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2. Interpretation and Use of K-12 Language Proficiency Assessment Score Reports: Perspectives of Educators and Parents. WCER Working Paper No. 2016-8
- Author
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University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin Center for Education Research (WCER), Kim, Ahyoung Alicia, Kondo, Akira, Blair, Alissa, Mancilla, Lorena, Chapman, Mark, and Wilmes, Carsten
- Abstract
A number of English language proficiency exams target grades K-12 English language learners (ELLs) because of the rising need to identify their needs and provide appropriate support in language learning. A good example is the WIDA ACCESS for ELLs (hereafter ACCESS), designed to measure the English language proficiency of students identified as ELLs. Every year approximately two million K-12 ELLs in the WIDA Consortium take ACCESS. After students complete the exam, score reports are provided to relevant stakeholders, including teachers and parents of the students. Because score reports are widely used by stakeholders for many purposes (e.g., placement, reclassification of ELLs), it is necessary to understand how they are interpreted and used in educational and home settings. Such information could be used to understand the usefulness of score reports and also to enhance their quality. However, there is little research on stakeholders' interpretation and use of score reports, especially in the context of K-12 ELL exams in the Unites States. Existing research is limited to teachers' interpretation of score reports (Impara, Divine, Bruce, Liverman, & Gay, 1991; Luecht, 2003; Underwood, Zapata-Rivera, & VanWinkle, 2007). For example, Impara et al. (1991) investigated the extent to which teachers were able to interpret student-level results on a standardized state assessment and the extent to which interpretive information provided on the reverse side of the student score report improved teacher understanding. Findings suggest that interpretive material helped facilitate teachers' understanding of student scores on the assessment. However, few studies have examined how stakeholders actually use the interpreted information. Moreover, very few (Miller & Watkins, 2010) have examined score reports from the parents' perspective. To gain a deeper understanding of the meaningfulness and utility of score reports, it is necessary to examine both educators' and parents' perspectives. The study on which this paper is based investigated how two stakeholder groups--K-12 ELL educators and parents--interpret and use ACCESS score reports. Findings from qualitative interviews offer implications for score report development in general and how to further enhance the quality of ACCESS score reports. In the study, the authors addressed the following research questions: (1) How do K-12 ELL educators and parents interpret the information in an English proficiency exam score report?; and (2) How do K-12 ELL educators and parents use the information in an English proficiency exam score report?
- Published
- 2016
3. Can You Hear Us Now? A White Paper on Connecting Minority-Serving Institutions in the West to U.S. Advanced Cyberinfrastructure. Lariat Summit on Minority Institutions and Cyberinfrastructure in the West (Bozeman, Montana, August 14-15, 2006)
- Author
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Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education and Fox, Louis
- Abstract
Advanced information, communication, computation and collaboration technologies, known as "cyberinfrastructure," have become essential elements for research, education, and innovation in the 21st century. A major challenge confronting the United States today is how to ensure that all colleges and universities, including those that have not traditionally benefited from leading-edge research infrastructure, can participate seamlessly in national and multinational cyberinfrastructure-enabled efforts. The minority-serving-institution community has unique expertise, knowledge, and resources to share. Western leaders from the fields of science, education and cyberinfrastructure recognize an urgent need for action. Participants in the 2006 "Lariat Summit on Minority Institutions and Cyberinfrastructure in the West" gathered in Bozeman, Montana to develop strategies and recommendations for connecting minority-serving institutions in the West to national advanced cyberinfrastructure. This document is a first step towards developing both the will and the resources to ensure that minority-serving institutions are among the "connected" institutions in the Western states of Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, and Washington. (Contains 2 figures and 11 endnotes.) [Financial support for this white paper was provided by the University of Washington, Internet2, and the Pacific Northwest Gigapop.]
