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Showing 1 to 15 of 282 results
Azzam, Amy M. – Educational Leadership, 2014
The author has looked at four decades of scientific research on human motivation and found a mismatch between what science tells us and what organizations actually do. In this interview with "Educational Leadership," Pink shares his insights on how schools can create more optimal conditions for learning--and how they can dial up…
Descriptors: Learning Motivation, Scientific Research, Interviews, Learner Engagement
Weissbourd, Richard; Jones, Stephanie M. – Educational Leadership, 2014
James is 14 years old. Tall, handsome, funny, athletic, attuned to others, he is one of the popular, high-status students in his large freshman class. He can also be remarkably caring and attentive with his close friends. But James has a dark side. Sometimes he uses his social skills to manipulate others, and he draws a bright line between those…
Descriptors: Peer Relationship, Bullying, Behavior Problems, Perspective Taking
Tschannen-Moran, Megan; Tschannen-Moran, Bob – Educational Leadership, 2014
"We can think of morale as an organizational mood," the authors write, "and we can view a school with low morale as a school that's in a bad mood." School leaders can improve mood and raise morale by implementing three strategies that promote the kind of good mood that fosters student learning and success. School leaners…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Morale, Administrator Role, Interpersonal Relationship
Henderson, Nan – Educational Leadership, 2013
Schools are natural environments for helping all children cultivate the resilience that resides within them. Research shows that schools are filled with the conditions that promote resilience (Werner, 2003). These include caring, encouraging relationships, role models, and mentors (Theron & Engelbrecht, 2012; Thomsen, 2002; Walsh, 2012); clear…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Child Development, School Role, Environmental Influences
Moss, Connie M.; Brookhart, Susan M. – Educational Leadership, 2013
Traditionally, principals have used walk-throughs to determine whether teachers are implementing strategies that the principal believes define good teaching. In this model, the principal is the expert, and the teacher is the learner. Connie M. Moss and Susan M. Brookhart believe that this approach can cause the principal to disregard the classroom…
Descriptors: Principals, Observation, Educational Strategies, Teachers
Duke, Neil K. – Educational Leadership, 2013
Can informational text be used effectively in beginning reading instruction, as mandated by the Common Core State Standards? Yes, writes Nell K. Duke-in fact, the primary grades are the perfect place for informational text. Duke discusses seven features that characterize K-3 classrooms that make good use of informational text: (1) informational…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Reading Instruction, Reading Materials, Beginning Reading
Armstrong, Thomas – Educational Leadership, 2012
This article discusses how a neurodiversity perspective can help educators create learning environments in which all students flourish. The basic premise of neurodiversity is that there is no "typical" mental capacity--no "normal" brain to which all other brains are compared--and because this is the case, educators should look at students with…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Behavior Disorders, Autism, Special Needs Students
Weissbourd, Richard; Jones, Stephanie – Educational Leadership, 2012
Over the last 20 years, high-profile episodes of bullying have stirred up broad public alarm. This attention may appear to be merely trendy, but it's important. Bullying--commonly defined as systematic exclusion, aggression, or harassment that one child or a group of children inflicts on less powerful children--is pervasive in schools. Many…
Descriptors: Caring, Bullying, School Culture, Student Leadership
Hallowell, Edward – Educational Leadership, 2012
In this article, the author offers an advice to educators about how to help students with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) fulfill the potential of their powerful brains. It is a neurological fact that feeling safe opens up the brain, whereas feeling anxious and afraid clamps it down. So step one is to make sure all students feel as…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Brain, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Administrator Role
Arum, Richard; Ford, Karly – Educational Leadership, 2012
It's a challenge for schools in every country: How to provide the right kind of discipline and create a climate that nurtures learning. This challenge may look different in different countries. A school's disciplinary climate not only is the product of educators' beliefs and actions, students' beliefs and actions, and the interaction of these, but…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Social Environment, Social Scientists, Foreign Countries
Sterrett, William L. – Educational Leadership, 2012
In this article, the author discusses what school leaders can do to support teachers in building stronger relationships with students. He points out that efforts at establishing positive relationships can--and must--be strengthened at the schoolwide level. School leaders who are shifting from an emphasis on discipline to one on relationships must…
Descriptors: Discipline, Teacher Attitudes, Leadership Responsibility, Administrator Role
Tomlinson, Carol Ann; Javius, Edwin Lou – Educational Leadership, 2012
Sorting students into different tracks within a school correlates strongly with student race and economic status and predicts and contributes to student outcomes. Students in higher-level classes typically experience better teachers, curriculum, and achievement levels than peers in lower-level classes. Creating classrooms that support equity of…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Difficulty Level, Curriculum Design, Academic Achievement
Powell, William; Kusuma-Powell, Ochan – Educational Leadership, 2012
Now that many schools are developing curriculums thoughtfully linked to standards--including benchmarks for achievement--many teachers wrestle with this question: Can we still make room for individualized instruction? The authors, who have taught at diverse international schools in many countries, believe the answer is yes. They argue that under…
Descriptors: Grade 8, Curriculum Development, Academic Standards, Individualized Instruction
Allyn, Pam – Educational Leadership, 2012
As a well-known advocate for promoting wider reading and reading engagement among all children--and founder of a reading program for foster children--Pam Allyn knows that struggling readers often face any printed text with fear and confusion, like Max in the book Where the Wild Things Are. She argues that teachers need to actively create a…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Reading Programs, Printed Materials, Reading Motivation
Bluestein, Jane – Educational Leadership, 2011
The win-win approach to solving conflicts, which has become popular in the business world, should be a natural for the school environment. Win-win thinking can foster a cooperative school climate by meeting educators' and students' needs for dignity, belonging, and respect. Yet win-win thinking faces a number of obstacles in schools, writes…
Descriptors: Discipline, Conflict Resolution, Cooperation, Educational Environment

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