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         Connecticut Education General:     more books (100)
  1. Connecticut General Statutes Annotated (Education and Culture, 5A) by State of Connecticut, 1986
  2. Annual Report of the Board of Education of the State of Connecticut, Presented to the General Assembly, May Session, 1873, Together with the Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board by [Connecticut], 1873-01-01
  3. Annual Report of the Board of Education of the State of Connecticut, Presented to the General Assembly, January Session 1880. Together with the Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board by Connecticut Board of Education, 1880
  4. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT , presented to the General Assembly, January Session, 1877... by Board of Education Connecticut, 1877
  5. Annual Report of the Board of Education of the State of Connecticut, Presented to the General Assembly, January Session, 1881. Together with the Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board by Board of Education of Connecticut, 1881
  6. Annual Report of the Board of Education of the State of Connecticut, Presented to the General Assembly, May Session, 1873, Together with the Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board, 1882 by [Connecticut], 1882-01-01
  7. Special education (Background paper - Office of Legislative Research, Connecticut General Assembly) by Ellen Ferrari, 1978
  8. Connecticut General Statutes Annotated (Education & Culture, State System of Higher Education, Libraries, 5B) by State of Connecticut, 1986
  9. Handbook for Connecticut boards of education;: A guide to the general statutes and specific powers of town boards of education with statutory citations by Patricia Stuart, 1956
  10. Report of the Board of Education of the State of Connecticut to the Governor: Together with the Report of the Secretary of the Board
  11. Report of the Board of Education of the State of Connecticut to the Governor: Together with the Report of the Secretary of the Board
  12. Report of the Board of Education
  13. Report of the Board of Education
  14. The Witchcraft Delusion In Colonial Connecticut- John M. Taylor by John M. Taylor, 2010-04-09

1. Connecticut Department Of Education Home Page
a list of hyperlinks on general subjects and provides a useful guide connecticut State Department of education. connecticut Regional VocationalTechnical School System. connecticut
http://www.state.ct.us/sde
"We are committed to the success of all Connecticut students.." TEACHERS SITE MAP SEARCH
State CMT Results, 2002
... SSACE Challenge to Educational Citizenship Award T he software to view and print Adobe Acrobat documents is available free from the Adobe website. To get a free copy of the software, click the "Get Acrobat" image. Directions to the Department Division Information Evaluation and Research Grants Management Programs and Services School Improvement ... Vocational Technical Schools For further Information contact: Office of Public Information
Connecticut State Department of Education
165 Capitol Avenue
Hartford, CT 06145
Tel (860) 713-6548 Accessibility Notice: This Web site has been redesigned and includes several features designed to improve accessibility for users with disabilities. No accessibility warranty or guarantee is made for sites to which this Web site links; such compliance is beyond our scope or control. I f you have problems accessing a Web page or a document on this site, please contact us at (860) 713-6680.

2. CONNECTICUT GENERAL ASSEMBLY
connecticut general ASSEMBLY Major Issues 200 1 Want more information? Follow these links State Aid to education
http://www.cga.state.ct.us/olr/2001majorissues/education.htm
CONNECTICUT GENERAL ASSEMBLY Major Issues 200 Updated 3/7 Want more information? Follow these links: E DUCATION OLR Reports School Readiness Grant Eligibility History of the ECS Cap School Readiness Grants ECS Formula Factors And Data ... Categorical Education Grants New 1/19 Summary of Horton v. Meskill New 1/ Categorical Education GrantsII New OFA Reports State Aid to Education New 1/1 State Aid to Education The General Assembly will likely see proposals to increase aid to municipalities for K-12 education funding, particularly in the Education Cost Sharing (ECS) grant. Towns will also look for increased state assistance to pay for special education. Among the most prominent ECS issues is eliminating the 6% cap on annual increases in ECS grants, which is reducing grants to 96 towns this year. Although the cap is in the second year of a four-year phase-out and is scheduled to expire in FY 04, many towns believe it should be removed immediately, at a cost of $120 million in FY 01. Another option is to alter the cap phase-out to equalize its fiscal impact over its remaining years. The current phase-out is projected to increase ECS funding by approximately $30 million a year in FY 02 and FY 03, and $80 million in FY 04. The "balloon" in the final year makes towns fear the state will reduce FY 04 allocations.

