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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 91 to 105 of 735 results
Senechal, Diana – American Educator, 2011
A strong curriculum brings clarity to a school's endeavor; it has practical, intellectual, and philosophical benefits. It gives shape to the subjects, helps ensure consistency within and among schools, makes room for first-rate books and tests, and leaves teachers room for professional judgment and creativity. In this article, the author explains…
Descriptors: Creativity, School Culture, Teaching Methods, Evaluation
Hirsch, E. D., Jr. – American Educator, 2011
Most of today's reading programs rest on faulty ideas about reading comprehension. The author argues that comprehension is not a general skill; it relies on having relevant vocabulary and knowledge. He explains the need for a fact-filled, knowledge-building curriculum. He suggests that states should adopt a common core curriculum that builds…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Core Curriculum, Reading Programs, Reading Achievement
Sweller, John; Clark, Richard E.; Kirschner, Paul A. – American Educator, 2011
Recent "reform" curricula both ignore the absence of supporting data and completely misunderstand the role of problem solving in cognition. If, the argument goes, teachers are not really teaching people mathematics but rather are teaching them some form of general problem solving, then mathematical content can be reduced in importance. According…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Problem Solving, Long Term Memory
Cohen, David K. – American Educator, 2011
When inspectors visit construction sites to assess the quality of work, they do so against the building code, which typically is written out in detail and used to guide work and teach apprentices. When attending physicians supervise interns as they take patients' histories or check their blood pressure, they compare the interns' work with…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Education Work Relationship, Public Education, Teaching Methods
Hamilton, Laura S. – American Educator, 2011
In recent years, standardized, large-scale tests of student achievement have been given a central role in federal, state, and local efforts to improve K-12 education. Despite the widespread enthusiasm for assessment-based reforms, many of the current and proposed uses of large-scale assessments are based on unverified assumptions about the extent…
Descriptors: Evaluation, Elementary Secondary Education, State Standards, Formative Evaluation
Hirsch, E. D., Jr.; Pondiscio, Robert – American Educator, 2011
For millions of American schoolchildren, taking a test for which they are completely unprepared is like a nightmare from which they cannot wake. It is a trial visited upon them each year when the law requires them to take reading tests with little preparation. Formally preparing for reading tests has become more than just a ritual for schools. It…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Reading Achievement, Reading Tests, Reading Ability
Wu, Hung-Hsi – American Educator, 2011
Many sets of state and national mathematics standards have come and gone in the past two decades. The Common Core State Mathematics Standards (CCSMS), which were released in June of 2010, have been adopted by almost all states and will be phased in across the nation in 2014. The main difference between these standards and most of the others is…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics, Standards
Rosenbaum, James E.; Becker, Kelly Iwanaga – American Educator, 2011
Successful early college high schools (ECHSs) are formed through partnerships between high schools and colleges (usually community colleges). Think of it as preparation through acceleration. ECHSs enroll disadvantaged students who have not excelled with ordinary grade-level academic content and have them take college courses while still in high…
Descriptors: High Schools, Higher Education, Disadvantaged, Educational Change
Nodine, Thad R. – American Educator, 2011
In 2005, the Hidalgo Independent School District made an ambitious commitment. In partnership with nearby University of Texas-Pan American, the University of Texas System, the Communities Foundation of Texas/Texas High School Project, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the district promised that all of its students, not just a select group,…
Descriptors: High Schools, Private Schools, College Programs, College Credits
Hamill, Sean D. – American Educator, 2011
Professional educators--whether in the classroom, library, counseling center, or anywhere in between--share one overarching goal: seeing all students succeed in school and life. In this regular feature, the work of professional educators is explored--not just their accomplishments, but also their challenges--so that the lessons they have learned…
Descriptors: Unions, Teachers, Partnerships in Education, Public Schools
Sticht, Thomas G. – American Educator, 2011
The idea that families need to provide enriching educational activities is not new. In 1908, Edmund Burke Huey, regarded as "one of the foremost leaders" in educating children with learning disabilities, wrote, "The school of the future will have as one of its important duties the instruction of parents in the means of assisting the child's…
Descriptors: Parenthood Education, Early Childhood Education, Child Rearing, Young Children
Heckman, James J. – American Educator, 2011
Educational equity is often discussed as a moral issue. Another way to think about equity is as a way to promote productivity and economic efficiency. Traditionally, equity and efficiency are viewed as competing goals. One can be fair in devising a policy, but it often happens that what is fair is not economically efficient. Conversely, what is…
Descriptors: Evidence, Social Justice, Human Capital, Equal Education
Fabricant, Michael B. – American Educator, 2011
This author states that, since the civil rights movement, Americans have documented and decried--but done little to decrease--the achievement gap. This gulf, one of many that divide people by race and class, has festered in part because the larger question of inequitable investment in poor communities of color has long been neglected.…
Descriptors: Achievement Gap, Democracy, Economically Disadvantaged, Community Involvement
American Educator, 2011
In the last issue of "American Educator," several scholars argued in favor of a common core curriculum. By common core, they meant that the curriculum should be broadly adopted (enabling improvements in instructional materials, student tests, and teacher training), but also limited (preserving instructional time for districts, schools, and…
Descriptors: Expertise, Core Curriculum, Equal Education, Instructional Materials
Rosenbaum, James E.; Stephan, Jennifer L.; Rosenbaum, Janet E. – American Educator, 2010
The vast majority of high school students plan to attend college--and believe that a bachelor's degree all but guarantees them a high-paying job. What many of them don't know is that those who are not well prepared are not likely to graduate. They also don't realize that plenty of career-focused certificates and associate's degrees lead to…
Descriptors: High School Students, Student Educational Objectives, Education Work Relationship, Theory Practice Relationship
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