1,320 results
Search Results
52. Expert moves: international comparative testing and the rise of expertocracy.
- Author
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Grek, Sotiria
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,POLICY sciences ,EDUCATION & politics - Abstract
Through a sociological analysis of the knowledge and actors that have become central to international assessments, the paper focuses on the processes that influence the production of shared narratives and agendas, adopting the position that their existence is not organic, but rather the product of undertakings that often fabricate and manage, rather than strive for 'real' consensus. The paper suggests that limiting the analysis to the role of travel and exchanges of experts and policy-makers in the making of policy is, in fact, the construction of an 'ideal-type' of an international policy-making world. Recent research on these encounters suggests that one needs to focus on actors' conflict and struggles, rather than processes of 'collective puzzling'. Using the concept of 'political work', as well as elements of Bourdieu's field theory, the paper shows the ways that international comparative testing in the field of education has not only offered policy-makers with much needed data to govern, but has in fact almost fused the realms of knowledge and policy; expertise and the selling of undisputed, universal policy solutions have now drifted into one single entity and function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
53. The impact on education for librarianship and information studies of the Bologna process and related European Commission programmes - and some outstanding issues in Europe and beyond.
- Author
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Johnson, Ian M.
- Subjects
LIBRARIES & education ,LIBRARY science - Abstract
The Bologna Declaration of 1999 is the basis for continuing reforms in higher education intended to support international mobility in employment within the European Union. This paper describes the standardised structure and nomenclature for courses that have been implemented, together with a credit transfer system, a quality assurance regime, and the ERASMUS and MUNDUS programmes that support international student mobility. However, the European Commission has left crucial aspects of the implementation of the Bologna principles to Member States, and several issues have arisen because of national variations. The paper expresses concerns about differences in assessment standards and conventions, and questions the relevance of various attempts that have been made to produce model lists of competences and curricula. The European Union's international assistance programmes, TEMPUS and ALFA, have encouraged collaboration in assisting development in non-member states, but with limited effect, perhaps because of organisational changes that stemmed partly from the Bologna process. The changes in higher education stimulated the establishment of a pan-European association, EUCLID: the European association for library and information education and research, but the paper argues that the expectations of the founders of the association remain largely unfulfilled, and argues for more empirical research to review issues such as the academic level at which education for librarianship is undertaken, and the need for a European accreditation scheme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
54. European cities continue to grow greener.
- Author
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Connolly, Louise, Campion, Louise, and Rudden, Patrick
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,URBAN planning ,EDUCATION ,EMPLOYMENT ,CIVIL engineers ,SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
Two-thirds of Europeans currently live in cities, predicted to rise to 80% by 2050. People choose to live in increasingly dense urban areas to gain better education and employment. However, urban living brings a range of environmental challenges and civil engineers need to provide solutions. The European Commission initiated the European Green Capital Award in 2008 to reward cities for environmental performance, sustainability plans and acting as a role model for other cities. This paper describes notable civil engineering features of four of the more recent winning cities: Copenhagen in Denmark, Essen in Germany, Nijmegen in the Netherlands and Oslo in Norway. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
55. Outlaw biker violence and retaliation.
- Author
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Klement, Christian
- Subjects
GANG violence ,STREETS ,GANGS ,GANG members ,VIOLENCE ,INJURY risk factors ,VIOLENCE against women - Abstract
The number of outlaw bikers is growing globally. Despite this, little research exists on these groups and their alleged violent tendencies. To address this, the current paper uses unique data to examine whether gang violence causes outlaw biker violence. The period examined runs from mid-2008 until early 2012 during which violent clashes occurred between outlaw bikers and street gang members involved in an alleged conflict in Copenhagen, Denmark. A precise description of each individual act of violence would make it possible to identify whether specific acts were carried out in furtherance of the alleged conflict. This would allow one to determine whether outlaw bikers commit violence on behalf of their club. However, such knowledge is unavailable. The paper therefore takes a different approach by examining whether acts of violence committed by the two groups are statistically associated. In other words, it considers whether one or more acts can be described as retaliatory during the observation periods. The sample consists of 640 individuals involved with the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club or with non-biker street gangs–both of which are present in Copenhagen. Statistical models are used to predict 143 violent events committed by 196 outlaw bikers. The results suggest that violence committed by gang members predicts violence committed by outlaw bikers. This indicates that violent acts committed by outlaw bikers are at least partly a form of retaliation carried out on behalf of their club. The paper expands the literature on the kinds of inter-group, micro-level processes that can lead to reciprocal violence by including outlaw bikers in a literature that has previously focused on non-biker street gangs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
56. CESE News.
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE education ,EDUCATION associations ,GLOBAL studies ,MULTICULTURAL education ,EDUCATION ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The article offers information on the June 10-13, 2014 conference of the organization Comparative Education Society in Europe (CESE), noting a call for papers based on the conference theme "Governing Educational Spaces: Knowledge, Teaching, and Learning in Transition." A symposium on the theme "Comparative Education, International Education, and Intercultural Education: Tensions, Harmonies, Contradictions" is noted.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
57. INSIGHTS FROM TEACHING EUROPEAN ECONOMIC INTEGRATION TO NON-ECONOMIC STUDENTS.
- Author
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Marinescu, Nicolae
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL programs ,ECONOMICS education ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,SERVICES for students - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to identify, analyze and assess the main challenges, difficulties and benefits of teaching European economic integration to non-economic students. The paper draws on evidence from a series of courses delivered within the framework of a Jean Monnet European Module to students registered in different faculties of Transilvania University of Brasov. The results of the teaching activity can be measured in terms of the number of students participating in the lectures and tutorials, the quality of their exam papers and essays submitted for evaluation as well as the share of students finally graduating the Module. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
58. Towards ‘Lisbon objectives’: Economic Determinants of Participation Rates in University Education: An empirical analysis in 14 European Countries.
- Author
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Agasisti, Tommaso
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,HIGHER education & state ,EDUCATION ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EDUCATION costs ,HUMAN capital ,PUBLIC investments - Abstract
Participation rates in higher education are an important indicator to pursue one of the main European policy objectives, which is to increase the proportion of population attending higher education. A model used to detect the determinants of participation rates is proposed in this paper, and it is empirically tested for 14 European countries through a five-year panel regression. The model considers the potential explanatory factors as follows: the country's socio-economic conditions, the human capital stock, the organisation of the higher education sector, the higher education expenditure. The results show the important role of financial resources devoted to higher education; but also, as expected, the influence of other factors. More specifically, there is a role for the variables related to higher education organisation and structure, also confirming that higher entry rates are influenced both by an improvement in public investments in the sector and by organisational elements. These findings are relevant for policy purposes, since they suggest some possible solutions for improving participation rates. Although future research would need to explore the impact of income inequality, the overall level of spending is the key element that influences entry rates. Therefore, in periods of public finance pressure, the best way to resolve this problem could be to improve private resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
59. The Changing European Profession of Political Science.
- Author
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Erk, Jan
- Subjects
POLITICAL science ,EDUCATION ,LABOR market ,DOCTORAL programs ,DOCTOR of philosophy degree ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,CAREER development ,LABOR supply - Abstract
This paper deals with the changes within the profession of political science in Europe. The first part of the paper outlines the emerging integrated academic labour market in Europe and the accompanying process of convergence around shared professional benchmarks. The main observation here is the increasing influence competitive meritocracy has on our profession. The second part of the paper deals with some of the structural barriers European political science faces in such a competitive market. The final part of the paper outlines ways by which to surpass these structural barriers and attain a competitive academic profile while doing a Ph.D. at a typical European university.European Political Science (2009) 8, 151–161. doi:10.1057/eps.2009.3 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
60. Development over Time in Cognitive Function among European 55-69-Year-Olds from 2006 to 2015, and Differences of Region, Gender, and Education.