- Published
- 2007
4. Postsecondary Education for Incarcerated Individuals: Guidance for State Agencies and Systems of Higher Education
- Author
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State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO), Pearson, Denise, and Heckert, Kelsey
- Abstract
The United States leads the world in the number of incarcerated persons per 100,000. In today's global economy, these numbers represent huge wastes in human capital, especially when you consider the inequitable nature of the American criminal justice system, as witnessed by the disproportionate racial and ethnic composition, types of crimes, and length of prison sentences represented within this population. Regardless of the pathway to prison, most incarcerated people will eventually return to the communities from which they came, so one of the important questions may be, how does society want them to show up? Broken or made whole? Angry or hopeful? Employable or unemployable? Role model or counterexample? The essence of this paper is linked to a favored quote by the late Nelson Mandela, who said, "Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." These words are as profound today as they were in 1990 when he addressed an audience of Boston high school students. Furthermore, education in America remains one of the best investments individuals and governments can make, which should include investment in prison-based education programs. These types of efforts are cost-effective, reduce recidivism, improve employment prospects, increase civic engagement, and can disrupt generational poverty. Despite Second Chance Pell programs and other evidence supporting the multilayered value of postsecondary (coursework beyond high school) education for incarcerated populations, barriers and challenges persist. Fortunately, leaders of state agencies and systems of higher education are increasingly exploring the feasibility of these programs for their states. This paper presents preliminary findings from a survey SHEEO administered to its members in 2018. It advocates for postsecondary education for incarcerated persons as a relevant policy issue at federal and state levels in current political environments. Key findings and recommendations were informed by responses from 38 percent of SHEEO's membership. States responding to the survey were Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Washington, and Wyoming. Non-member organizations included Truckee Meadows Community College (NV); University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Bismarck State College (ND); and the Washington State Board of Community and Technical Colleges. The paper is organized around three main categories: access, program delivery, and reentry of program participants into society, with the following key performance indicators.
- Published
- 2020
5. Making It Official: The Institutionalization of The Hegemony of English in the US
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Nieto, David G.
- Abstract
Drawing upon Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) as theoretical framework and methodological tool, the present paper critically examines the legislation that has established English as official language in 30 states. This study captures the motivation and rationale of the policies, their stated outcomes and educational implications. The analysis situates the discourse embedded in official language policies within its socio-historical context and the conceptualization of race and language in the US. The results indicate that official English legislation responds to a conservative raciolinguistic ideology that seeks to reaffirm the hegemony of English as a mechanism of internal colonization. Official English attempts to establish monolingual educational and governmental practices that serve as an instrument to protect the status quo and, thus, perpetuate the privilege of whiteness and the subordination of immigrants, and Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC).
- Published
- 2021
6. Redefining School Discipline: Illinois and Other States' Responses to Negative Impact
- Author
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Puckett, Tiffany, Graves, Christopher, and Sutton, Lenford C.
- Abstract
Minority students and students with disabilities are disciplined disproportionately from their peers. Discipline has led to many negative consequences in the lives of youth in the United States, including the school-to-prison pipeline. In 2014, the U.S. Department of Education issued guidance encouraging school districts to develop policies that seek alternatives to exclusionary penalties. Some states, including the State of Illinois, have been proactive in revamping the state's discipline. In this paper, we will examine how the states are responding to the school-to-prison pipeline and the other negative effects of exclusions and suspensions. Additionally, this paper will examine the implementation of Illinois Senate Bill 100, from an administrator's point of view, to make recommendations for disciplinary strategies and possible policy revisions.
- Published
- 2019
7. Brick and Click Libraries: Proceedings of an Academic Library Symposium (9th, Maryville, Missouri, November 6, 2009)
- Author
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Northwest Missouri State University, Ury, Connie Jo, Baudino, Frank, and Park, Sarah G.