3. Connecticut State Department Of Education
connecticut State Department of education. general Reference. Someof the material in this section may be in Adobe Acrobat Format.
http://www.state.ct.us/sde/reference/
Connecticut State Department of Education General Reference Some of the material in this section may be in Adobe Acrobat Format. Adobe Acrobat Reader is required. Click here to download free Acrobat Reader.
Special Education Residential Facilities
Data Acquisition Plan 2002 - 2003 Connecticut's 2001 Grads Continue Strong Performance on SAT (August 28, 2001) Connecticut Students Continue Strong Performance on SAT 2000 (August 29, 2000) ... Sites of Interest
If you require further information, please contact:

Office of Public Information: thomas.murphy@po.state.ct.us
Connecticut State Department of Education
P.O. Box 2219
Hartford, CT 06145
Telephone: (860) 713-6548 Return to Department of Education Home Page Technical question regarding this site, contact the Internet Administrator Agency Website Legal Information and Privacy Notices
3 State of Connecticut. All State apply.

4. CEA - Connecticut Education Association
general Information Keep updated here about changes and additions to the BEST ofEducation Staff 200203 BEST project leaders, teachers-in-residence, and
http://www.cea.org/BEST/bestinfo.html
B eginning E ducators S upport and T raining
General Information
Keep updated here about changes and additions to the BEST program. Contact Linette Branham with questions or comments at linetteb@cea.org or call her at 800.842.4316 or 860.525.5641. State Dept. of Education Staff:
2002-03 BEST project leaders, teachers-in-residence, and staff Upcoming 2003 Dates You Need to Know!
For Year 1 teachers: BEST Videotape sessions
BEST online support seminars from the State Department of Education
A series of lessons for you to work through on your own, with your mentor, or with other colleagues, that will help you lay the groundwork for developing your BEST portfolio: Elementary Science English Language Arts Social Studies ... World Languages Portfolio Overviews - 2002-03

5. Connecticut Education Network
connecticut education Network. Through the Leadership of the Governors office and the connecticut general Assembly,
http://www.doit.state.ct.us/cen
CEN Search:
Department of Information Technology 101 East River Drive East Hartford CT 06108 From Outside Local Calling Area
Receive CEN news updates by e-mail. Subscribe now or update your e-Alerts
Connecticut Education Network
The Connecticut Education Network is a combination of physical and virtual network technologies that will deliver optimum connectivity on a "one step ahead of demand" basis now and in the future. Planning for the Connecticut Education Network was begun in July, 2000 and deployment is well underway. Major efforts to date include procurement activities to establish contract mechanisms for next generation network infrastructure, development of architectural principals, documenting network engineering policies, prototyping of the core network and deployment of the first higher education, K-12 and library sites.
Featured Links CEN News IT Contract Awards DOIT Bid Notices Other Resources Department of Administrative Services Core-CT Commission for Education Technology
Calendar Home CT.gov Home Send Feedback
State of Connecticut and

6. CEA - Connecticut Education Association
Dept. of education in connecticut. Contact sections BEST general InformationKeep updated about changes and additions to the BEST program.
http://www.cea.org/BEST/
B eginning E ducators S upport and T raining
Here is everything you want to know about BEST, the program required for teacher certification by the State Dept. of Education in Connecticut. Contact Linette Branham with questions or comments at linetteb@cea.org or call her at 800-842-4316 or 860-525-5641. Let us know how we can help you! All the information for BEST is in the following 2 sections: BEST General Information
Keep updated about changes and additions to the BEST program. Schedules for upcoming seminars, information about the portfolio, where to view samples of BEST portfolios, and all other general information about BEST.
BEST Support Tools

There are many things you can and should do to prepare for the portfolio assessment. See suggestions and tools available that will help you organize, prepare for, and take some of the busy-work out of compiling your portfolio.