- Author
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Ying Zhou
- Subjects
POPULATION aging ,COGNITIVE ability ,GENERALIZED estimating equations ,SUCCESSFUL aging ,COGNITIVE development ,RETIREMENT age - Abstract
With populations rapidly aging, the development over time in the cognitive function among the elderly approaching or reaching retirement is important for successful aging at work and planning pension policies. However, few studies in this field focus on this age group. This study characterizes time trends in cognitive function among 55-69-year-old Europeans from 2006 to 2015, and compares these trends by region, gender, and education. This study analyzes 40,689 subjects in Waves 2, 4, 5 and 6 of the Survey of Health, Aging and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) covering ten countries. Cognitive function was measured by Recall and Verbal Fluency. Educational levels were classified by quartiles. A Generalized Estimating Equation (GEE) model was used to explore the association between cognitive function and development over time after controlling for confounders. Further stratification analysis using GEE models was conducted, stratified by region, gender and education. Cognitive function improved significantly in southern and central Europe over the observed timeframe, whereas it did not in northern Europe. Those with relative low levels of formal education displayed the most rapid increases in cognitive function in southern and central Europe. Among those with lower education in southern Europe, males' cognitive function improved more quickly than females'. The improvement of cognitive function at ages 55-69 in southern and central Europe may contribute to continuing engagement with productive activities in old age. Educational interventions for people with lower levels of education may be most effective in achieving such engagement. This paper extends the literature on the development over time in the cognitive function among the elderly close to retirement age in Europe by analysing southern, central and northern Europe, as well as differences by region, gender and education. The results may provide evidence for planning pension policies and educational interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
61. Cell and gene therapy workforce development: the role of the International Society for Cell & Gene Therapy (ISCT) in the creation of a sustainable and skilled workforce in Europe.
- Author
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Vives, Joaquim, Sánchez-Guijo, Fermín, Gnecchi, Massimiliano, and Zwaginga, Jaap Jan
- Subjects
- *
GENE therapy , *CELLULAR therapy , *LABOR supply , *STEM cell transplantation , *HUMAN origins , *ACTIVE aging - Abstract
The development and production of cell gene and tissue (CGT)-based therapies requires a specialized workforce. Entering the CGT arena is complex because it involves different scientific and biomedical aspects (e.g., immunology, stem cell biology and transplantation), as well as knowledge of regulatory affairs and compliance with pharmaceutical quality standards. Currently, both industry and academia are facing a worldwide workforce shortage, whereas only a handful of educational and training initiatives specifically address the peculiarities of CGT product development, the procurement of substances of human origin, the manufacturing process itself and clinical monitoring and biovigilance. The training offered by traditional Master's and PhD programs is not suited for training a skilled workforce ready to enter the increasingly fast-growing CGT field. Indeed, typically these programs are of long duration and only partially cover the required competencies, whereas the demand for a specialized workforce relentlessly increases. In this paper, we (i) present and discuss our understanding of the roots of current growth acceleration of the CGT field; (ii) anticipate future workforce needs due to the expected increase of marketed CGT-based therapies and (iii) evaluate potential solutions that seek to adapt, develop and implement current educational and training initiatives. Importantly for these solutions, we call for scientific societies, such as the International Society for Cell & Gene Therapy, to play a more active role and act as catalysers for new initiatives, building bridges between academia and Industry to establish effective educational and training programs that will engage and prepare a new generation of qualified professionals for entry into the CGT field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
62. Politics page.
- Author
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Perry, John
- Subjects
SPECIAL education teachers ,SPECIAL education ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The article presents information of particular interest to special educational needs (SEN) teachers in Europe as of September 2023. Topics include details of the National Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) and Alternative Provision (AP) Implementation Board plan released in Great Britain, publication of the independent report on the national discussion on education in Scotland and the IPSOS UK report on Independent Review of SEN Services and Processes in Northern Ireland.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
63. The education pillar of the Europe 2020 strategy: a convergence analysis.
- Author
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Cuestas, Juan Carlos, Monfort, Mercedes, and Ordóñez, Javier
- Subjects
ECONOMIC convergence ,SUSTAINABLE development ,SOCIAL cohesion ,ECONOMIC impact ,ECONOMIC expansion ,POSTSECONDARY education - Abstract
In March 2010, the European Commission launched the Europe 2020 strategy 'for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth' in the EU. Education is a major pillar of the Europe 2020 strategy due to its long-run impact on economic growth, productivity, and social cohesion. The Europe 2020 strategy established two headline targets on early leavers from education and training and tertiary educational attainment at the EU level. This paper attempts to assess the Europe 2020 strategy for the education pillar in terms of convergence across countries. Despite the fact that every country in the EU has its own national targets in these two headline indicators, progress on the achievement of the Europe 2020 strategy requires convergence. Thus, even if the EU as a whole meets its targets in 2020, the existence of a growing divide between the best and worst performing countries would cast doubt on the prospects of real economic convergence and the sustainability of the process. Our empirical findings reveal the existence of convergence clubs in educational attainment and the early leavers rate, and points towards the idea of multi-speed transitional dynamics in Europe, calling into question the convergence in educational performance in the EU. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
64. Trust in Educational Settings: Insights and Emerging Research Questions.
- Author
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Bormann, Inka, Niedlich, Sebastian, and Würbel, Iris
- Subjects
TRUST ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The theoretical and empirical foundations of research on trust in education are still weak. To contribute to a better understanding of the role of trust in educational systems, this final article of the special issue "Trust in educational settings. European perspectives" highlights the findings from the contributions in this special issue and links them to insights and concepts from interdisciplinary trust research. Furthermore, it identifies and discusses seven avenues for future research on trust in educational settings. Thus, this paper and the special issue as a whole aim to highlight relevant avenues for future research, thereby strengthening research on trust in education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
65. Seeing education with one's own eyes and through PISA lenses: considerations of the reception of PISA in European countries.
