
In January 2006, 42 semistructured telephone interviews were conducted by PREL staff with educators in the Pacific region. Trained interviewers asked them about the two most critical needs, the root causes behind those needs, solutions to meeting those needs, and PREL's role in the solutions. This report discusses the content analyses of the expressed educational needs of the region, as well as potential solutions and ways in which PREL could be of assistance in addressing these needs.

As English becomes the language of wider communication in the Pacific region, changes in culture and language-use are increasingly apparent and of concern to Pacific educators and community members. This briefing paper focuses on the choices of instructional language in Pacific classrooms, as mandated by national or state policies, and discusses consequences of such choices on students' achievement and career preparation.

This paper examines complex issues surrounding language-in-education policy in Micronesia. It analyzes the difficult questions that arise as a result of the interplay between local traditions and globalizing economic and political forces.

Educators should not be expected both to teach and to solve the major problems facing education. This paper illustrates the value of educational research and provides strategies by which educators and researchers in diverse settings can find reliable answers to real-life questions.

This paper describes how the NCLB Act and the Pathways Framework can be partnered when developing and evaluating comprehensive programs for schools interested in preparing children for the next steps in their educational careers.

The Pacific Region needs more highly qualified teachers, but current teacher preparation and training programs and certification and licensing processes are not meeting this need.

The notion of "highly qualified teachers" is the backbone of recently enacted U.S. federal legislations such as the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) and other similar initiatives. Teacher preparation is instrumental in improving performance of all students. This policy brief reviews current research, policies, and practices in teacher certification systems with the purpose of assisting regional policy makers in examining their own systems, addressing necessary changes, and proposing policy changes to their own legislatures, parliaments, or governing boards.
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