; 9) Politics; 10) Adapting to the Needs of our Time; and, 11) In a World Setting. The various authors uphold the potential of each individual and express the… [PDF]

Cox, Buford Jr.; Halliday, J. Stuart (1972). A Guide: To The Negro in American History. The black American has played a significant part in the development of the United States and the making of its institutions, but unfortunately historians have failed to objectively record and properly deal with Negro history. This instructional guide for secondary students, written in outline form, attempts to portray Negro history as an integral part of the American past and includes a broad yet comprehensive study of the Negro from early African civilizations of 700 A.D. to the present and, moreover, provides a projected look into the future. Emphasis is upon the many contributions and achievements that Negroes made throughout the nation as developers, inventors, defenders, leaders, educators, explorers, scientists, performers in the field of theatre, art, music, and literature and especially as contributors and builders of democracy. Twenty-one chapters depict a race forced from freedom into oppression and their continual struggle for human dignity through the American…

Brubaker, Thomas, A., Ed.; And Others (1993). The Magic of Technology. NECC 1993: Proceedings of the Annual National Educational Computing Conference (14th, Orlando, Florida, June 27-30, 1993). These conference proceedings address the capabilities of technology in education. Papers and summaries of presentations are provided on the following topics: programs for special needs students; virtual realities; funding opportunities; videodiscs; future programs and perspectives; telecomputing; computer networks in the classroom; human infrastructures and interfaces; creating schedules with artificial intelligence; a management information system; a classroom instructional technology center; teacher training; student response journals; teachers and telecommunications; interactive electronic learning; integrating multimedia applications; exploring native cultures; implementation strategies; multimedia lesson planning tools; multimedia and hypermedia projects; electronic mail; global learning; local area networks; gender-free perspectives; for-profit schools; computer simulation of laboratory instruments; connecting students and the community; multimedia for bilingual children;… [PDF]

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Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 371 of 406)

Kerekes, Judit (2005). Using the Learners World to Construct and Think in a System of Mathematical Symbols. College Teaching Methods & Styles Journal, v1 n2 p17-26. According to Dutch mathematician and educator Hans Freudenthal, mathematics is a human activity that unfolds in a process and can be best learned through personal experience (Gravemeijer & Treffers, 2000). Such experience involves the solving of real life problems; they require mathematization based on reality. Students should therefore be given the opportunity to solve real life problems cooperatively in the classroom. They should be encouraged to appreciate mathematization, and share their findings during whole class discussions. This learning style requires a special environment, and demands math teachers who are well prepared in every respect: subject matter, child psychology, and didactics as a true and scientific analysis and interpretation of the dynamics of teaching and learning. Clearly, such capabilities require intense training, dedication, and a steep learning curve for teacher candidates. However, the burden is reduced by the practical nature of the approach, the… [Direct]

Cardwell, Vernon B. (2005). Literacy: What Level for Food, Land, Natural Resources, and Environment?. Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education, v34 p112-117. Many forms of literacy exist. Each literacy is an integration of ways of thinking, acting, interacting, and valuing. To understand the impact of agriculture (i.e., farming, ranching, forestry, and fisheries) and the contributions and interactions to the environment (e.g., losses of biological diversity, soil degradation, air and water pollution, the effects of human activity on the land, the landscape and natural resources, and the overall impact on nutrition and other biologically based consumer consumption choices) requires literacy about food, land, natural resources, and the environment. To define citizen levels of literacy we need to understand the competency levels of literacy–nominal, functional, cultural, and multidimensional. Nominal literacy identifies the minimal recognition of concepts. Functional literacy provides the content and understanding of \what.\ Cultural literacy provides context to concepts and ability to articulate \why.\ All three are conditions for… [PDF]