- Author
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Carvalho, Luís Miguel and Costa, Estela
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION & politics ,EDUCATIONAL programs ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The paper addresses the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development'sProgram for International Student Assessment(PISA) as a public policy instrument, whose worldwide circulation is mediated by processes of reinterpretation, negotiation, and re-contextualization, where national, local, and international agencies intertwine. It is focused on the active reception of PISA in six European spaces (Francophone Belgium, France, Hungary, Portugal, Romania, and Scotland) along its first three cycles. The paper identifies two contrasting developments: the Program's divergent uses and its attractiveness in different social worlds. The paper gives particular attention to what is called the ‘update of reference societies’ in the context of national receptions of PISA. These ‘updates’ are analyzed as part of a composite process that involves domestic reasons, either related to current agendas for education or to deep historical factors, and injunctions related to PISA's rationale and PISA objects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
66. The problems of ‘competence’ and alternatives from the Scandinavian perspective of Bildung.
- Author
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Willbergh, Ilmi
- Subjects
PHILOSOPHY of education ,PERFORMANCE ,EDUCATIONAL forecasting ,PHILOSOPHY of teaching ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The paper aims to show how competence as an educational concept for the 21stcentury is struggling with theoretical problems for which the concept ofBildungin the European tradition can offer alternatives, and to discuss the possibility of developing a sustainable educational concept from the perspectives of competence andBildung. The method of the study is conceptual analysis of ‘competence’ andBildung. The paper concludes that (1) competence must be abandoned as an educational concept, as its problems cannot be solved due to the lack of a theory of educational content. With competence, the content aspect of education is obscured and hidden from public debate, and human autonomy is threatened. (2)Bildungcan be revised as an educational concept by reinventing educational content as subject to interpretation and open debate by autonomous individuals on all levels from the transnational to the classroom. (3) A revised ‘mimetic’ concept ofBildungcan prepare students for the knowledge society, as imagining is a type of higher order thinking essential for innovation and creativity. Instructional content in school is meaningful to students if they are able to imagine the representational object ‘as if’ it is both subject matter and real to them. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
67. Light Weight Tabletop Exercise for Cybersecurity Education.
- Author
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Ottis, Rain
- Subjects
INTERNET security ,COMPUTER security ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,ACTIVITY programs in higher education ,HIGHER education ,EDUCATION - Abstract
It is often difficult to meaningfully convey concepts like security incident management cycle, information sharing, cooperation, as well as the roles of people, processes and technology in cybersecurity courses. Serious gaming can help solve this problem, since it can provide a more immersive and interactive learning experience than traditional methods. This paper presents a light weight tabletop exercise format that has been successfully used in cybersecurity education to demonstrate these and many other concepts to Master level students in two European universities over the past 5 years. The term light weight is chosen to indicate the low work load and resource requirements for the instructor. The paper provides practical guidance on how to develop and execute such exercises. In addition, it lists observations of concepts and recommended discussion points that have been successfully demonstrated in class using this exercise format. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
68. Romani culture and academic success: arguments against the belief in a contradiction.
- Author
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Brüggemann, Christian
- Subjects
EDUCATION of Romanies ,ROMANIES -- Social life & customs ,ACADEMIC achievement ,EDUCATION of minorities ,EDUCATION ,CULTURAL ecology ,ROMANIES ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Roma, today perceived as the most numerous European minority, face marginalisation and exclusion. Education is considered to be one of the focal points for improvement, and numerous studies have analysed and reported on the educational situation of Roma. Several studies have argued that Romani cultural values are not compatible with institutional schooling and that Romani families perceive schools as an alien institution. Other studies have drawn upon cultural–ecological theory (CE theory), developed by Ogbu and colleagues, and argue that the Romani cultural frame of reference is oppositional to academic success and thus suggest that successful Romani students distance themselves from Romani culture. The paper discusses the application of CE theory in the context of the academic discourse about the educational achievement of Romani students. Drawing on interviews with Spanish Romani university students, the paper argues that Romani students themselves challenge the assumption that educational success leads to cultural alienation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
69. DABAI: A Data Driven Project for e-Learning in Denmark.
- Author
-
Alstrup, Stephen, Hansen, Casper, Hansen, Christian, Hjuler, Niklas, Lorenzen, Stephan, and Pham, Ninh
- Subjects
BIG data ,COMPUTER science research ,EDUCATION ,MOBILE learning ,MACHINE learning - Abstract
A new Big Data research team called DABAI have been launched in Denmark, which aims at integrating cutting edge computer science research from machine learning, algorithms and visualization into the education sector. The educational part of the DABAI project is a cooperation between Danish universities and multiple enterprises providing e- Learning solutions for the Danish market. The companies' services cover over 90% of the Danish schools, with more than one million students, who on a daily basis do millions of exercises and interactions using the involved companies' solutions. The study presented in this paper is an initial investigation of the needs of the three largest companies in e-Education in Denmark directly involved in DABAI, with the goal being to continue providing novel and high-demand features for their customers. The three companies are MaCom, Clio Online, and EduLab. Clio Online and EduLab provide an online platform for teaching material and exercises for the primary school level covering all subjects. MaCom provides a lecture management system used by most Danish high schools. Overall the study shows that the problems encountered at the different companies are varied, but can be categorized into three general sub categories: Student Profiling, Content Profiling, and Content Recommendation. Some problem types fall into multiple sub categories, and in general to accomplish the goal of providing e-Learning of the highest quality, research into all of them is necessary. This paper presents the fundamental problems these companies are facing in e-Learning. For each encountered problem, we describe its objectives and challenges in detail, followed by the current state of the art for solving it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
70. SIMULATION OF COMBINATIONAL CIRCUITS USING MULTISIM: TRANSFORMATION OF TRADITIONAL SCHOOL INTO A MODERN.
- Author
-
MAGDIN, Martin and KOPRDA, Stefan
- Subjects
SIMULATION methods in education ,SIMULATION methods & models ,COMPUTER architecture ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATION ,SEQUENTIAL circuits - Abstract
The main aim of education reform in the European Union is the transformation of traditional school into a modern. The task of reform is purposeful and systematic development of skills and competencies especially in the context of a focus on science (Project ROSE - Relevance of Science Education). From the wide range of similar projects such as is project ROSE is a resulting fact that guys are more interested in the technique and everything associated with it, while girls are more focused on issues of a humanitarian nature. In this paper we provided an example of the use of advanced IT to support the teaching of subject Computer Architecture. The traditional form of teaching this course is focused on the memorization of electrical schemes, which represent the functional units of a computer, possibly explaining the operation of its individual components. When transform traditional form to modern teaching methods, we focused on the use of simulation program Multisim that allows to the students a relatively simply gradually develop their critical thinking. In this paper we present a series of examples that we have implemented with students. Examples was focused on non-linear transistor level, combination (AND, NAND, OR, NOR, NOT) and sequential logic circuits (RS), which form the basic architecture of computers. All examples were solved repeatedly with students in the academic years 2009 - 2012. To evaluate the effectiveness of teaching using program Multisim we used a questionnaire in which learners express their views on the quality and method of teaching. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
71. The new spirit of capitalism in European Liberal Arts programs.
- Author
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Claus, Jakob, Meckel, Thomas, and Pätz, Farina
- Subjects
GENERAL education ,CAPITALISM ,EDUCATIONAL programs ,EDUCATION ,CREATIVE ability ,ARTS students - Abstract
The following paper suggests a connection between recent developments in the justification of the capitalist system and contemporary European Liberal Arts programs. By looking at Luc Boltanski's and Eve Chiapello's study on The New Spirit Of Capitalism and Gilles Deleuze's term of societies of control we highlight a pivot within Western societies towards flexibility, creativity and self-fulfillment as essential requirements on the job market. We then link this observation to European Liberal Arts programs and ask to what extent the Liberal Arts' self-understanding, as it appears at European universities, conforms to this new capitalist imperative. Furthermore, we examine how we experienced these claims during our time as Liberal Arts students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