- Abstract
Twenty-one scholarly papers and fourteen abstracts comprise the content of the ninth annual "Brick and Click Libraries Symposium," held annually at Northwest Missouri State University in Maryville, Missouri. The peer-reviewed proceedings, authored by academic librarians and presented at the symposium, portray the contemporary and future face of librarianship. Many of the papers include charts and illustrations, which enhance readers' understanding of the information presented. Several papers describe research projects or deployment of current trends in a specific library setting. Topics incorporate information of interest to librarians working in the areas of reference, instruction, access services, and collection development. The 2009 paper titles include: (1) The Process and Promise of Consolidating Public Service Desks: You Can't Hurry Love (Phillip J. Jones and Tim Zou); (2) Build an iLibrary with iGoogle: Building Blocks for Libraries (Rene Erlandson and Rachel Erb); (3) Evaluating "CamStudio and Wink" Screen Capture Programs for Library Instruction (Ted Gentle); (4) Physical Space in a Virtual World: Implications for Library Space (David Alexander); (5) Collection Development in Tight Economic Times: A Homegrown Workflow Analysis Program (Anna Hulseberg and Julie Gilbert); (6) Creating Usability Tests that Work for Your Web Site and Other Web Applications (Kari D. Weaver and Kimberly Babcock Mashek); (7) 11,000,000 Words: An Avalanche of Academic Archive Photos at KState at Salina (Heidi Blackburn, Pam Bower, and Alysia Starkey); (8) Are You Ready for "The Cloud"? Implications and Uses of Cloud Computing for Libraries (Alyssa Martin, Kent Snowden, and Debbie West); (9) Using "Jing" to Turn Your IM or Chat Reference into a Multimedia Educational Experience (William Breitbach); (10) Empowering College Students' Research Skills via Digital Media (Elaine Chen); (11) "Meebo": Jumpstarting an Instant Message Reference Program (Jennifer Nelson); (12) Taking the Library Where Our Users Are (Where Is That, Exactly?) (Julia Bauder); (13) Expanding while Simplifying: Document Delivery Services at the University of Wyoming Libraries (William O. Van Arsdale, III); (14) What We Do for the Sake of Correct Citations (Connie Jo Ury and Patricia Wyatt); (15) New Acquisitions Retrieval System (NARS) a New Tool to Promote Library Collection (Youbo Wang); (16) "Excel"erate Your Metadata: Tips and Tricks for Using Excel to Generate Metadata for the NonProgrammer (Teressa Keenan); (17) This Is the World Calling: The Global Voices and Visions of Internet Radio and Television (John Barnett); (18) Comparing Bananas with Grapes: Ebook Use Data from a Bunch of Vendors (Joseph Kraus); (19) What the Text Is Happening? (Linda L. Parker and Audrey DeFrank); (20) Cataloging Streaming Media: Tools and Rules (Janice Boyer); and (21) "Coursecasting" with iTunes University (Plamen Miltenoff, Pamela Salela, and Gary Schnellert). An author/title index is included. (Individual papers contain notes, figures, tables and references.) [Abstract modified to meet ERIC guidelines. For the 2008 proceedings, see ED503310.]
- Published
- 2009
8. From Moral Development to Healthy Relationships: The Role of Religion in Out-of-Home Placement.
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Schatz, Mona S. and Horejsi, Charles
- Abstract
Neither public nor private agencies address the extensive religious involvement that children and youth receive in child care facilities and foster home placement situations. In a five-state mid-west study (N=252), this paper examines religious practices in foster homes. The study identifies a strong Christian-based affiliation of foster homes. The findings illustrate the daily, weekly, and monthly religious rituals practiced in foster homes including grace at meals, bedtime prayers, church-going, and religious social groups activities. These activities complement the process of moral development in children through religious involvement. The pervasiveness of religious practices and beliefs as reported suggests that even when both parents of these out-of-home children do not stipulate a preference for a specific religiously-affiliated foster home, the experience of the foster child will probably include practices and education in a specific religious persuasion. Though foster parents generally state that they allow the child to choose to be involved in the religious activities of the home, anecdotal evidence exists to suggest that while some children gain a great deal from involvement in the religious practices of the foster home, other foster children have experienced both confusion and rejection due to the demands by foster parents to be involved in religious activities. Child-serving agencies and government social services should take heed that foster parents are of the opinion that the issues of religion and religious involvement of foster children is not adequately addressed by agencies at orientation and placement. In this study, only two states had any training in this area. (Contains 6 tables and 15 references). (Author/MKA)
- Published
- 1996
9. The Knowledge Base for Improving Policy and Practice: The Regional Laboratories Experience. The Knowledge Bases for Improving Rural Education: Their Needs Are Unique.