Au, Wayne, Ed. (2009). Rethinking Multicultural Education: Teaching for Racial and Cultural Justice. Rethinking Schools, Ltd Since the 1980s, "Rethinking Schools" magazine has been renowned for its commitment to racial equality in education. Now, "Rethinking Multicultural Education: Teaching for Racial and Cultural Justice" has collected the best Rethinking Schools articles that deal with race and culture. "Rethinking Multicultural Education" moves beyond a simplistic focus on heroes and holidays to demonstrate a powerful vision of anti-racist, social justice education. Practical, rich in story, and analytically sharp, "Rethinking Multicultural Education" reclaims multicultural education as part of a larger struggle for justice and against racism, colonization, and cultural oppression–in schools and society. This book contains four sections. Section I, Anti-Racist Orientations, contains the following: (1) Taking Multicultural, Anti-Racist Education Seriously: An interview with Enid Lee; (2) Origins of Multiculturalism (Christine Sleeter and Peter McLaren); (3) What… [Direct]

ORNATI, OSCAR (1964). THE STRATEGY AND POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE WAR AGAINST POVERTY. SUGGESTIONS FOR STRATEGIES TO WIN THE WAR ON POVERTY ARE BASED ON AN UNDERSTANDING OF WHAT POVERTY IS, HOW IT IS TO BE FOUGHT, AND THE MEANING OF LOSING THE WAR. THERE HAVE BEEN MANY DEFINITIONS OF POVERTY, FOR INDIVIDUALS DIFFER IN THEIR VALUES AND THEIR IDEAS OF NEED. SUBJECTIVE ESTIMATES OF NEED DEPEND ON WHETHER THE ESTIMATOR IS RICH OR POOR, THRIFTY OR LAX, MATERIALISTIC OR IDEALISTIC. FROM SUCH DIFFERENCES STEM VARIED ESTIMATES OF THE NUMBER OF POOR IN THE UNITED STATES WHICH RANGE BETWEEN 20 TO 70 MILLION. DISAGREEMENT ALSO ARISES ON WHETHER THERE ARE MORE OR LESS POOR NOW THAN FORMERLY. THE POOR MAY ALSO BE DEFINED AS CONSTITUTING SOME PART OF THE BOTTOM OF THE INCOME DISTRIBUTION, BUT INCOME DISTRIBUTION IS A DERIVED ASPECT OF POVERTY RATHER THAN ITS CAUSE. TO PLAN AND CARRY OUT POLICIES EFFECTIVELY, PEOPLE WITH HIGH CHANCES OF BEING POOR SHOULD BE IDENTIFIED. IN ONE STUDY, A MEASURE WAS DEVELOPED SHOWING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN POSSESSION OF A GIVEN CHARACTERISTIC AND THE…

Kalichman, Seth C. (1996). Answering Your Questions about AIDS. This book focuses on AIDS education and answers 350 commonly asked questions about Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) taken from questions addressed to two major urban AIDS hotlines (Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and Houston, Texas). Chapter 1, "HIV – The Virus That Causes AIDS," discusses: the HIV virus; the origins of AIDS; HIV inside and outside the body; and the AIDS epidemic. Chapter 2, "HIV Infection and How It Causes AIDS," describes: the stages of HIV and AIDS; symptoms of HIV infection; AIDS; and children with HIV and AIDS. Chapter 3, "Sex, Drugs, and AIDS," discusses: various types of sexual intercourse; sharing needles; pregnancy and childbirth; and risk taking behavior. Chapter 4, "People at Risk," deals with: gay and bisexual men; lesbians and bisexual women; heterosexual men and women; risky partners and places; and infants, children, adolescents, and the elderly. Chapter 5, "Can I Get…

Lavelle, Robert, Comp. (1995). America's New War on Poverty: A Reader for Action. Companion to the Public Television Series "America's War on Poverty.". Companion to a five-part public television documentary, this book describes efforts across the United States to fight poverty, and also prescribes that we all take responsibility for a fight against economic inequality. The book's goal is to contribute to a meaningful discussion about poverty in America, a topic that cannot be broached today without noisy, bitter debate. Short stories, fiction excerpts, and personal essays are at the heart of the book. Policy-oriented discussions are limited to prologue and conclusion. Stories and essays were chosen to show the many manifestations of poverty today and a glimpse of the human faces usually hidden behind statistics and policies. Selections are arranged in three parts: (1) the poverty of children; (2) of families; and (3) of communities. The experience of poverty is examined in diverse places (inner cities, rural areas, farm communities) and among diverse groups (Whites, Blacks, Hispanics, American Indians, migrant workers, homeless…