7. $7.8 Million In Special Education General Supervision Enhancement Grants Awarded
of Special education Programs general Supervision Enhancement Colorado Departmentof education Lois Adams connecticut, connecticut Department of education George
http://www.ed.gov/PressReleases/10-2001/10052001j.html
FOR RELEASE:
October 5, 2001 Contact: Jim Bradshaw
$7.8 Million in Special Education General Supervision Enhancement Grants Awarded to 24 States, Territories and Outlying Areas
More than $7.8 million in grants have been awarded by the U.S. Department of Education to 24 states, territories and outlying areas for special education improvement efforts as part of a competitive process to help reform and improve services for children with disabilities. A total of 42 states, Puerto Rico and outlying territories competed for the awards, known as General Supervision Enhancement Grants. The grants are intended to complement and support the accountability system developed by the department’s Office of Special Education Programs by assisting states and lead agencies to develop and improve their infrastructure for holding states, districts and schools accountable for improving student achievement. "Accountability for improved performance rests at the heart of our efforts to improve American education," said U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige. "These awards will help move us toward assuring that our special education programs are offering quality educational services to all students with disabilities so that no child is left behind." Activities supported by the grants include:
  • developing data-driven, evidence-based state monitoring systems that focus on areas that have the greatest impact on better outcomes for children with disabilities;

8. Lessons Learned III - University Of Connecticut
project, the University of**connecticut embarked on an ambitious project to teststudent performance in each of their six general education areas science and
http://www.ed.gov/offices/OPE/FIPSE/LessonsIII/connec.html
Lessons Learned from FIPSE Projects III - June 1996
University of Connecticut
Assessing General Education Outcomes
An Institution-Specific Approach
Purpose
There is much discussion and bewilderment in higher education about how to measure curriculum improvement, especially in general education. The University of Connecticut embarked on an ambitious project to test student performance in each of their six general education areas: science and technology, foreign languages, culture and modern society, philosophy and ethical analysis, social science and comparative analysis, and literature and the arts. The university wanted answers to questions about whether a student's level of performance in the new general education curriculum improves with time in the program, and whether the number of courses taken in a general education area affects student performance.
Innovative Features
Just a few years after the general education curriculum was installed, the university set out to study its benefits to students and to further refine its goals, structure and course content. From the beginning, this three-year project was viewed not as a one-time activity, but as a continuing faculty-directed process of goal and curriculum improvement. Since the university had no prior institutional structure for assessment, the project required the creation of an ad hoc committee on assessment within the Faculty Senate.
Evaluation
The assessment process stressed the faculty's role in generating clear and concrete general education goals and in deciding what constitutes evidence that they have been achieved. Fifty faculty members working in six different goal committees (each of which included a behavioral measurement expert) examined all the course syllabi and relevant standardized and commercial tests, and arrived at a set of 14 locally-developed assessment instruments that matched the new goals. With two exceptions, each gene ral education area was assigned two forms with complementary content. Another instrument, the Cornell Test, was purchased to measure critical thinking skills.

