Publication Date
| In 2015 | 49 |
| Since 2014 | 248 |
| Since 2011 (last 5 years) | 919 |
| Since 2006 (last 10 years) | 1684 |
| Since 1996 (last 20 years) | 3206 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
| Brandt, Ron | 78 |
| Molnar, Alex | 38 |
| O'Neil, John | 29 |
| Popham, W. James | 29 |
| Scherer, Marge | 26 |
| Slavin, Robert E. | 21 |
| Holloway, John H. | 20 |
| Guskey, Thomas R. | 18 |
| Perkins-Gough, Deborah | 17 |
| Darling-Hammond, Linda | 16 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Showing 2,746 to 2,760 of 6,790 results
Peer reviewedSylwester, Robert – Educational Leadership, 1998
From fine-tuning muscular systems to integrating emotion and logic, the arts have important biological value. Motion and emotion are central to the arts and life itself. It is counterproductive to promote high performance standards while displacing skill development with computer technologies and reducing arts programs that move students from…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Aesthetic Education, Art Education, Attention Span
Peer reviewedWeinberger, Norman M. – Educational Leadership, 1998
New brain research shows that music improves our brain development and even enhances skills in other subjects such as reading and math. Music enhances creativity and promotes social development, personality adjustment, and self-worth. Music making provides the most extensive exercise for brain cells and their synaptic interconnections. (12…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Brain, Educational Benefits, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedJensen, Eric – Educational Leadership, 1998
New neuroscientific knowledge is redefining possibilities for K-12 education. There are five critical variables in the brain's learning process: neural history, context, acquisition, elaboration, and encoding. This article tracks one student's unique brain activity throughout her school day to illustrate these variables. (MLH)
Descriptors: Attention Span, Brain, Case Studies, Cognitive Style
Peer reviewedAstington, Janet Wilde – Educational Leadership, 1998
The "theory of mind" that children acquire in the preschool years provides the conceptual foundation for the metacognitive skills learned in school. At school entry, children's theory of mind is intuitive, embedded in everyday social interaction. Teachers can encourage children to make their understanding explicit by talking about it. (MLH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Learning Theories, Metacognition, Primary Education
Peer reviewedSweet, Sharon S. – Educational Leadership, 1998
As one high school teacher found, allowing students to use preferred learning modalities can increase their enthusiasm, raise their achievement levels, and foster growth in other intelligences. This article shows how two students demonstrated their mastery of nuclear and organic chemistry by using kinesthetic and spatial problem-solving…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Cognitive Style, High Schools, Kinesthetic Perception
Peer reviewedTomlinson, Carol Ann; Kalbfleisch, M. Layne – Educational Leadership, 1998
Three brain-research principles--emotional safety, appropriate challenge, and self-constructed meaning--find a one-size-fits-all approach to classroom teaching ineffective for most students. A child needing an open learning environment will feel intimidated by a controlling teacher. Differentiated classrooms are responsive to students' varying…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Style, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedRose, Samuel P.; Fischer, Kurt W. – Educational Leadership, 1998
Whereas prior conceptions treated cognitive development as a sequence of stages, current research points to recurring growth cycles between birth and age 30. Each recurrence produces a new capacity for thinking and learning grounded in an expanded, reorganized neural network. Cognitive spurts are evident only under optimal support conditions.…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Brain, Cognitive Development, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedWolfe, Pat – Educational Leadership, 1998
Discusses connections between Madeline Hunter's elements of effective teaching and current brain research. Hunter's emphasis on setting the stage for learning fits precisely with research on the brain's attentional mechanisms. Other Hunter elements, including level of concern (challenge), task analysis, procedural memory, and prior learning, are…
Descriptors: Brain, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Effectiveness
Peer reviewedSprenger, Marilee – Educational Leadership, 1998
Our memories are not necessarily "bad," but stored in different areas. By understanding the five memory lanes (semantic, episodic, procedural, automatic, and emotional), a high school English teacher discovered why her students could not do fractions (to calculate grades) in English class. Paper-and-pencil tests can be redesigned to assess memory…
Descriptors: Brain, Elementary Secondary Education, Memory, Student Evaluation
Peer reviewedGiven, Barbara K. – Educational Leadership, 1998
What and how students eat can profoundly affect their ability to learn. Children require a high-protein breakfast for alertness, and a balanced diet, including complex carbohydrates throughout the day. Chronic stress causes the brain and body to deplete available nutrients. Nutrition is an important issue; better school food equals better school…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Biochemistry, Brain, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedChase, Kim – Educational Leadership, 1998
A middle-school teacher humorously observes seven other intelligences of students: random thinking; virtual memory void (erasing entire sections of personal memory); antigravity (balancing on two chair legs); intravacancy (achieving perfect, effortless aplomb); inter-Origami (intricate note-folding); stealth-kinesthetic (peashooting spitballs…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Humor, Individual Differences, Intermediate Grades
Peer reviewedReis, Sally M.; And Others – Educational Leadership, 1998
Detracking alone is not the best means of raising student achievement. Students with different abilities, interests, and motivation levels should be offered differentiated instruction that meets their individual needs. Unfortunately, only a small number of teachers employ differentiation in their classrooms. Training and instructional grouping…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Individual Differences, Individualized Instruction
Peer reviewedLatham, Andrew S. – Educational Leadership, 1998
Some experts claim that learning two languages well gives rise to mental flexibility, superior concept formation, a diversified set of mental abilities, and metalinguistic awareness. Although most researchers believe accomplished bilingualism and cognitive development are positively related, this view is not universally accepted, and the exact…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Cognitive Development, Educational Benefits, Educational History
Peer reviewedBeane, James A. – Educational Leadership, 1998
Deplores the demise of progressive education and the current movement to turn schools and other public institutions over to private greed and political self-interest. Instead of blaming teachers, critics should rectify teaching/learning conditions and level the school resources playing field. It is time to construct a new curriculum forged from…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Citizenship Education, Civil Liberties, Democratic Values
Peer reviewedGiroux, Henry A. – Educational Leadership, 1998
Invaded by candy manufacturers, sneaker companies, and fast food chains, schools increasingly promote a commercial culture. As commercial culture replaces public culture, the language of the market substitutes for the language of democracy. Educators, families, and communities must reinvigorate the language, social relations, and politics of…
Descriptors: Advertising, Democratic Values, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education