- Author
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Mid-Continent Regional Educational Lab., Aurora, CO. and Haas, Toni
- Abstract
Several problems exist with the rural knowledge base as it is traditionally conceived: (1) there is no useful rural definition with the diverse rural reality; (2) rural is undervalued as reflected in teacher education and training and in the stereotyping of regions in the country; (3) issues of sparsity, scarcity and size are disregarded, and (4) the positive attributes already present in many rural schools are ignored. The type of education available in rural schools typify, on a small scale, the recommendations of effective schools research. Rural educators have experienced the limitations of the current knowledge base and rely on practice and experienced-based knowledge. New knowledge to improve practice comes from personal interactions with other rural educators rather than from research or outside resource persons. State departments of education establish monitoring and compliance relationships with rural schools, mirroring the larger society's undervaluing of rural education. They assume that rural schools are financially inefficient and educationally ineffective, although all state-wide test data proves contrary. New models for knowledge production and utilization are necessary for improving rural education. Three alternative models are: (1) clustering schools with similar interests to share programs, personnel and equipment; (2) sponsoring grassroots research on rural education and rural schools; and (3) creating Centers on Rural Education at colleges and universities. This document contains 22 references. (ALL)
- Published
- 1990
10. Toward the Development of a Program Quality Framework for Career and Technical Education Programs: A Researcher-Practitioner Collaborative Project
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Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness (SREE), Brodersen, R. Marc, Yanoski, David, Hyslop, Alisha, and Imperatore, Catherine
- Abstract
Career and technical education (CTE) programs of study are subject to rigorous state and federal accountability systems that provide information on key student outcomes. However, while these outcome measures can form a basis for identifying high- and low-performing programs, they are insufficient for answering underlying questions about how or why that level of achievement was attained. Given the variety of CTE program guidance and program quality frameworks currently available, the Regional Educational Laboratory Central (REL Central) partnered with members of its college and career readiness research alliance (CCRRA) consisting of state directors of CTE programs in the central region. This study was designed to address the following questions: (1) What CTE program components do state educational agency (SEA) policies and guidance focus upon in the central region? and (2) How are current national CTE program frameworks structured, and what program components are the focused on. To address these research questions, REL Central and ACTE conducted reviews of SEA and national framework documents, respectively. This study was designed to address the following questions: (1) What CTE program components do state educational agency (SEA) policies and guidance focus upon in the central region? (2) How are current national CTE program frameworks structured, and what program components are the focused on. To address these research questions, REL Central and ACTE conducted reviews of SEA and national framework documents, respectively. REL Central collected CTE program guidance and policy documents from the seven states composing the REL Central region: Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. The National Association of State Directors of Career and Technical Education Consortium (NASDCTEc) provided additional policy documents they had previously collected from the central states. ACTE collected program frameworks developed by national organizations. REL Central and ACTE conducted a document analysis of state CTE program guidance and policies, as well as national program frameworks. These documents were examined to identify and summarize the various CTE program components focused on. Analysis of the two sets of documents revealed nine broad categories of content: (1) Course content; (2) Course delivery; (3) Guidance and counseling; (4) Stakeholder partnerships; (5) Student leadership; (6) Student assessment; (7) Program outcomes; (8) Administrative program guidance; and (9) Administrative guidance for CTE teacher recruitment and training. Examination of the frequency with which each content area was addressed showed state and national guidance most frequently addressed stakeholder involvement and partnerships, course content and delivery, student assessment, and career guidance and counseling. Many of the other areas focused upon were related to administrative requirements. [SREE documents are structured abstracts of SREE conference symposium, panel, and paper or poster submissions.]
- Published
- 2016
11. States in the Driver's Seat: Leveraging State Aid to Align Policies and Promote Access, Success, and Affordability
- Author
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Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, Prescott, Brian T., and Longanecker, David A.