Cressey, Peter; Kelleher, Michael; Nyhan, Barry; Poell, Rob; Tomassini, Massimo (2004). European Perspectives on the Learning Organisation. Journal of European Industrial Training, v28 n1 p67-92. This paper, based on a publication entitled "Facing up to the Learning Organisation Challenge," published in April 2003, provides an overview of the main questions emerging from recent European research projects related to the topic of the learning organisation. The rationale for focusing on this topic is the belief that the European Union goals related to "lifelong learning" and the creation of a "knowledge-based society" can only be attained if the organisations in which people work are also organisations in which they learn. Work organisations must become, at the same time, learning organisations. This paper has four main messages. The first is that, in order to build learning organisations, one has to ensure that: there is coherence between the "tangible" (formal/objective) and the "intangible" (informal/subjective) dimensions of an organisation; and that the organisation's learning goals are reconciled with individuals' learning… [Direct]

(2023). Academic Freedom and Tenure: Emporia State University (Kansas). American Association of University Professors This report concerns the action taken on September 15, 2022, by the administration of Emporia State University to terminate the appointments of thirty tenured and tenure-track faculty members under a temporary "COVID-related workforce management policy" adopted by the Kansas Board of Regents (KBOR) in January 2021. The investigating committee concluded that the mass dismissal "is a signal event in American higher education" and in violation of several AAUP-recommended standards concerning academic freedom and tenure, such as the 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure and Regulation 4 of the derivative Recommended Institutional Regulations on Academic Freedom and Tenure. Additionally, the report concludes that the Kansas Board of Regents actively enabled the administration of Emporia State University in these violations, and "initiated the process that assaulted tenure and imperiled academic freedom at Emporia State University." [The… [PDF]

Flanagain, William C. (2007). A Survey–The Negative Aspects of in and out of School Suspensions and Alternatives That Promote Academic Achievement. Online Submission In almost every sector of the educational arena, educators, administrators and parents are concerned with the problem of establishing environments that are contributing to a successful educational outcome. The most profound questions today are safety in the schools, which stimulated political and educational leaders to establish zero tolerance policies for different negative behaviors in an effort to deter students into sustaining good behaviors. With an almost epidemic in school-based violent crimes; such as Virginia State University, in April 2007; school boards across America are searching for alternatives for educating violent and disruptive students while still meeting their constitutional rights to an education. The purpose of this research study is to determine to what extent students agree, and analyze the deterrent effects of in and out of school suspensions on the personal-social characteristics of the student and the academic achievement as well. Statistical figures will… [PDF]

Vandeyar, Saloshna; Ziqubu, Lwazi (2022). Rupturing the Laws of Discourse: Learner Agency in the Construction of Their Identity in School Discourses. Perspectives in Education, v40 n4 p180-195. Utilising the theoretical frameworks of theory of power and theory of performativity, this case study explored how learners exercised agency in the construction of their identity in school discourses. Data capture incorporated a mix of a survey, semi-structured interviews and field notes. Data was analysed using content analysis. A total of 90 learners participated in the survey. Fifteen learners, three teachers and three principals participated in semi-structured interviews. This paper reports on findings from the semi-structured interviews. Findings were twofold. First, schools used Foucault's mechanisms and instruments of constructing learner identity. Learners were subjected to a constant gaze at schools. Second, learners became agentic in schools and asserted their own identities. Some of these identities clashed with the identity of the 'ideal learner' of schools. Despite established subject positions in schools, learners created their own subject positions to counter limiting… [Direct]