72. Curriculum making as social practice: complex webs of enactment.
- Author
-
Priestley, Mark and Philippou, Stavroula
- Subjects
CURRICULUM planning ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,YOUNG adults - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the authors discuss various reports within the issue on topics including curriculum planning, education policy in Europe, and professional role of teachers in classroom especially in curriculum planning.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
73. The Relation Between Education and Divorce Risk in Societies with Different Divorce Laws and Welfare Systems.
- Author
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Harkonen, Juho and Dronkers, Jaap
- Subjects
DIVORCE ,WOMEN employees ,LABOR policy ,SOCIAL classes ,MARRIED people ,LABOR market - Abstract
Goode (1962) argues that at the start of modern society the upper classes will have higher divorce rates, but as divorce procedures are gradually made available to all classes this differences will dwindle away. Since family strain towards the lower strata is greater, the proportion of lower strata divorces will increase, and eventually Goode expects an inverse relation between class and divorce rate. The partly contradicting results on this relation between class and divorce risk ask for a more systematic, cross-national and cross-cohort analysis of the relation between education and divorce and separation. This will be the first aim of this paper. We use multi-level analysis to analyze this relation in various countries in Europe and the USA. We analyze this relation for both all unions (whatever their juridical form) and for the married couples only (with or without cohabitation). The second aim of this paper is to explain these cross-national and cross-cohort differences in the relation between education and divorce/separation by (changes in) state regulations of marriage and divorce, social policies, the level of female full time labor market participation and the general acceptance of divorce. We use the files of the Fertility and Family Survey project. These data were collected during the 1990s. They are national representative samples of male and female respondents in Finland, Poland, Estonia, France, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Spain, Switzerland, Austria, Belgium, West Germany, Sweden, USA and Greece. Final results will be presented at the conference. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
74. Age diversity and aggregate productivity.
- Author
-
Zélity, Balázs
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,PANEL analysis ,AGE ,STANDARD deviations ,PER capita - Abstract
This research explores theoretically, empirically, and quantitatively the role of age diversity in determining aggregate productivity and output. Age diversity has two conflicting effects on output. On the one hand, due to the complementarity between education and experience, age diversity may be beneficial. On the other hand, rapid skill-biased technological change makes age diversity costly as up-to-date education tends to be concentrated among younger cohorts. To study this trade-off, I first build an overlapping-generations (OLG) model which, in view of these two opposing forces, predicts a hump-shaped relationship between age diversity and GDP per capita. This prediction is established analytically, and also quantitatively using real-world population data in an extended computational version of the model. The prediction is then tested using country-level panel data with a novel instrument and regional data from Europe. Moving one standard deviation closer to the optimal level of age diversity is associated with a 1.5% increase in GDP per capita. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
75. Inclusive education in progress: policy evolution in four European countries.
- Author
-
Smyth, Fiona, Shevlin, Michael, Buchner, Tobias, Biewer, Gottfried, Flynn, Paula, Latimier, Camille, Šiška, Jan, Toboso-Martín, Mario, Rodríguez Díaz, Susana, and Ferreira, Miguel A.V.
- Subjects
INCLUSIVE education ,SPECIAL education ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation on education ,SPECIAL needs students ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL law & legislation ,PARTNERSHIPS in education ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper seeks to compare the evolution of inclusive education policy in the four countries of an EU-funded research project (QualiTYDES) operating under the shared policy environment of the UN, EU and European Commission. A shared policy cannot of course be assumed to result in common legislative or provisional outcomes at national level. The different sociocultural, political, historical and economic contexts in each country shape its journey towards ‘compliance’ with an international convention (both pre- and post-ratification), and neither the route nor the destination can be assumed to be shared, given the scope for different interpretations of the same texts. This paper places the implementation trajectories of four European countries side by side as they attempt to move towards ‘inclusive’ education systems. Following a brief overview of the international education policy environment relating to the education of people with disabilities, we describe the national education policy responses in Ireland, Austria, Spain and Czech Republic in recent decades, including both legislation pertaining to special educational need and implementation of policies in practice. The comparison highlights the different manifestations of inclusive education current in each country, and also explores the challenges which have arisen as individual countries attempt to align international policy with provision in existing education systems, each with their own legacy interests, pressures and priorities. Examples of ‘gaps’ in this alignment are where learners with disabilities/SEN are likely to be failed, and represent the critical points at which barriers to fully inclusive education arise and negatively impact opportunity over the life course. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
76. Who knows what school leavers and graduates are doing? Comparing information systems within Europe.
- Author
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Hordosy, Rita
- Subjects
GRADUATES ,COMPARATIVE education ,EDUCATION ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Many current national and institutional education policies address the issue of raising participation amongst young people and enhancing employability after leaving school or university. What sort of information are these policies built on? This paper compares national information systems from the last three decades across Europe that gather information on school leavers' and graduates' pathways after compulsory education. Using documentary data collected systematically the paper describes the main focus, the research design and the sampling frame of the school leavers' and graduates' information systems (SLGIS) arriving at several different typologies. This paper gives an overall picture of what sort of research is conducted within the area of school leaving and graduation and points out the advantages and disadvantages of the different approaches. Beyond these, the paper gives an indication of how the school leavers’ and graduates’ data are used within the different European contexts and points towards the next steps of this meta-research: case-studies on how the school leavers' and graduates' data are applied at the national and the institutional level. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
77. The policy object: a different perspective on policy enactment in higher education.
- Author
-
Sin, Cristina
- Subjects
HIGHER education & state ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,EDUCATIONAL law & legislation ,ONTOLOGY ,BOLOGNA process (European higher education) ,HIGHER education - Abstract
This paper proposes a new perspective for higher education policy research. It introduces the concept of policy object to designate the discrete preoccupation(s) of a policy text (e.g. a new governance regime, a quality system, or new degrees) and suggests that actor conceptualisations of the policy object intersect with other elements in the policy process to shape enactment and outcomes. First, the policy object concept is described. It is argued that the policy object does not have an objective existence and two concepts are proposed to explain it: ontology and enacted ontology. The former refers to what actors believe the policy object is, a socially-construed context-determined conceptualisation, whereas enacted ontology refers to what the policy object becomes further to enactment under the influence of ontology. Second, the paper presents the findings of a comparative study of master degrees further to the Bologna process in different national and institutional settings to illustrate the policy object approach. This research puts forward arguments to suggest that the policy object could be an important variable to consider in policy research. This somewhat different lens, inviting fine-grained attention to a specific policy object (its ontologies and enacted ontologies), could bring additional insight into policy outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
