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Publication Type
Showing 2,101 to 2,115 of 6,790 results
Peer reviewedBurns, Deborah E.; Purcell, Jeanne H. – Educational Leadership, 2001
Five useful tools developed by Connecticut consultants can help teachers make sense of standards, design classroom activities, and differentiate achievement levels. These include the sentence diagram, a roll of the die, the mannequin (wardrobe metaphor), Twenty Questions, and the four-rung ladder exercise. (MLH)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Elementary Secondary Education, Inservice Education, Learning Activities
Peer reviewedMiles, Karen Hawley – Educational Leadership, 2001
To meet ambitious goals, districts and schools must redefine priorities, decide how to meet them, and allocate resources appropriately. This means restructuring salaries to attract and retain superior teachers, redirecting spending from compliance to supporting performance goals, investing strategically in professional development, and reducing…
Descriptors: Accountability, Educational Finance, Goal Orientation, Literacy Education
Peer reviewedBishop, John H.; Mane, Ferran; Bishop, Michael – Educational Leadership, 2001
Compared with minimum competency tests, curriculum-based external exit exams provide better measures of students' achievement levels. Analysis of Third Mathematics and Science Study data shows that 13 year-olds from exit-exam countries are ahead of nonparticipating countries. Effects on college enrollment, job success, and test scores are…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Accountability, Competency Based Education, Education Work Relationship
Peer reviewedSimone, Genet – Educational Leadership, 2001
Researchers found that a Washington State fourth-grade teacher successfully met the demands of standards-based writing instruction without compromising her teaching stance or diverse students' learning. She instituted 15-minute class meetings to address student problems, read aloud from books with relevant characters, and used innovative,…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Achievement Gains, Case Studies, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedHebert, Elizabeth A. – Educational Leadership, 2001
At one Illinois elementary school, student portfolios have been a powerful vehicle for understanding what students know and understand about standards. Before developing a portfolio, educators should listen to children as they evaluate others' accomplishments and encourage conversations and reflections that affirm students' sense of competence.…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Elementary Education, Portfolios (Background Materials), Program Implementation
Peer reviewedHolloway, John H. – Educational Leadership, 2001
When used appropriately, standardized assessments can assist education reform by tracking individual or group progress and achievement levels and indicating college readiness. Credibility and validity can be improved by preventing student exclusions, using multiple indicators, stressing year-to-year performance, monitoring consequences, and…
Descriptors: Educational Benefits, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Standardized Tests
Peer reviewedSchlozman, Steven C. – Educational Leadership, 2001
Depression is a psychiatric disorder characterized by a persistently sad or sometimes irritable mood. Recognizing and helping potentially depressed students are essential for meeting their academic and social needs and for maintaining the overall learning environment. Alerting the guidance counselor or school psychologist is a good idea. (MLH)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Anxiety, Children, Depression (Psychology)
Peer reviewedSlavin, Robert E. – Educational Leadership, 2001
In the May 2001 "Educational Leadership," Stanley Pogrow wrote another article attacking the Success for All program and comprehensive reform. SFA has been highly evaluated in numerous studies and by 52 individual researchers. Pogrow is a competitor who believes his own program (Higher Order Thinking Skills) has been slighted. (Contains 9…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Jealousy, Misconceptions, Program Effectiveness
Peer reviewedHaycock, Kati – Educational Leadership, 2001
Between 1970 and 1988, the African-American/white achievement gap was halved; progress halted during the 1990s. Latino students made substantial progress until 1992. Increasing minority and low-income students' achievement levels requires focusing on what really matters: high standards, a challenging curriculum, and good teachers. (MLH)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Blacks, Curriculum, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedTomlinson, Carol Ann – Educational Leadership, 2001
Effective grading practices grow from a teaching/learning philosophy that respects student differences and reflects individual growth. To help individual students succeed, teachers must grasp the curricular landscape, figure out what students know and care about, and design powerful learning experiences to guide them through the next learning…
Descriptors: Diversity (Student), Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Grading
Peer reviewedPopham, W. James – Educational Leadership, 2001
Curriculum-teaching, requiring teachers to direct instruction toward a specific body of content knowledge or cognitive skills, is preferable to item-teaching organized around test items. Detecting inappropriate test-preparation practices among teachers is difficult. Curriculum-teaching, if effective, will elevate students' scores and mastery of…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Elementary Secondary Education, High Stakes Tests, Instructional Effectiveness
Peer reviewedWasley, Patricia A.; Lear, Richard J. – Educational Leadership, 2001
Small school size (fewer than 400 students) makes possible success-enhancing structures and practices: strong, ongoing student/adult and home/school relationships; flat organizational structure; concentration on a few goals; ongoing, site-specific professional development; a respectful culture; and community engagement. Implementation barriers are…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Community Involvement, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Development
Peer reviewedSchoenlein, James – Educational Leadership, 2001
Staff at an Ohio high school with 1,200 students decided to create a more welcoming, supportive place for all students; initiate advisory periods; put up student pictureboards; provide career-exploration and social development opportunities, and radiate a steady diet of caring and friendly attention. (MLH)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, High Schools, House Plan, Principals
Peer reviewedHalbach, Anke; Ehrle, Karen; Zahorik, John; Molnar, Alex – Educational Leadership, 2001
Evaluation of a Wisconsin initiative compared academic progress in three types of smaller K-3 classes (15 students per teacher) with that in comparison schools. Smaller classes had fewer discipline problems, more time for instruction and individualization, varied instructional strategies, and more content and in-depth coverage. (Contains 10…
Descriptors: Discipline, Individualized Instruction, Primary Education, Small Classes
Peer reviewedMoats, Louisa C. – Educational Leadership, 2001
Researchers agree that a core linguistic deficit underlies poor reading at all ages; poor readers generally exhibit weaknesses in phonological processing and word-recognition speed and accuracy. Reading intervention grounded in research imparts to older readers the skills missed in primary grades and can bring them to grade level in 1 or 2 years.…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Intervention, Phonemics


