Study Document
Pages:4 (1603 words)
Sources:5
Subject:Education
Topic:Higher Education
Document Type:Term Paper
Document:#3581664
(Eds.). (2005). The role of education: Promoting the economic and social vitality of rural America. Jackson, MISS: The Southern
Rural Development Center, Mississippi State University.
Green, M., Eckel, P., & Barblan, a. (2002). The brave new (and smaller) world of higher education: A transatlantic view. The Changing Enterprise. First in a Series. [n.p.].
Phelps, D.G. (1992). A vision for the Los Angeles Community College District.
Los Angeles, CA: Los Angeles Community College District Department of Public Affairs.
Robinson, P.R. (Spring 1988). Changing roles and new expectations. New Directions for Higher Education 61(16, 1). 71-74
Whalen, E.L. (1991). Responsibility center budgeting: An approach to decentralized management for institutions of higher education.
Bloomington,
IN: Indiana University Press.
In relationship to other responsibilities, e.g., department or program chair, for example.
Also, at various times, e.g., annual or biennial state legislative sessions, another responsibility of such a team is to request additional funding for "capital projects"; new hires; salary increases for existing faculty and/or classified employees, etc.
While this is true in theory, in actual practice, here is also (unfortunately) where the ideal of administrative teamwork toward the common good of a higher education system and/or institution can and all too often does break down. This is because rivalries and/or "turf wars" (e.g., among divisions; departments, or programs within a given institution; or separate institutions within a system, etc.) set in, especially once it comes down to monies actually being divvied up. Any number of external factors may (and many do) often also occlude the original teamwork concept, e.g., internal; external, or geographical politics, to name some major ones, and well as differences in educational philosophies, priorities, ways of proceeding, etc.
Of, for example, students with disabilities or who otherwise need special assistance.
References
Beaulieu, L., & Gibbs, R. (Eds.). (2005). The role of education: Promoting the economic and social vitality of rural America. Jackson, MISS: The Southern
Rural Development Center, Mississippi State University.
Green, M., Eckel, P., & Barblan, a. (2002). The brave new (and smaller) world of higher education: A transatlantic view. The Changing Enterprise. First in a Series. [n.p.].
Phelps, D.G. (1992). A vision for the Los Angeles Community College District.
Study Document
Tenure refers to a legally secure position, an “indefinite appointment” at an institute of higher learning (AAUP, 2019, p. 1). Of course, extenuating circumstances may enable the educational institution to sever the contract and terminate the tenured faculty. One of those extenuating circumstances would be financial exigency: an unavoidable and unfortunate situation in which the institution experiences severe budget shortfalls and must completely reconsider reallocating resources in order to remain
Study Document
In the last decades, the repositioning of knowledge generation and research has been the trend. New fields of knowledge have been introduced and would continue to be introduced. Along with these new fields and new social issues, there would be application-oriented research within industrial structures, which are likely to retain focus. Higher education is viewed to increase further. New information technologies will open more doors to new knowledge and
Study Document
Democratic Education Question No. What are the principles of democratic education? How are these principles and values in tension/contradiction with our social construction of children and youth? For example, what assumptions do we make about teaching, learning and youth that democratic schools challenge? How does "one size fits all" centralized curriculum contribute to what Apple called the "de-skilling of teachers"? What is lost when this approach is adapted, especially when it
Study Document
They also focus more on institutional support, like the need for appropriate funding for such educational programs, rather than psychological issues attacked to assimilation. Changing demographics in recent years in Canada have forced adult education programs to meet the challenge of doing more with fewer resources, as they fight, for more funding for programs designed to orient immigrants in the language and culture of the area. "As new citizens
Study Document
shared vision allows for the fulfillment of common goals. Therefore, the first step in creating and maintaining a successful charter school will be to plan the vision with a common goals meeting and invite all stakeholders to the meeting in accordance with best practices ("Shared Vision and Common Goals," n.d.). The ELCC standard 1.1 clearly calls all educational leaders to "develop, articulate, implement, and steward a shared district vision
Study Document
Professional Student Athletes
The Raw Numbers
Eligibility
Advantages of Sport
Research Questions or Research Hypotheses
Selection of Subjects
Assumptions or Limitations
Data Processing and Analysis
SUMMARY, CONCLUSIONS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Questions related to academic priority
Questions related to role models
Questions related to advantages
Implications for Practice
Questions related to support and pressure
Implications for Practice