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Showing 2,296 to 2,310 of 6,790 results
Crawford, Megan – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2007
This article reflects on emotion and leadership. It views emotions as the language of relationships, because it is through the language and experience of emotion that we contextualize not only our individuality but also our sense of belonging in a group. The article argues that emotion is inherent to the practice of leadership rather than separate…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Leadership Qualities, Principals, Elementary Schools
Taylor, Ian – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2007
This article assesses the impact of education reform and the new public management (NPM) on the discretion of school teachers. The focal point of the study is Michael Lipsky's theory of discretion which casts public service professionals and others involved in service delivery as "street-level bureaucrats" because their high degree of…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Public Schools, Educational Policy, Governance
James, Chris; Connolly, Michael; Dunning, Gerald; Elliott, Tony – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2007
The purpose of this article is to make the case for a broader perspective on school leadership and school-environment interrelationships and to develop the concept of systemic leadership for schools and the related notion of systemic authorization. The article explores the background to the concept and relevant aspects of the conceptualization,…
Descriptors: Educational Administration, Instructional Leadership, Elementary Schools, Academic Achievement
Peer reviewedTomlinson, Carol Ann – Educational Leadership, 2000
There is no contradiction between effective standards-based instruction and differentiation. Curriculum tells teachers what to teach; differentiation tells how. Teachers can challenge all learners by providing standards-based materials and tasks calling for varied difficulty levels, scaffolding, instructional styles, and learning times. (MLH)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Diversity (Student), Elementary Education, Grading
Peer reviewedPettig, Kim L. – Educational Leadership, 2000
Based on 5 years' experience, the Project Challenge coordinator for the Pittsford (New York) Central School District explains how to implement differentiated instruction. Teachers should find a buddy, align objectives, find out what students know, plan flexible grouping, encourage student responsibility, and provide choices. (MLH)
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Classroom Techniques, Educational Planning, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedWehrmann, Kari Sue – Educational Leadership, 2000
A junior high school English teacher explains how she managed to teach gifted and talented students in a mixed-ability classroom. She discovered the importance of taking "baby steps" (allowing independent study), varying learning activities, raising the bar for everyone, and discovering her students' passions. (MLH)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Classroom Techniques, English Teachers, Guidelines
Peer reviewedSchniedewind, Nancy; Davidson, Ellen – Educational Leadership, 2000
Effective heterogeneous cooperative learning helps students grow academically, socially, and emotionally. Within heterogeneous groups, teachers can differentiate tasks by complexity and quantity, use high-achieving students' ideas, enhance individualized work, plan challenging peer-tutoring assignments, add enrichment options, vary criteria for…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cooperative Learning, Elementary Education, Emotional Development
Peer reviewedShelton, Claudia Marshall – Educational Leadership, 2000
A counselor/teacher explains a process to help students realize greater emotional competency in classroom learning: using the Human Dynamics model for understanding learning differences; having teachers and students collaborate on the student- identified learning dynamic and identify necessary emotional competencies; and completing student…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Development, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedHeuser, Daniel – Educational Leadership, 2000
Like writing workshops, math and science workshops create flexible environments where students actively learn, share, and explore concepts at their own pace. Format consists of a mini-lesson, an activity period, and reflection. Teacher- and student-directed varieties are explained and compared. (Contains 18 references.) (MLH)
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Elementary Education, Hands on Science, Individualized Instruction
Peer reviewedTowle, Wendy – Educational Leadership, 2000
The reading workshop is not based on ability groups, but provides a venue to focus on each student's strengths and needs. Components include a teacher-sharing time, focus lesson, state-of-the-class conference, self-selected reading and responding time, and student-sharing time. (MLH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Grade 5, Independent Reading, Individualized Instruction
Peer reviewedIvey, Gay – Educational Leadership, 2000
All students, including struggling readers, need opportunities to make choices in their reading. Schools should shun round-robin oral reading and basal readers, prioritize reading time, allocate resources for varied reading materials keyed to student interests, and develop better reading teachers, not better reading programs. (Contains 20…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Diversity (Student), Elementary Education, Independent Reading
Peer reviewedDoyle, Mary Beth – Educational Leadership, 2000
An interactive transition plan is a document that a student with disabilities makes with the assistance of friends, family members, or school personnel. This plan helps the student communicate relevant information to the general-education teacher. Sharing plans with receiving teachers can be rewarding and insightful. (MLH)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Elementary Education, Individualized Transition Plans, Mental Retardation
Peer reviewedRuder, Suzy – Educational Leadership, 2000
With strong administrative and parental support, Hinsdale (Illinois) Central High School successfully launched an inclusive (and heterogeneous-grouping) policy with five special-needs ninth graders in fall 1995; eight others took some regular courses while remaining in their traditional special-education program. (MLH)
Descriptors: Grade 9, High Schools, Inclusive Schools, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedWinebrenner, Susan – Educational Leadership, 2000
Although differentiated learning for high-ability students in heterogeneous classrooms is as important as for other children, gifted students' needs are frequently overlooked. Instead of offering extra credit, teachers should compact the curriculum, design alternative learning experiences, allow differentiated pacing, and agree on expectations.…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education, Heterogeneous Grouping
Peer reviewedSchneider, Evelyn – Educational Leadership, 2000
A new teacher conducted a study of the short story through dialectical journals, linking her New York University expository writing students with inmate/students at Eastern Correctional Facility. Her experiences inspired the Goals 2000 Design for Differentiation Project and Socratic seminars for eighth-graders. (MLH)
Descriptors: College Students, English Teachers, Language Arts, Middle Schools

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