78. The gender gap of returns on education across West European countries.
- Author
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Mendolicchio, Concetta and Rhein, Thomas
- Subjects
INCOME tax ,EDUCATION ,UNEMPLOYMENT insurance ,MATERNITY benefits ,TAX rates - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to study the gender specific private returns on education (RE) in Europe in a comparative perspective. The authors extend the model of de la Fuente (2003) by estimating the parameters by gender and introducing maternity leaves and benefits. The paper analyses the impact of the public policy variables evaluating the elasticities with respect to unemployment benefits, marginal and average tax rates, maternity leave and childcare benefits. Design/methodology/approach – The authors estimate the Mincerian coefficients, with the Heckman’ selection model, for 12 West European countries using the EU-SILC data. The authors then use them as input to calibrate the decision model. Findings – The RE of females tend to be higher than those of males in all the Europeans countries but Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden. The gender gap can be explained mainly by the wage premia and labour income taxes which more than compensate the negative effects on females’ returns triggered by higher unemployment rates and maternity-related benefits. Practical implications – The tax system has the most pronounced effect on RE. An increase in the marginal tax rates has a negative impact. An increase in the average tax rates can have a negative or positive impact, depending on the progressivity of the tax system. An increase in unemployment benefits and maternity or child-care benefits has a negative but fairly small impact. Social implications – The analysis considers just one dimension of maternity related policies: the effect on RE and differences across gender. These policies may have aims which are beyond the scope of this paper, for instance to increase fertility. From this viewpoint, the small values of the elasticities presented are reassuring in that they suggest that they can be implemented at a fairly small cost in terms of investment in human capital. Originality/value – The authors compute the RE using a model which allows us to take into account and assess the significance of relevant variables: wage premium, income tax, some public transfers and benefits, costs of the investments. Moreover, the authors estimate the wage premia using relatively recent EU-SILC data. Finally, the paper compares 12 EU countries spanning quite different labour market conditions and institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
79. Application of Blockchain in Education: GDPR-Compliant and Scalable Certification and Verification of Academic Information.
- Author
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Delgado-von-Eitzen, Christian, Anido-Rifón, Luis, Fernández-Iglesias, Manuel J., Tonelli, Roberto, Ortu, Marco, and Pinna, Andrea
- Subjects
GENERAL Data Protection Regulation, 2016 ,BLOCKCHAINS ,CERTIFICATION ,PERSONALLY identifiable information ,REGULATORY compliance - Abstract
Blockchain technologies are awakening in recent years the interest of different actors in various sectors and, among them, the education field, which is studying the application of these technologies to improve information traceability, accountability, and integrity, while guaranteeing its privacy, transparency, robustness, trustworthiness, and authenticity. Different interesting proposals and projects were launched and are currently being developed. Nevertheless, there are still issues not adequately addressed, such as scalability, privacy, and compliance with international regulations such as the General Data Protection Regulation in Europe. This paper analyzes the application of blockchain technologies and related challenges to issue and verify educational data and proposes an innovative solution to tackle them. The proposed model supports the issuance, storage, and verification of different types of academic information, both formal and informal, and complies with applicable regulations, protecting the privacy of users' personal data. This proposal also addresses the scalability challenges and paves the way for a global academic certification system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
80. Trends and equity in the use of health services in Spain and Germany around austerity in Europe.
- Author
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Moreno, Almudena, Lostao, Lourdes, Beller, Johannes, Sperlich, Stefanie, Ronda, Elena, Geyer, Siegfried, Pulido, José, and Regidor, Enrique
- Subjects
RECESSIONS ,MEDICAL care ,REGRESSION analysis ,MEDICAL care use ,SURVEYS ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,HOSPITAL care ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CAUSAL models - Abstract
Background: Following the 2008 economic crisis many countries implemented austerity policies, including reducing public spending on health services. This paper evaluates the trends and equity in the use of health services during and after that period in Spain – a country with austerity policies – and in Germany – a country without restriction on healthcare spending. Methods: Data from several National Surveys in Spain and several waves of the Socio-Economic Panel in Germany, carried out between 2009 and 2017, were used. The dependent variables were number of doctor's consultations and whether or not a hospital admission occurred. The measure of socioeconomic position was education. In each year, the estimates were made for people with and without pre-existing health problems. First, the average number of doctor's consultations and the percentage of respondents who had had been hospitalized were calculated. Second, the relationship between education and use of those health services was estimated by calculating the difference in consultations using covariance analysis – in the case of number of consultations – and by calculating the percentage ratio using binomial regression – in the case of hospitalization. Results: The annual mean number of consultations went down in both countries. In Spain the average was 14.2 in 2009 and 10.4 in 2017 for patients with chronic conditions; 16.6 and 13.5 for those with a mental illness; and 6.4 and 5.9 for those without a defined illness. In Germany, the averages were 13.8 (2009) and 12.9 (2017) for the chronic group; 21.1 and 17.0 for mental illness; and 8.7 and 7.5 with no defined illness. The hospitalization frequency also decreased in both countries. The majority of the analyses presented no significant differences in relation to education. Conclusion: In both Spain and Germany, service use decreased between 2009 and 2017. In the first few years, this reduction coincided with a period of austerity in Spain. In general, we did not find socioeconomic differences in health service use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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81. The lasting legacy of the European Reformation of the 16th century: Protestant foundations of modern educational reasoning.
- Author
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Tröhler, Daniel
- Subjects
SCHOOL administration ,PROTESTANTS ,SALVATION ,PRESBYTERIANISM - Abstract
This article argues that crucial elements of the three most important theoretical models of twentieth-century education can be traced back to three Protestant denominations that were developed in Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. First, rather than to look in depth at the Protestant Reformers' own educational ideas, the paper examines their perceptions of how the social or political order should be governed as appropriate for salvation. It then shows how educational models became possible in the context of the three Protestant denominations as they morphed across time and space: German Lutheranism and how it eventually gave rise to the theory of Bildung, which goes hand in hand with the dual world view of Lutheranism; the political theology of Zwinglianism and how it was developed into the Congregational religious order in England and led to the ideal of the virtuous and cooperative citizen in American pragmatism; and Geneva Calvinism and how it was transformed into Presbyterianism in Scotland, its principles of governance, and how it contributed to a certain idea of school organisation that is to be regulated by test psychology and experts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
82. Measuring Sustainable Development Using an Extended Hellwig Method: A Case Study of Education.
- Author
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Roszkowska, Ewa and Filipowicz-Chomko, Marzena
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Benchmarking the analysis of countries' performance in terms of sustainable development helps to understand the success factors of countries that over perform and to target priority issues of others with lower performance. However, assessing sustainable development comes with methodological challenges, including indicator standardization, aggregation and weighting. Our study significantly contributes to the measure of sustainable development by providing a new approach based on an extended Hellwig method. After describing the main limitations of existing methodologies, this paper's aim is twofold. First, we show that the proposed analytical framework allows for comparing the sustainable performance of EU countries on the national level. The extended Hellwig method takes into consideration EU targets and/or national targets in building patterns of development. Second, this framework is tested as a part of the evaluation of the implementation of the Europe 2020 strategy in the education area. The results obtained using the extended Hellwig method were compared with those obtained by means of the Education Index, TOPSIS and Ward technique. Our analysis showed the significant disparities in the implementation of the Europe 2020 strategy recommendations in the education area in 2015. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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83. Does having highly educated adult children reduce mortality risks for parents with low educational attainment in Europe?
