What's the difference between educationalist and educationist?

Educationalist


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Yhr inclusion of a health educationalist in the general-practitioner team to achieve this is advocated.
  • (2) Sophisticated technologies are available to educationalists which develop individual learning strategies, but the cost of producing the necessary courseware is high, both in terms of money and tutor time.
  • (3) Information was derived from a review of the literature, personal contacts with nurse educationalists, and an undergraduate project supervized by the author.
  • (4) This research arose from the belief that nurse educationalists are failing to provide these learning opportunities for their students.
  • (5) This is likely to require cooperation between educationalists and interested medical staff and two such ventures, one in North America and the other in Nottinghamshire, are described.
  • (6) The authors, respectively an educationalist and a nurse researcher experienced in neonatal intensive care, agreed in finding that the study fell short of what it promised, but differed as to their reasons.
  • (7) The current prevalent attitude of disapprobation towards the medical model, held by nurse practitioners and educationalists alike, stems from a desire to denounce diagnostic reductionism and proselytize holistic care.
  • (8) But some educationalists are less enamoured: almost every evening on social media sees skirmishes between pro- and anti-Michaela factions.
  • (9) An ideology "at odds with traditional British values" has taken hold at the schools inspectorate Ofsted , a group of leading educationalists and Muslim leaders have warned.
  • (10) The joint aim of epileptologists and neurophysiologists, neuropsychologists, specialist educationalists, teachers of the mentally handicapped, ergotherapists and the professional advisers of insurance for the handicapped, is to optimize the medical, professional and social rehabilitation of epileptics, while always respecting their individuality.
  • (11) As a secular educationalist of immigrant parents, I’m a product of Birmingham’s 1960s and 70s multicultural education policy.
  • (12) It is argued that practitioners and educationalists should reconsider the nature of professional knowledge, and develop strategies suitable for the casework approach adopted by many mental health branches in Project 2000.
  • (13) Toby Young , the controversial journalist turned educationalist, has been appointed as the head of a government-funded charity to promote free schools in England.
  • (14) I have summarized my findings as a non-medically qualified educationalist attending regularly at meetings of a group of general-practitioner trainers.
  • (15) And those same reforms, which he sells as creating islands of independence, academies with their own ethos and culture, are judged by some educationalists to represent the biggest ever centralisation .
  • (16) A review of the literature shows that clinical evaluation still poses problems for nurse educationalists despite its prominence in nurse education.
  • (17) Lifelong learning for all – a goal that visionary educationalists have pursued for decades – can at last become a reality.
  • (18) Sarah Brook, 74, a retired educationalist, said she had come on behalf of her grandchildren.
  • (19) The social pediatrician can play his role as the physician, advocate, activist and educationalist in the many complex situations revealed within family, community and society.
  • (20) And for measuring how our wider reforms can do better for these families – and so better for the country.” Greening’s language suggests the government is to plough ahead with re-establishing grammar schools across England, despite evidence from educationalists and experts who argue that selective education largely benefits the better-off .

Educationist


Definition:

  • (n.) One who is versed in the theories of, or who advocates and promotes, education.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Many educationists know that children are more likely to acquire knowledge if they can immediately put it to use; otherwise they may just not see the point.
  • (2) For many years educationists have argued that character is a function of parenting, genetics or background, and what happens in the classrooom is marginal to the development of a child's personality.
  • (3) Gove declined to deny speculation over the weekend that he intended to install the Tory donor and educationist Theodore Agnew as the new Ofsted chair.
  • (4) Nearly 60,000 people – including 10,000 police officers, 3,000 judges and prosecutors, more than 15,000 educationists, and all the university deans in the country – have either been detained or fired, and the numbers are growing daily.
  • (5) Dominic Cummings, the most influential adviser to the education secretary in the past five years, also argues in a revealing 250-page paper that "real talent" is rare among the nation's teachers – and, eye-catchingly, says educationists need to better understand the impact of genetics on children.
  • (6) The empirical data showed that nursing educationists in Southern Africa are not entirely up to standard regarding the skills required for clinical evaluation.
  • (7) In his guise as a political and historical essayist, he was a fearless critic of narrow orthodoxies and bullying cliques, from communist apologists to the Israel lobby, from "liberal hawks" to progressive educationists.
  • (8) A case example is presented from an educationist perspective, illustrating the disruptive impact of craniocerebral trauma on the person's biography.
  • (9) The main reasons for this are difficulties in communication between physicians and educationists, which require to be discussed.
  • (10) The self-help mentality in pediatrician, parents and educationists assumes increasing importance as economy cames to rule pediatric practice in view of the cost explosion in the health sector.
  • (11) "An unreconstructed 1950s grammar school agenda" is how one leading educationist describes his views.
  • (12) Educationists and student groups have joined environmental organisations to condemn government plans to drop debate about climate change from the national curriculum for under-14-year-olds in English schools.
  • (13) The social historian and educationist Asa Briggs, who has died aged 94, was one of the last survivors of a wartime generation who not only wrote groundbreaking works but helped to make history themselves.
  • (14) The continual contact between Public Health authorities and the kindergartens also results in motivating the educationists to promote increased inclusion of the subject "Teeth and Health of the Human Denture" in the kindergarten itineraries.
  • (15) The recent development of powerful microcomputers and the introduction of object-oriented programming languages has now made available to educationists software that can be easily used to design and develop computer-based learning material.
  • (16) "Deconstruction", the word he transformed from a rare French term to a common expression in many languages, became part of the vocabulary not only of philosophers and literary theorists but also of architects, theologians, artists, political theorists, educationists, music critics, filmmakers, lawyers and historians.
  • (17) Migration of doctors, though universal, is disturbingly high in India and a major cause of concern to the government and the educationist.
  • (18) Last month, campaigners including professional associations, unions, academics and educationists called for the tests to be stopped because they: are statistically invalid; will formalise a testing culture from the age of four; will be used to judge teachers and schools; and, most importantly, will be dangerous for children.
  • (19) Take some burdens away, give you more freedoms.’” As for describing educationists as “the blob” she says she doesn’t know who first aired the phrase (Gove used it in the Daily Mail ) – but she doesn’t approve.
  • (20) It is suggested that as a matter of urgency educationists, sociologists and physiologists should confer to take cognizance of the recent, extremely important findings pertaining to permanent intellectual stunting resulting from chronic malnutrition of infants up to their 4th postnatal year.

Words possibly related to "educationalist"

Words possibly related to "educationist"