9. 81.ch.02: The History Of Public Education In Connecticut
intense study of connecticut public education. I have prefaced each section with a general objective which the students
http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1981/cthistory/81.ch.02.x.html
Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute Home
The History of Public Education in Connecticut
by
Clifford J. Dudley
Contents of Curriculum Unit 81.ch.02:
Introduction
The idea of public education has come to mean various things to many people. What is your concept of it? What images do your students have when “public education” is mentioned? Public schools in England have little in common with their name-sakes in America; more like our private schools, they are exclusive schools which serve to prepare students for important jobs in the government or military, “public” service. Yet the present American idea of publicly supported schools which would teach basic knowledge to future citizens did not exist in our state most of our early history. This unit is concerned with how education developed throughout the state’s history. The overall goal of the unit is to Provide students with insight into how education has responded to changing conditions. Your students should learn how education affects, and in turn is affected by, the attitudes of the society in which it exists. The unit is divided into three sections: the colonial era, the 19th century, and the 2Oth century. The sections may be taught together as a two-week unit, or separately in connection with each period as it is covered in traditional American history courses. It may be used for grades eight through ten. However, depending on your desires and the class ability, the unit may be used for a more intense study of Connecticut public education. I have prefaced each section with a general objective which the students should recognize. Following each section are some activities which you nay find useful. Of course, each of us will use this material in the way we feel will be most informative and interesting to the students.

10. Connecticut General Assembly - Education Committee (0)
education Committee Recommended Links Contact Information for education Members(pdf). Department of education. connecticut Commission on the Arts.
http://www.cga.state.ct.us/ed/
var CGADarkBar = "#0066CC" //Blue var CGALightBar = "#609FE0" //Light Blue var CGAOverColor = "#0066CC" var CGABanImage = "/images/cga_ban_blue.png" Quick Search by: Bill House Cal# Senate Cal# File Copy LCO# Public Act Special Act Number: Year: Broadcast Media Statutes Committees A - H I - Z ... Legislative References Education Committee
Room 3100, Legislative Office Building 860-240-0420 A committee on EDUCATION which shall have cognizance of all matters relating to the Department of Education Department of Higher Education ; local and regional boards of education and the substantive law of collective bargaining covering teachers and professional employees of such boards; vocational rehabilitation; the Board of Governors of Higher Education; the Commission on the Arts ; and libraries, museums and historical and cultural associations.
Committee Members
Bill Record Book Agendas Minutes ... Non-Bill Votes
Education Committee Recommended Links:
Contact Information for Education Members
(pdf) Department of Education Connecticut Commission on the Arts
Contact WebMaster
Site Map ... Go to CT.gov

11. Education: General Works
A number of works treat the history of public education in connecticut m a general way. One of the best is Charles L.
http://www.ctheritage.org/reference/topical_education/general.htm
More Connecticut history, heritage, people, places and things...
Education: General Works
The history of public and private elementary, secondary, and collegiate education in Connecticut is, on the whole, a happy one, though a close inspection of the condition of schools throughout the state's history will not support that generalization unless set in a national context. Things get bad in Connecticut from time to time, and are never as good as they should be for delivering quality education but, compared with almost every other state in the United Statesprobably in the worldwe're stars. There are many general histories of education in America, and a study of one of them should form the first step in an investigation of education in Connecticut. A number of works treat the history of public education in Connecticut m a general way. One of the best is Charles L. Ames' essay "History of Education in Connecticut, 1818-1925," in Vol. V of Osborn’s History of Connecticut in Monographic Form . It is only about fifty pages and stops in 1925. Ames taught for many years in rural one-room schoolhouses and then for a third of a century in Hartford. At the time he wrote this essay, he was a member of the State Board of Education. Another old standard work, now superseded, is Bernard C. Steiner

12. Connecticut College - General Education
connecticut College requires that each student complete a program of general education.
http://camel.conncoll.edu/academics/gen_ed

Academics Home
Academic
Calendar

Academic
... General Education
Academics
General Education
General Education (GE) Requirements
Classes of 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006
Connecticut College requires that each student complete a program of general education. Previous years' GE events for reference: 2000-2001 GE Event Listings 1999-2000 GE Event Listings 1998-99 GE Event Listings This page maintained by the CC Web Team feedback@conncoll.edu General Feedback
Last Modified: Wednesday, November 06, 2002, 02:14:35 PM EST