- Author
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Sabater, Albert, Graham, Elspeth, and Marshall, Alan
- Subjects
MORTALITY prevention ,MORTALITY risk factors ,ADULT children ,DEATH ,FATHERS ,HEALTH behavior ,HEALTH status indicators ,PATIENT aftercare ,INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,LONGEVITY ,MOTHERS ,PARENT-child relationships ,PARENTS ,RISK assessment ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,PHYSICAL activity ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ADULTS - Abstract
It is known that the education of significant others may affect an individual's mortality. This paper extends an emerging body of research by investigating the effect of having highly educated adult children on the longevity of older parents in Europe, especially parents with low educational attainment. Using a sample of 15,015 individuals (6,620 fathers and 8,395 mothers) aged 50 and above, with 1,847 recorded deaths, over a mean follow-up period of 10.9 years from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE), we examine whether the well-established socio-economic gradient in mortality among parents is modified when their adult children have higher educational attainment than their parents. We find that having highly educated adult children is associated with reduced mortality risks for fathers and mothers with low educational attainment, compared to their counterparts whose adult children have only compulsory education. The association is stronger in early older age (ages 50–74) than in later older age (ages 75 and over). Part of the association appears to be explained by health behaviours (physical (in)activity) and health status (self-rated health). Our findings suggest that the socio-economic–mortality gradient among older parents might be better captured using an intergenerational approach that recognises the advantage of having highly educated adult children, especially for fathers and mothers with only compulsory education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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84. Autonomy and accountability in schools serving disadvantaged communities.
- Author
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Klein, Esther Dominique
- Subjects
SCHOOL autonomy ,SCHOOL administration ,EDUCATIONAL accountability ,SCHOOLS ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Purpose Increased school autonomy and accountability have been a common denominator of national reforms in otherwise heterogeneous governance systems in Europe and the USA. The paper argues that because schools serving disadvantaged communities (SSDCs) often have lower average performance, they are more often sanctioned or under closer scrutiny, but might also receive more additional resources. The purpose of this paper is to therefore analyze whether SSDCs have more or less autonomy than schools with a more advantageous context in four countries with heterogeneous autonomy and accountability policies.Design/methodology/approach The paper is based on the data from the Programme for International Student Assessment 2012 school and student questionnaires from Finland, Germany, the UK, and the USA. The choice of countries is based on different governance models described by Glatter et al. (2003). The data are used to identify SSDCs and analyze the reported autonomy in resource allocation and curriculum and assessment. Using regression analyses, patterns are analyzed for each country individually. They are then juxtaposed and compared. Differences are related back to the governance models of the respective countries.Findings The results indicate an association between the communities the schools are serving and the autonomy either in the allocation of resources, or the curriculum and assessment. SSDCs appeared to have a little more autonomy than schools with a more advantageous context in Finland, Germany, and the UK, but less autonomy in the USA. The comparison suggests that in the USA, autonomy is rather a reward for schools that have the least amount of need, whereas in the other three countries it could be a result of strategies to improve schools in need. The paper discusses possible explanations in the policies and support structures for SSDCs.Originality/value The effects of increased school autonomy and accountability on student achievement have been discussed at length. How different accountability policies affect the autonomy of schools with the highest needs has so far not been studied. The study can be understood as a first step to unravel this association. Following steps should include in-depth investigations of the mechanisms underlying increased or diminished autonomy for SSDCs, and the consequences for school improvement in these schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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85. The current state of orthopaedic residency in 18 European countries.
- Author
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Madanat, Rami, Mäkinen, Tatu, Ryan, Daniel, Huri, Gazi, Paschos, Nikolaos, Vide, Joao, Mäkinen, Tatu J, and the FORTE writing committee, and FORTE writing committee
- Subjects
ORTHOPEDICS ,TRAINING ,SURGERY ,LEARNING ,WOUND care ,CURRICULUM ,INTERNSHIP programs - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to compare differences in current orthopaedic and trauma training programs across Europe.Methods: A questionnaire was sent to the FORTE (Federation of Orthopaedic Trainees in Europe) representatives of 25 different European countries, of which 18 responded. The questionnaire included demographic information and information concerning the structure of the training programs, including duration, selection, and mandatory training requirements.Results: The number of trainees per specialist varied between countries from a ratio of 1:2 to 1:7. Residency was generally five to six years in all the countries. In more than half of the countries selection was interview-based. Nearly all countries utilized a logbook. About 80% of the participating countries had a final examination. When assessing the components of training it was found that only one country (the United Kingdom) had mandatory minimum requirements for (1) courses, (2) surgical procedures, (3) research and (4) leadership. Nearly 40% of the participating countries had only one or none of these four components as a mandatory training requirement.Conclusions: There are many similarities in training programs, but some important differences remain in overall requirements and final qualification. The main limitation of this study was that we were unable to get data from all the European countries. FORTE will continue to serve as a forum for sharing best practices with the ultimate goal of improving and harmonizing the level of orthopaedic training across Europe. Future studies should aim to include further details about training programs as well as to include data from more countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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86. Assessing European primary school performance through a conditional nonparametric model.
- Author
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Cordero, José Manuel, Simancas, Rosa, and Santín, Daniel
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,PRIMARY schools ,EDUCATION research ,NONPARAMETRIC estimation ,PRIMARY education - Abstract
This paper uses a fully nonparametric framework to assess the efficiency of primary schools using data about schools in 16 European countries participating in PIRLS 2011. This study represents an original enterprise since most of the empirical research in the field is restricted to evaluations at regional or national level and focused on secondary education. For our purpose, we adapt the metafrontier framework to compare and decompose the technical efficiency of primary schools operating in heterogeneous contexts, which in our case is represented by different educational systems or countries. Similarly, we use an extension of the conditional nonparametric robust approach to test the potential influence of a mixed set of environmental school factors and variables representing cultural values of each country. Our results indicate that the intergenerational transmission of non-cognitive skills such as responsibility or perseverance are significantly related to school efficiency, whereas most school factors do not seem to have a significant influence on school performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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87. How higher education institutions contribute to the growth in regions of Europe?
- Author
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Lilles, Alo and Rõigas, Kärt
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,PUBLIC institutions ,HIGHER education ,GROWTH rate - Abstract
Various studies show that higher education institutions contribute to regional economic development by R&D, creation of human capital, knowledge and technology transfer, and by creation of a favourable milieu. It is brought out that the basic procedure is to sum expenditures of the college community (students, faculty, staff and visitors) created by the presence of the institution and apply multipliers to account for the interdependency of economic activity in a local economy, resulting in an estimated ‘local economic impact'. The aim of the paper is to investigate the relationship between students in tertiary education and economic growth in NUTS 2 level in Europe from 1998 to 2008 by looking whether the share of tertiary students (measuring human capital) is correlated with the share of knowledge-intensive employment (KIE) in different regions. The increase in KIE is related to increasing levels of GDP per capita and R&D expenditures. Taking into account regional-level fixed effects, the share of tertiary students is not statistically significant. We found out that the increase in KIE is related to increasing levels of GDP per capita and R&D expenditures. The share of students five periods ago has a positive relation with the KIE: as we assumed, it takes time for the human capital to contribute to the economic development. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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88. Opportunities and challenges related to ICT and ICT-AT use by people with disabilities: An explorative study into factors that impact on the digital divide.
