scholarly journals The Policy of Commercialization Abolition in Indonesia Equality Education Effort: The Explanation of the Coleman’s Report

Author(s):  
Nur Hamidah ◽  
Setyabudi Indartono
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Siswadi Siswadi

Islam education reformation is an absolute demand. Everyone effort, especially teacher, lecturer, politician, stakeholder, state, or private sector surely bring positive impact to education, include Islamic education. However, education system implemented today, in school or ex-scroll, remain contain weakness and deterioration. This paradigm triggers the rise of Islam education reforms spirit. This article show how Indonesian education figure see Islamic education condition in Indonesia. Meanwhile, by and large we would about reforms Islamic education effort that more constructive ad relevant with change and development on this globalisation and industrialisation era.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-118
Author(s):  
KENNETH W. KLESH

To the Editor.— I read with great interest the recent article by Hayden1 concerning the expanding use (and misuse) of biostatistics. in the medical literature. Having little background in statistics, I indeed have found it increasingly difficult to critically evaluate research presentations—the "auto-cerebrectomy" of which Feinstein2 spoke is both familiar and personally troubling. While a series of instructional articles on statistical topics as has appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine, is most welcome, I suspect that an approach more intimately associated with a well-established continuing medical education effort would reach the greatest number of practicing pediatricians and could be more directly tailored to their needs.


2006 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 159-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher L. Jones ◽  
Andrea Alston Roberts

Charities that use direct mailings or other activities that combine a public education effort with fundraising appeals must allocate the joint costs related to these activities to programs, fundraising, and administration. This study investigates whether charities use joint-cost allocations to manage the program ratio—a widely used measure of spending efficiency. Using a hand-collected dataset of 708 organization-year observations from 1992 to 2000, we find evidence that charities use joint costs to mitigate changes in the program ratio.


Author(s):  
Joan Von Ahn ◽  
Zorana Jelenak ◽  
Joseph Sienkiewicz ◽  
Michael Brennan

EDIS ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 2009 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda Hodges ◽  
Jennifer Gillett-Kaufman ◽  
Carrie Harmon ◽  
Aaron Palmateer ◽  
Pamela Roberts ◽  
...  

ENY-501, a 5-page fact sheet by Amanda Hodges, Jennifer Gillett-Kaufman, Carrie Harmon, Aaron Palmateer, Pamela Roberts, Adrian Hunsberger, Sylvia Shives, Theresa Friday, and Jiannong Xin, answers questions about the NPDN First Detector training program, which promote the early detection and proper identification of potentially devastating exotic species through a coordinated extension education effort. Includes references. Published by the UF Department of Entomology and Nematology, December 2008.


2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Correani

<p>We analyse the dynamics of the distribution of democratic values in a population where<br />agents have heterogeneous preferences about democracy, distinguishing between<br />fundamentalist-antidemocratic agents and pro-democracy agents. Cultural traits and norms<br />are acquired through a process of intergenerational cultural transmission and socialization.<br />The driving force in the equilibrium selection process is the education effort exerted by<br />parents; this depends on the distribution of democratic values in the population and on<br />expectations about future policies affecting formal and informal institutions.<br />The main result is that when fundamentalism is sufficiently diffused in all institutional<br />dimensions of social life, the imposition of formal democratic rules do not significantly affect<br />social preferences. On the other hand the model shows how a cruel fundamentalist<br />dictatorship cannot wholly destroy democratic preferences in the population; the sole result is<br />a fictitious homologation of manifested attitudes, with no preferences dynamics and the<br />previous real attitudes immediately emerging as soon as dictatorship falls.</p>


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