Alderman, Derek H.; Craig, Bethany; Cunningham, Shaundra; Inwood, Joshua (2023). The 1964 Freedom Schools as Neglected Chapter in Geography Education. Journal of Geography in Higher Education, v47 n3 p411-431. Our paper revisits a neglected chapter in the history of geographic education–the civil rights organization SNCC and the Freedom Schools it helped establish in 1964. An alternative to Mississippi's racially segregated public schools, Freedom Schools addressed basic educational needs of Black children while also creating a curriculum to empower them to become active citizens against White supremacy. Emerging out of a history of Black fugitive learning, Freedom Schools produced a critical regional pedagogy to help students identify the geographic conditions and power structures behind their oppression in the South and use regional comparisons to raise their political consciousness and expand their relational sense of place. Freedom Schools have important implications for higher educators, especially as contemporary conservative leaders seek to rid critical discussions of race from classrooms. They offer an evocative case study of the spatial imagination of the Black Freedom Struggle… [Direct]

Hight, Joe; Madrigal, Ilissa; Newman, Elana (2023). The Inconsistency of Trauma-Related Journalism Education Goals and Instruction. Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, v78 n2 p165-182 Jun. Many journalism students cover stories about tragedy and violence (trauma). Yet few journalism schools offer trauma training despite growing agreement among educators that early journalists need to learn about the impact of reporting trauma on victims, the community, and the journalists' themselves. This contrast is puzzling. This study aimed to identify what trauma-related topics are valued and which are taught. First, 156 Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) members completed a survey rating the importance and extent of course coverage of self-care, trauma-informed interviewing, trauma's impact on the community, and best trauma community reporting practices. The commonly deemed highly valued topics include ethics of accuracy, sensitivity, respect for survivors, and privacy rights. Self-care was deemed important but often not covered. Qualitative interviews provided context on pedagogical techniques, experiences, and barriers to teaching trauma…. [Direct]

Knapp, Clifford E. (1999). In Accord with Nature: Helping Students Form an Environmental Ethic Using Outdoor Experience and Reflection. This book demonstrates how educators and youth leaders can help middle-school and older students understand and define their relationship with nature and learn the importance of protecting the environment. Chapter 1 defines environmental ethics and discusses biocentric and anthropocentric ways of seeing the world. Chapter 2 examines how ecology, nature, technology, and human communities relate to environmental ethics. Chapter 3 classifies types of environmental ethics, discusses misconceptions and excuses that act as barriers to following an environmental ethic, and provides details on specific ethics: Wise Use movement, social ecology, ecofeminism, land stewardship or management, Leopold's ecological conscience or land as community, Schweitzer's reverence for life, deep ecology or bioregionalism, indigenous or traditional ethics, animal liberation and rights, and radical ecoactivism. Chapter 4 discusses strategies for teaching environmental ethics and values, criticisms of such… [PDF]

(1993). AIDS/HIV Infection Policies for Early Childhood and School Settings. This volume of policies related to children with Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) or Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) describes appropriate ways to guarantee students' rights while maintaining public health, and answers questions for parents, educators, and caregivers. Section 1 presents policy guidelines for infants, toddlers, and preschoolers with HIV infection or AIDS in early childhood settings. Guidelines cover the appropriateness of early childhood setting attendance, enrollment in a specific setting, restrictions, continued attendance, sharing medical information with child care providers, confidentiality, medical records, infection control, HIV screening, and consultation availability. Section 2 contains updated medical policy guidelines for children and adolescents with HIV infection or AIDS in school settings. This section includes facts about the transmission of HIV, guidelines for disclosure, and an overview of statutes governing disclosure. Medical… [PDF]

(1988). Infertility: Medical and Social Choices. This report illustrates a range of options for Congressional action in nine principal areas of public policy related to infertility: (1) collecting data on reproductive health; (2) preventing infertility; (3) information to inform and protect consumers; (4) providing access to infertility services; (5) reproductive health of veterans; (6) transfer of human eggs, sperm, and embryos; (7) recordkeeping; (8) surrogate motherhood; and (9) reproductive research. After introductory chapters on infertility and the demography of infertility, full chapters are devoted to factors contributing to infertility, prevention, diagnosis, treatment, services and costs. Quality assurance for research and clinical care is discussed. Reproductive health of veterans is discussed, including factors specific to veterans, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Agent Orange, and radiation. Ethical considerations relevant to infertility are reviewed, including the right to reproduce, the moral status of the embryo,… [PDF]

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