- Abstract
With increasingly widespread calls to raise educational attainment levels without substantially growing public investment in higher education, policymakers and others have devoted growing attention to the role of financial aid programs in providing access to, promoting affordability for, and incentivizing success in college. Given relative levels of investment, most of that focus has been on federal financial aid programs. But for students enrolled in higher education, the vast majority of whom attend public institutions, the impact of federal aid policies is filtered through finance policies enacted at the state level. The wide differences in financing strategies among states mean that states ultimately determine to a great extent how college opportunities are distributed, costs are affordable, and students are successful. This concept paper takes a closer look at state financial aid programs and how they are uniquely well-positioned to address many of the financial challenges in college access, success, and affordability that stand in the way of achieving educational attainment goals. It advances a framework for the distribution of aid that is efficient with scarce public funds, encourages students to make progress and succeed, promotes institutional behaviors that are aligned with public needs and expectations, and integrates state policies with federal and institutional policies and practices. Informed by a set of guiding principles, the paper makes the following policy proposals: (1) States can adopt a Shared Responsibility Model (SRM) as the framework for determining the eligibility for a state grant, as well as the amount of the grant; (2) States can encourage well-designed, state-supported programs to assist students in meeting their student contribution; (3) States can embed demand-side incentives that promote student success; (4) States can embed supply-side incentives that ensure that institutions share in both the risk and rewards of student success; (5) States can leverage grant aid programs to encourage institutional aid expenditures that are aligned with state goals for student success, affordability, transparency, and predictability; (6) The federal government can recommit to its historic partnership with states in promoting well designed grant programs through a contemporary LEAP program; (7) States can ensure that their grant programs include an expectation that standards of academic quality are maintained; and (8) States can require that their financial aid programs are systematically evaluated.
- Published
- 2014
12. A Meta-Analysis of Growth Trends from Vertically Scaled Assessments
- Author
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Dadey, Nathan and Briggs, Derek C.
- Abstract
A vertical scale, in principle, provides a common metric across tests with differing difficulties (e.g., spanning multiple grades) so that statements of "absolute" growth can be made. This paper compares 16 states' 2007-2008 effect size growth trends on vertically scaled reading and math assessments across grades 3 to 8. Two patterns common in past research on vertical scales, score deceleration (grade-to-grade growth that decreases over time) and scale shrinkage (variability in scale scores that decreases from lower to higher grades), are investigated. Pervasive, but modest, patterns of score deceleration are found for both math and reading. Limited evidence of scale shrinkage was found for reading, and virtually no evidence was found for math. In addition, linear regression was used to show that little of the considerable variability in the growth effect sizes across states could be explained by readily identifiable characteristics of the vertical scales. However, many scale characteristics were not well documented in available technical reports. The most important of these characteristics, along with their implications for interpretations of growth, are discussed. The results serve both as a normative baseline against which other scaling efforts can be compared. (Contains 5 tables, 4 footnotes, and 5 figures.)
- Published
- 2012
13. Tuition and Fees in Public Higher Education in the West, 2011-2012. Detailed Tuition and Fees Tables
- Author
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Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education
- Abstract
This annual report updates the tuition and fee prices published by all of the public higher education institutions in the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education (WICHE) member states. It is the product of an annual survey administered to the State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO) offices in each state, with a couple of exceptions. There is no centralized coordinating or governing body for the two-year colleges in Arizona or for the technical institutes in South Dakota. Therefore, personnel at the individual institutions in those two states responded to this survey. Beginning with the 2010-2011 and continuing this year, this report presents published tuition and fees amounts as averages both unweighted and weighted by full-time equivalent (FTE) enrollments. Unlike unweighted averages, which treat each institution equally no matter how big or small it is, enrollment-weighted averages provide a truer estimate of the published price a typical student faces based on enrollment patterns. Appended are: (1) The Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education, 2010; (2) Number of Public Four-Year Institutions by Carnegie Classification in the WICHE Region, 2011-12; (3) Number of Public Two-Year Institutions by State in the WICHE Region, 2011-12; (4) Procedure for Converting Current Dollars to Constant Dollars; (5) Methodology; (6) Survey Instructions; (7) Mandatory Fees at Public Two-Year Institutions in the WICHE Region; (8) Mandatory Fees at Public Four-Year Institutions in the WICHE Region; (9) Undergraduate FTE Four-Year Institutions in the WICHE Region; (10) Graduate FTE Four-Year Institutions in the WICHE Region; and (11) Undergraduate FTE Two-Year Institutions in the WICHE Region. (Contains 21 tables and 68 endnotes.) [This paper was prepared by the Office of Policy Analysis and Research. For "Tuition & Fees in Public Higher Education in the West, 2010-2011. Detailed Tuition and Fees Tables," see ED539047.]
