Skip to main content

Home/ English 102 - Spring 2009/ Group items tagged higher education

Rss Feed Group items tagged

E Schickler

EBSCOhost: The Educational Experiences of Intercollegiate Student -- Athletes - 0 views

  •  
    This article presents the authors' views on the educational experiences of intercollegiate student, athletes. The critics of intercollegiate sport argue that winning, which is highly correlated with revenues, has corrupted higher education. Most specifically, at some schools the athletic performance of athletes is more important than their academic achievement.
Abby Purdy

Beyond Myopic Visions of Education: Revisiting Movement Literacy - 0 views

  •  
    One possibility for those interested in sports to consider is the concept of physical literacy, here called "movement literacy," the idea that just as our minds learn to function at higher levels and acquire new skills, our bodies must do the same. However, between phyical education budgets being cut and increasing importance placed on technology, our understanding of movement literacy is decreasing. This article focuses on students in Kenya, where the most original innovative learning takes place during unstructed playtime. Includes a PDF and several photographs.
Abby Purdy

Higher Education May Soon Be Unaffordable for Most Americans - 0 views

  •  
    Tuition and fees increased 439 percent from 1982 to 2007, while median family income rose 147 percent.
S Stull

Risk Factors Associated With Overweight and Obesity in College Students. - 0 views

  •  
    This article surrounds the idea that obesity in college students can be traced to eating disordered behaviors. They conducted research of students with different weights in order to find which weight group had the least amount of nutritional education. The higher weight group would partake in such unhealthy activities such as binge eating and a "preoccupation with food".
E Schickler

EBSCOhost: THE ATHLETE STIGMA IN HIGHER EDUCATION - 0 views

  •  
    In this study 538 collegiate athletes were asked how they were perceived and treated by faculty and other non athlete students. 33% reported they were perceived negatively by professors and 59.1% by students, Only 15% reported positive perceptions.
T  O Hearn

Mapping Academic Achievement and Public School Choice Under the No Child Left Behind Le... - 0 views

  •  
    The authors share the difference of how the education gap between minority and low-income students compares to the fortunate white students. These low-income students are usually seen in urban schools that are at a disadvantage because of their label as a "failing school". The authors conduct a chart that shows the number of free or reduced lunches, percent of minority students, the student teacher ratio and the percent of poverty rate of failing schools, choice schools and the mean difference in schools in North Carolina. The rates in failing schools were substantially higher than the ones in choice schools. This process was only conducted in North Carolina, but it would be very similar for all states.
  •  
    The authors research the effects of public school choice in the state of South Carolina under the No Child Left Behind Act. It has been found that public schools are labeled "in need of improvement" if there is a large minority of students and a large amount of poverty independent of rural, suburban, or urban location. The article touches on all the spatial aspects of the academic achievement gap between public schools and how rural failing schools are the most disadvantaged. The research in the article is useful but it is limited to the state of South Carolina.
1 - 6 of 6
Showing 20 items per page