- Author
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Mavrou, Katerina, Meletiou-Mavrotheris, Maria, Kärki, Anne, Sallinen, Merja, and Hoogerwerf, Evert-Jan
- Subjects
BENCHMARKING (Management) ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CONTENT analysis ,EDUCATION ,EMPLOYMENT ,INFORMATION technology ,INTERVIEWING ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,QUALITY of life ,RESEARCH ,SOCIAL participation ,DIGITAL divide ,ASSISTIVE technology ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
BACKGROUND: This paper presents part of the work undertaken by the European Network for Technology Enhanced Learning in an Inclusive Society (ENTELIS) to respond to the need for bridging the digital divide. It is based on previous evidence of lack of digital skills of people with disabilities of all ages to effectively participate in the digital society. OBJECTIVE: The paper aims to present the results of an exploratory study conducted in different European countries in order to identify needs, barriers, opportunities and good practices. METHODS: Data collection included the collection of experiences and best practices, and interviews conducted with different groups of people with disabilities of all ages and other stakeholders in five countries. RESULTS: Results emphasize the vital role of ICT-AT for independence, social integration, educational success, employment opportunities, and overall quality of life, while there seems to be heterogeneity in the way technology is considered and utilized among various groups of PwD. A number of challenges and barriers for ICT-AT competence development are also identified. CONCLUSIONS: Considerations and suggestions for further research, for policy and for practice implications are discussed, mainly focused on reducing the abandonment of ICT-AT, on responding to user's heterogeneous needs and on strengthening facilitating factors for the acquisition of digital competencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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89. Economic Strain, Education and Attitudes towards Foreigners in the European Union.
- Author
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Gang, Ira N., Rivera‐Batiz, Francisco L., and Yun, Myeng‐Su
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,IMMIGRANTS ,SURVEYS ,EDUCATION ,PUBLIC opinion ,STATISTICS - Abstract
Surveys carried out by the Eurobarometer survey series show a sharp increase in the negative attitudes of European citizens towards foreigners between 1988 and 2003, but a noticeable reversal of this trend between 2003 and 2008. This paper provides a statistical analysis of the determinants of attitudes towards foreigners and analyzes the factors associated with changes in anti-foreigner sentiment among European citizens. The paper concludes that while rising racial prejudice accounts for a substantial portion of the trend in anti-foreigner sentiment, economic conditions also matter, with economic strain leading to more negative attitudes. At the same time, educational attainment is shown to be a strong antidote to anti-foreigner attitudes. Both rising average schooling and more positive attitudes towards foreigners by the highly educated have led to a reversal of the climbing anti-immigrant sentiments in Europe. The paper discusses policy implications and the potential effects of the European economic collapse since 2008. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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90. 'Innovation Studies': The Invention of a Specialty.
- Author
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Godin, Benoît
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,INTELLECTUAL history ,HISTORY of inventions ,INNOVATIONS in business ,HISTORY of technology ,EUROPEAN history, 1492- ,EDUCATION ,HISTORY - Abstract
Innovation has become a very popular concept over the twentieth century. However, few have stopped to study the origins of the category and to critically examine the studies produced on innovation. This paper conducts such an analysis on one type of innovation, namely technological innovation. The study of technological innovation is over one hundred years old. From the early 1900s onward, anthropologists, sociologists, historians, and economists began theorizing about technological innovation, each from his own respective disciplinary framework. However, in the last forty years an economic and 'dominant' understanding of technological innovation has developed: technological innovation defined as commercialized invention. This paper documents the origins of this representation and the tradition of research to which it gave rise: 'innovation studies.' More specifically, it analyzes what distinguishes this tradition from that concerned with technological change as the use of inventions in industrial production, and looks at why such a tradition originated in Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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91. THE SOCIAL POLICY CHALLENGES OF EUROPE 2020 IN THE EU CANDIDATE COUNTRIES: THE CASE OF CROATIA AND MACEDONIA.
- Author
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Mitev, Maja Gerovska and Stubbs, Paul
- Subjects
SOCIAL policy ,EMPLOYMENT ,EDUCATION ,POVERTY - Abstract
This paper examines the social dimension of the EU's Europe 2020 Strategy in two EU candidate countries (Croatia and Macedonia). The text outlines both the positive attributes of the new Strategy and addresses criticisms it has received. The two countries analysed show diverging trends, but also face similar challenges, in relation to the incorporation of Europe 2020 indicators and targets in employment, education, and poverty and social inclusion. The new indicators and targets may promote greater influence of the European Union in the creation of social policy at national level. At the same time, there is a need to support candidate countries where there are gaps in statistical data for evidence-based policies, a lack of strategic capacity, significant fiscal constraints, and a lack of political will. The paper concludes by addressing implications in relation to the identification of the poor and impacts on social protection systems and overall public policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
92. Attitudes towards entrepreneurship education: a comparative analysis.
- Author
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Gary Packham, Paul Jones, Christopher Miller, David Pickernell, and Brychan Thomas
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,BUSINESSPEOPLE ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HIGHER education ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Purpose - This paper aims to examine the impact of enterprise education on entrepreneurial attitude within European higher education institutions (HEIs) in France, Germany and Poland. The research seeks to consider whether differences between cultural and industrial heritage can influence entrepreneurial attitude and mediate the effectiveness of enterprise education. Design/methodology/approach - Research argues that Europe requires more entrepreneurs willing to innovate and create new ventures to facilitate economic growth. This research builds on prior studies, which have examined the impact of enterprise education and training on business start-up. In particular the study utilises the concept of entrepreneurial attitude to measure how enterprise education influences students'' perceptions of, and motivations towards, entrepreneurship as a viable career option. The study contrasts and compares the impact of a short enterprise course on entrepreneurial attitude among undergraduate students in French, German and Polish HEIs. A quantitative methodology employed a research instrument utilising five-point Likert arrays to contrast attitudes and opinions of students both prior to, and after, the delivery of the course. Findings - Enterprise education has a positive impact on entrepreneurial attitude of French and Polish students. Conversely, the course had a negative impact on male German students. It was also found that while female students are more likely to perceive a greater benefit from the learning experience, the impact of enterprise education on entrepreneurial attitude is actually more significant for male students. Practical implications - The research findings are of interest to academia and policy makers. The study suggests that entrepreneurial attitude among European students can be influenced by exposure to enterprise education. The results also indicate that gender, cultural and industrial heritage can moderate the impact of enterprise education. Originality/value - The paper provides evidence that differences between gender, culture and regional settings need to be considered in the design and delivery of enterprise programmes if they are to have the desired impact on entrepreneurial intent and graduate entrepreneurship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
93. "It's not that I'm a racist, it's that they are Roma.".