- Published
- 2011
14. Staff Report to the Senior Department Official on Recognition Compliance Issues. Recommendation Page: HLC
- Author
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Department of Education (ED)
- Abstract
The Higher Learning Commission (HLC or the agency) is a regional institutional accreditor that accredits (or preaccredits) over 1,000 degree granting institutions in 19 states, tribal institutions and including those programs offered via distance education within these institutions. Most of the institutions accredited by HLC use the Secretary's recognition of the agency to establish eligibility to participate in the Title IV, HEA student financial assistance programs. This paper presents the recommendations of the staff of the National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity (NACIQI) concerning HLC's petition for continued recognition.
- Published
- 2010
15. Tuition and Fees in Public Higher Education in the West, 2010-2011. Detailed Tuition and Fees Tables
- Author
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Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education
- Abstract
This annual report updates the tuition and fee prices published by all of the public higher education institutions in the WICHE (Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education) member states. It is the product of an annual survey administered to the State Higher Education Executive Officers (SHEEO) offices in each state, with a couple of exceptions. There is no centralized coordinating or governing body for the two-year colleges in Arizona or for the technical institutes in South Dakota. Therefore, personnel at the individual institutions in those two states responded to this survey. In response to feedback from WICHE constituents, this year's edition incorporates three significant changes: 1) the addition of enrollment-weighted tuition and fee averages by state; 2) the ability to download all data tables in excel format, most notably the tables that show each institutions' tuition and fees charges; and 3) a reduction in the total number of data tables to eliminate redundancy and streamline the report. Unlike unweighted tuition and fee averages, which treat each institution equally no matter how big or small it is, enrollment-weighted averages provide a truer estimate of the published price an average student faces based on enrollment patterns. Appended are: (1) The Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education, 2005; (2) Number of Public Four-Year Institutions by Carnegie Classification in the WICHE Region, 2010-11; (3) Number of Public Two-Year Institutions by State in the WICHE Region, 2010-11; (4) Procedure for Converting Current Dollars To Constant Dollars; (5) Methodology; (6) Survey Instructions; (7) Mandatory Fees at Public Two-Year Institutions in the WICHE Region; (8) Mandatory Fees at Public Four-Year Institutions in the WICHE Region; (9) Undergraduate FTE Four-Year Institutions in the WICHE Region; (10) Graduate FTE Four-Year Institutions in the WICHE Region; and (11) Undergraduate FTE Two-Year Institutions in the WICHE Region. (Contains 20 tables and 73 endnotes.) [This paper was prepared by the Office of Policy Analysis and Research. For "Tuition and Fees in Public Higher Education in the West, 2009-2010. Detailed Tuition and Fees Tables," see ED508995.]
- Published
- 2010
16. Energy Resource Development: Implications for Women and Minorities in the Intermountain West.
- Author
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Commission on Civil Rights, Washington, DC.
- Abstract
A selection of papers presented at a consultation sponsored by the Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming Advisory Committees to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights address the inequities of benefits received by women and minorities from resource development activities in the Intermountain West. The introduction discusses the impact of resource development on women and minorities. The next section, on boomtowns, contains five papers addressing women and minorities, human services, and social/psychological problems inherent in communities experiencing rapid growth. Section 3 provides three papers dealing with the economic position of women and their employment opportunities in energy development, women working with energy, and effects of energy development on rural women. The fourth section includes seven papers detailing energy development and the disadvantages, i.e., the effects on Blacks, Hispanics, women, and other disadvantaged. Section 5 provides four papers covering Indian reservation resources, such as coal and water, and conservation practices. Three papers on economic opportunities for Indians and other minorities in energy-related businesses conclude the document. (AH)
- Published
- 1979
17. Reports from Western States. Educational Telecommunications Plans, Policies, Programs.
- Author
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Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, Boulder, CO.