13. Connecticut College - General Education
connecticut College requires that each student complete a program of general education.Previous years' GE events for reference 20002001 GE Event Listings.
http://www.conncoll.edu/academics/gen_ed/

Academics Home
Academic
Calendar

Academic
... General Education
Academics
General Education
General Education (GE) Requirements
Classes of 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006
Connecticut College requires that each student complete a program of general education. Previous years' GE events for reference: 2000-2001 GE Event Listings 1999-2000 GE Event Listings 1998-99 GE Event Listings This page maintained by the CC Web Team feedback@conncoll.edu General Feedback
Last Modified: Wednesday, November 06, 2002, 02:14:35 PM EST

14. Health Services / Education / Counseling / General
Allied Health education. Art education (general). Assist. Professor, Clinical or Counseling services for Houston, TX. connecticut State Information Health Social Services
http://www.jericho.org/sq_h_c.html

15. Connecticut College - General Education Requirements
Dated August 5, 2002. connecticut College requires that each studentcomplete a program of general education. Part I Foundation Courses.
http://www.conncoll.edu/academics/gen_ed/areas/

Academics Home
Academic
Calendar

Academic
... General Education
General Education Requirements
Class of 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006
Courses Which Satisfy the Seven Areas in the Program of General Education
Dated: August 5, 2002 Connecticut College requires that each student complete a program of general education.
Part I: Foundation Courses
Foundation Courses are designed to give you a basic introduction to a discipline. This might be done through the study of major texts in a given discipline or through study of the issues and questions around which a discipline is built. The academic disciplines are in essence formalized ways of trying to understand the world, and each one of them has its conventions of how it goes about its task. Another way in which Foundation Courses can work then is to introduce you to the chief issues within a given discipline. Another way of saying this is to ask what are the questions a discipline is trying to answer. Academic disciplines are perspectives and vantage points from which the world can be observed and understood. Each stakes out a portion of reality to examine, and thus offers a perspective or vantage point from which to see and evaluate the world. Whichever one it happens to be, a liberal arts discipline should teach you how to examine critically the conventions of inquiry being followed and the assumptions used. This is true whether you are studying institutions, scientific data, human beings, or perhaps most importantly of all, yourself.

16. Advanced Education In General Dentistry At The UConn School Of Dental Medicine
The Program Director Advanced education in general Dentistry Department of BehavioralSciences and Community Health University of connecticut Health Center 263
http://sdm.uchc.edu/graduate_dental/adv_ed/index.shtml
Advanced Education in General Dentistry
Program Goals and Objectives

The Advanced Education in General Dentistry residency prepares individuals to enter the field of general dentistry with confidence and expertise. The goals of the program are to:
  • Provide advanced training beyond the predoctoral level; Expand the scope and depth of knowledge and clinical skills so residents can provide comprehensive care to a variety of patient groups; Expand the scope and depth of knowledge leading to the oral health management of compromised patients; Develop in-depth knowledge of the ability to apply modern practice management theory; Provide residents with the analytical skills necessary for evaluation of professional literature to insure the capacity for continued, self-directed growth; Provide training in community based, primary care setting addressing the needs of underserved populations.
  • Program Description
    participate in literature reviews, case presentations, treatment planning

    17. Graduate Dental Programs At The UConn School Of Dental Medicine
    Information on programs for general dentistry, oral medicine, prosthodontics, endodontology and other Category Reference education School of Dental Medicine...... of Dental Medicine and support the School's mission to prepare broadly trained generaldentists, specialists, and dental academicians for connecticut and the
    http://sdm.uchc.edu/graduate_dental/index.shtml

    These programs are offered by the University of Connecticut School of Dental Medicine and support the School's mission to prepare broadly trained general dentists, specialists, and dental academicians for Connecticut and the nation. The strength of these programs is recognized internationally and the graduates of these programs have achieved prominence throughout North America and the world. The School of Dental Medicine is complemented by the other components of the University of Connecticut Health Center, the School of Medicine and John Dempsey Hospital. The Health Center also supports two faculty group practices, University Physicians and University Dentists. The strong clinical programs in the School of Dental Medicine are enhanced by a research environment in which basic behavioral sciences and clinical research are integrated into the Health Center's exciting
    academic environment. Postgraduate students who take advantage of the opportunities at the Health Center enhance their abilities to bridge the gap between basic medical science and clinical dentistry.