- Author
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O'Higgins, Niall
- Subjects
ROMANIES ,LABOR market ,ECONOMETRIC models ,WAGES ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Purpose -- This paper uses a unique survey of Roma and non-Roma in South Eastern Europe with the aim of evaluating competing explanations for the poor performance of Roma in the labour market. Design/methodology/approach -- Following a descriptive analysis, econometric models are employed to identify the determinants of educational achievement, employment and wages for Roma and non-Roma. Limited information maximum likelihood (LIML) methods are employed to control for endogenous schooling and two sources of sample selection bias in the estimates. Non-linear and linear decomposition techniques are applied in order to identify the extent of discrimination. Findings -- The key results are that: the employment returns to education are lower for Roma than for non-Roma whilst the wage returns are broadly similar for the two groups; the similar wage gains translate into a smaller absolute wage gain for Roma than for non-Roma given their lower average wages; the marginal absolute gains from education for Roma are only a little over one-third of the marginal absolute gains to education for majority populations; and, there is evidence to support the idea that a substantial part of the differential in labour market outcomes is due to discrimination. Research limitations/implications -- The survey data employed do not include information on hours worked. In order to partially control for this, the analysis of wages is limited to employee wages excluding the self-employed. Practical implications -- Explanations of why Roma fare so badly tend to fall into one of two camps: the "low education" and the "discrimination" schools. The analysis suggests that both of these explanations have some basis in fact. Moreover, a direct implication of the lower absolute returns to education accruing to Roma is that their lower educational participation is, at least in part, due to rational economic calculus. Consequently, policy needs to address both low educational participation and labour market discrimination contemporaneously. Originality/value -- This is the first paper to attempt to econometrically distinguish between discrimination and educational explanations of Roma disadvantage in the labour market in Central and Eastern Europe. The survey data employed are unique and appropriate for the task. Unusually for analyses dealing with returns to education, the LIML econometric approach employed controls for both endogenous schooling and two sources of sample selection bias. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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- View/download PDF
94. Developing an inclusive system in a rapidly changing European society.
- Author
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Drudy, Sheelagh and Kinsella, William
- Subjects
INCLUSIVE education ,SCHOOL children ,LEARNING ,CHILDREN with disabilities ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL sociology ,MAINSTREAMING in special education ,ETHNIC groups - Abstract
This paper uses Ireland - one of Europe's most rapidly changing societies - as a case study and examines progress towards an inclusive education system. It explores policy and progress on developing an inclusive system under a number of key headings: social class, ethnicity, gender and disability. On the basis of analysis of official statistics and of research evidence from a study of the inclusion of children with disabilities and special educational needs, this paper assesses whether the impact of recent state policy and legislative change has significantly increased the degree of inclusion in the education system under the four headings. There is a particular focus on the area of disability. The particular questions explored in this paper are whether the unprecedented changes which have taken place in Ireland since the mid-1990s have resulted in a more inclusive system, an increase in equality, and an increase in inclusive practices in schools. On the basis of the available evidence, the results appear to be mixed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
95. Contributions of open access to higher education in Europe and vice versa.
- Author
-
Chantavaridou, Elisavet
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,MANAGEMENT science ,EDUCATION ,INTERNET in higher education ,SCHOOL integration ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,ACADEMIC dissertations ,ACTIVE learning ,PROJECT method in teaching - Abstract
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the relationship between open access and academic institutions, as well as the initiatives that spring from this relationship with a mainly European geographical focus. Design/methodology/approach - The paper describes the main European initiatives and collaborations in the area of open access that have been university-driven so far. Findings - The strength of many universities is in leading many national European initiatives, and collaborations by universities that aim to provide open access to research output, scientific publications and student theses and dissertations. Individual university efforts are the ones that pioneer in software and application development. International agreements and declarations are also signed by university representatives in order to promote open access and the close bond between higher education and open access. Originality/value - The paper describes the latest developments regarding the promotion of open access in European universities and the collaborations that they form. Smaller countries can benefit from these examples. E-theses projects are estimated to lead the next pan-European projects related to open access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
96. Reviewing Approaches and Perspectives on “Digital Literacy”.
- Author
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Sefton-Green, Julian, Nixon, Helen, and Erstad, Ola
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,TECHNOLOGY ,CHILDREN - Abstract
This paper explores the purchase and usefulness of the notion of digital literacy. Comparing and contrasting theoretical formulations of digital literacy from the “top-down” and “bottom-up”, it reviews how the concept has been used across three research fields in Europe and Australia. An introductory section situates the ways in which digital literacy offers itself as a mean of empowerment in the tradition of the “new literacy studies” but at the same time exposes contradictions in terms of access and power. The first domain explored is media discourse, and this section of the paper examines ideas which have been circulating in Australia since the early 1990s about the need for children to become digitally literate. The second section examines how the concept of digital literacy has developed over the last decade in the domain of school policy, curriculum documents and practices in Norway; and the third section reviews transnational research to explore how the term digital literacy is used in the domain of children's and youth's out-of-school cultural digital practices. We argue that the term “digital literacy” incorporates more notions of exclusion and division than is commonly supposed, and that it exposes the contradictory politics of literacy education in new and provocative ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
97. Updating the Clothing Technician Profile through synergies between industry and vocational and educational training.
- Author
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CARDOSO, ALEXANDRA, NERO GUIMARÃES, PEDRO, PAULA DINIS, ANA, KOUKOVINIS, ALEXANDROS, DOMENECH-PASTOR, JORGE, SEGADO, ALMUDENA, DASCALU, MIHAELA, and OLARU, SABINA
- Subjects
EDUCATION & training services industry ,JOB qualifications ,COOPERATIVE education ,CLOTHING industry ,MANUFACTURING industries - Abstract
Copyright of Industria Textila is the property of Institutul National de Cercetare-Dezvoltare pentru Textile si Pielarie and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. OBRAZOVANJE OBITELJSKIH MEDIJATORA U HRVATSKOM I MEĐUNARODNOM KONTEKSTU.
- Author
-
Branica, Vanja
- Subjects
FAMILY mediation ,TEACHING methods ,PROFESSIONAL associations ,MEDIATION ,ATTENTION ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) - Abstract
Copyright of Ljetopis Socijalnog Rada / Annual of Social Work is the property of Pravni Fakultet Sveucilista u Zagrebu, Studijski Centar Socijalnog Rada and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. New challenges for universities in the knowledge triangle.
- Author
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Unger, Maximilian, Marsan, Giulia Ajmone, Meissner, Dirk, Polt, Wolfgang, and Cervantes, Mario
- Subjects
UNIVERSITY & college administration ,TRIANGLES ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,HELICES (Algebraic topology) ,PRIVATE sector - Abstract
This paper discusses the role of higher education institutions within the framework of the knowledge triangle between academic education, scientific research and innovation, as it has gained importance in recent years as a framework for innovation policies especially in the OECD and Europe. First, complementary concepts of universities' outreach activities and extended role model such as 'third mission', 'triple helix', 'entrepreneurial or civic university' models and 'smart specialization' are reflected against their fit with the concept of the knowledge triangle, also with respect to new requirements for university governance. Second, a new understanding of spillovers between public sectors research and the business sector according to knowledge triangle is presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. How to Prepare Educational Lecture: EAGEN 50 Years of Experience.
- Author
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Regula, Jaroslaw
- Subjects
LECTURES & lecturing ,GASTROENTEROLOGY ,EXPERIENCE ,NUTRITION ,ENDOSCOPY - Abstract
Background: European Association of Gastroenterology, Endoscopy, and Nutrition for 50 years provided a good, professional teaching of gastroenterology across Europe by world-known experts. Teaching tips and tricks to achieve maximum effects are summarized in this review article. Summary: The good speaker should be motivated to teach the audience at the time of lecture a topic in way that information provided is remembered. The educational aim should realistic, well selected, and precisely defined. Putting an order and clarity into information provided are crucial. Speaker should feel comfortable during lecture and enjoy it. Ways to achieve that are described in this review paper. Key Messages: Medical teaching by lectures should be simple, clear, well-structured, and enjoyable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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