- Abstract
This collection of reports highlights the status of educational telecommunications in 13 western states during 1991. Topics addressed include distance education initiatives in Alaska; activities by members of the Arizona Education Telecommunications Cooperative, including colleges, public schools, and government agencies; groups active in the planning and implementation of technology in California education; activities of the Colorado Telecommunications Advisory Commission, colleges, and other organizations in Colorado; the infrastructure for Educational Telecommunications in Hawaii, as well as Department of Education, University of Hawaii, and legislative activities; telecommunications technology in Minnesota public school districts, community colleges, private colleges, the state university system, technical colleges, and the University of Minnesota; legislative initiatives in Nevada and activities of the University of Nevada; efforts by various organizations in New Mexico, including the state library, the board of education, and several colleges; progress made in North Dakota in the areas of interactive television, interactive video, public television, computer networking, satellite broadcasting, and emerging partnerships; legislative policy, networking, community college services, and activities of state agencies in Oregon; the South Dakota Governor's Telecommunication Task Force and uses of telecommunications technology in various educational settings in the state; activities of Utah state agencies and colleges; and initiatives in Wyoming, including legislation, distance education, interactive video, and community college programs. (ALF).
- Published
- 1991
18. State Educational Policies and the Mission of Rural Community Schools.
- Author
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Moriarty, Thomas E.
- Abstract
Any conclusions that community education concepts are "alive and well" were not supported in a study of the impact of state education policies on rural school districts with total enrollments of 350 students or less in the Great Plains Region (Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, and South Dakota). Survey instruments were mailed to 742 district chief school officers and 595 (80.4%) were returned. Respondents were randomly placed in five groups and responded to separate survey instruments. Eighteen to 21 policy options were listed in each of five areas: curriculum materials and development, pupil personnel services, resource generation and allocation, goal development and organizational structure, and personnel training and certification. In each of the five categories the impact of state educational policy options was perceived as negative. State policymakers were perceived as unable or unwilling to accept small rural schools as having individuality--an attitude which is counterproductive to the concepts of community education. Dealing with rural issues would require policymakers to initiate reforms to close the gap between current practices and local community expectations. The "one best system" concept is outmoded in state policy frameworks and new models should be developed to capitalize on strengths of each rural community and to provide for congruence of missions and outcomes. (BRR)
- Published
- 1984
19. Inservice Needs: Perceptions of Rural Teachers, Principals and School Board Members--A Nine State Study.
- Author
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Reece, Jerald L.
- Abstract
To determine perceptions of school board members, teachers, and principals in rural schools about the quality of their educational programs, the type of preparation they had received in preservice programs, and the inservice opportunities available to them, responses to questionnaires from 2,028 teachers, 119 principals, and 113 school board members throughout the states of Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wyoming were analyzed. Background data were broken down according to sex, school placement, linguistic fluency, ethnic origin, and educational attainment. More than 80% of teachers and principals and more than 65% of school board members were satisfied with selected aspects of their school program, 80% of teachers and 75% of principals had no specific preparation for service in a rural setting, and approximately 92% of teachers and 100% of principals had participated in inservice training. Inservice programs designed to upgrade rural school personnel may need to be different from those in the past. Such programs should include expanded off-campus, field-based graduate programs, rural school program models, leadership roles for rural teachers and principals in planning, directing, and presenting inservice workshops, procedures for multiple teaching activities, and increased understanding of rural cultural issues. (MM)
- Published
- 1984
20. Referenda Affecting Colleges: What the Voters Decided.
- Abstract
State higher education-related referenda and 1986 voter response are listed concerning compensation of state employees, facility improvement, bond issues, English as the official state language, taxes and tax policy, lotteries for financing education, state trust funds for education funding, and governing boards. (MSE)
- Published
- 1986
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