    18. University Of Connecticut - Waterbury Campus
    Bachelor of general Studies program and summer school options.Category Reference education Campuses Waterbury...... 310 Higher education Center 203575-8260 Barb.Riggi@uconn.edu The College of ContinuingStudies has responsibility for the Bachelor of general Studies program
    http://www.waterbury.uconn.edu/exted.html
    COLLEGE OF CONTINUING STUDIES CCS:Waterbury Office
    Tracie Borden
    Associate Director- Continuing Studies
    Room 313 Higher Education Center
    750 Chase Parkway
    Waterbury, CT 06708
    203 596-8761 (fax)
    T. Borden@uconn.edu

    Barbara Riggi
    Program Assistant
    Room 310 Higher Education Center Barb.Riggi@uconn.edu The College of Continuing Studies has responsibility for the Bachelor of General Studies program and primary responsibility for Summer School. The functions of the office include: Bachelor Of General Studies Program *Counseling (Personal, Academic, Career, Etc.) *Evening Division Program *Graduate Schools Advisement Non-Degree Program *Senior Citizen Programs Summer School Program 2002 Email: BGSWTBY@access.ced.uconn.edu Home Directories Course Schedule ... University of Connecticut-Waterbury 32 Hillside Avenue Waterbury, CT 06710 Telephone: (203) 236-9800

    19. Labor Education Center
    Offers information on OSHA programs including ten undergraduate credit courses for practitioners/nonprac Category Health Occupational Health and Safety...... The University of connecticut's Occupational and Environmental is administered throughthe Labor education Center in completion of the five general Studies (GS
    http://continuingstudies.uconn.edu/centers/labor/osha.html
    Search Our Site
    CCS Home
    Labor Education Center Programs /OSHA
    Programs and Courses Pages: Overview Programs and Courses Humanitarian Services Admin Mediation Certification ... Contact
    Occupational and Environmental Safety and Health Program
    T Occupational and Environmental Safety and Health program is administered through the Labor Education Center in the College of Continuing Studies. It comprises graduate and undergraduate credit courses offered through the College and UConn's School of Allied Health. These courses are designed for practitioners and non-practitioners alike, providing students with marketable skills and knowledge that are relevant to a broad spectrum of industries and work environments. The courses also prepare students to take the national examination to become a Certified Safety Professional (CSP), a prestigious designation in the occupational safety and health field. Students may take courses individually as needed, or choose from several certificate or degree options:

    20. Connecticut Education Network
    s office and the connecticut general Assembly, the K12, public and private highereducation and library locations throughout the State of connecticut.
    http://www.ct.gov/cen/
    CEN Search:
    Department of Information Technology 101 East River Drive East Hartford CT 06108 From Outside Local Calling Area
    Receive CEN news updates by e-mail. Subscribe now or update your e-Alerts
    Connecticut Education Network
    The Connecticut Education Network is a combination of physical and virtual network technologies that will deliver optimum connectivity on a "one step ahead of demand" basis now and in the future. Planning for the Connecticut Education Network was begun in July, 2000 and deployment is well underway. Major efforts to date include procurement activities to establish contract mechanisms for next generation network infrastructure, development of architectural principals, documenting network engineering policies, prototyping of the core network and deployment of the first higher education, K-12 and library sites.
    Featured Links CEN News IT Contract Awards DOIT Bid Notices Other Resources Department of Administrative Services Core-CT Commission for Education Technology
    Calendar Home CT.gov Home Send Feedback
    State of Connecticut and

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