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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 2,911 to 2,925 of 6,790 results
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Holden, Gerri – Educational Leadership, 1997
Increasingly, children who learn good conflict-management skills find themselves negotiating with kids who would rather fight--even over minor matters like cutting into line, taking a pencil, or touching a classmate's desk. A Pittsburgh teacher has worked to create a physically and emotionally safe classroom and devised a Students Against Violence…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Conflict Resolution, Elementary Education, Negotiation Agreements
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Duffy, Francis M. – Educational Leadership, 1997
Because knowledge work occurs inside teachers' heads, it cannot be supervised directly. School improvement can become a permanent, ongoing organizational function by replacing traditional instructional supervision with a supervision-for-school-improvement function. The focus then shifts to examining a district's work processes, social…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Educational Improvement, Elementary Secondary Education, Teacher Evaluation
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Latham, Andrew S. – Educational Leadership, 1997
Instructive feedback, which incorporates extra information and instruction in responses to students' work, appears to produce quantifiable strides in learning. Peer feedback has its limitations, but can effectively promote student-centered learning, encourages students to produce their work for a larger audience, and frees overworked teachers form…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Feedback, Learning Processes, Student Attitudes
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Checkley, Kathy – Educational Leadership, 1997
Reviews seven multiple-intelligence forms (linguistic, logical-mathematical, spatial, bodily kinesthetic, musical, interpersonal, intrapersonal) and adds naturalist intelligence, the ability to discriminate among living things. Considers a ninth form (existential intelligence), challenges the IQ concept and common testing practices, and urges…
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Cognitive Style, Definitions, Elementary Secondary Education
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Campbell, Linda – Educational Leadership, 1997
Since Howard Gardner first published "Frames of Mind: The Theory of Multiple Intelligences" (1983), educators began applying his theory in classrooms. This article describes the varied curricular approaches--multiple-intelligence-based lesson designs, interdisciplinary curricula, student projects, innovative assessments, and apprenticeships--that…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Curriculum Development, Educational Benefits, Elementary Secondary Education
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Gardner, Howard – Educational Leadership, 1997
It is difficult to grasp multiple-intelligences theory and implement its implications effectively. MI is not a quick fix. However, educators who thoughtfully use the theory to support their larger educational goals find it a worthy partner in school improvement. The author praises the efforts of several researchers and practitioners in this…
Descriptors: Educational Benefits, Educational Improvement, Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education
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Silver, Harvey; Strong, Richard; Perini, Matthew – Educational Leadership, 1997
Multiple-intelligences theory (MI) explores how cultures and disciplines shape human potential. Both MI and learning-style theories reject dominant ideologies of intelligence. Whereas learning styles are concerned with differences in the learning process, MI centers on learning content and products. Blending learning styles and MI theories via…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Educational Benefits, Elementary Secondary Education, Ideology
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Guild, Pat Burke – Educational Leadership, 1997
Although multiple intelligences, learning styles, and brain-based education have discrete theoretical constructs, research bases, and applications, they share similar outcomes in the practical classroom environment. There are several areas of overlap. Each theory is learning- and learner-centered, regards teachers and students as reflective…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Style, Diversity (Student), Elementary Secondary Education
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Meyer, Maggie – Educational Leadership, 1997
Around Puget Sound, communities and elementary teachers value naturalist intelligence, the kind needed to solve environmental problems. As part of an integrated curriculum on water quality, sixth graders are learning about scientific procedures by performing dissolved oxygen, pH, and turbidity tests and taking samples of aquatic organisms. An…
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Elementary Education, Environmental Education, Grade 6
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Knodt, Jean Sausele – Educational Leadership, 1997
In a Virginia school grounded in Gardner's multiple-intelligences theory, K-12 students flock to the think tank, a hands-on discovery room, to explore their varied abilities. This well-equipped room synthesizes many ideas and theories, such as Socratic questioning and John Dewey's discovery-learning ideas. Because multiple ways of smartness are…
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Elementary Education, Individual Differences, Intellectual Development
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Cantrell, Mary Lou; Ebdon, Susan Austin; Firlik, Russell; Johnson, Diane; Rearick, Dianne – Educational Leadership, 1997
Designing projects around Gardner's multiple intelligences, a Connecticut school created a one-week summer camp where children can tap into their unique strengths. The Summer Stars program allows children ages 7-12 to choose materials and activities from many topics and to participate in one of three internships involving a discovery museum, a…
Descriptors: Educational Innovation, Elementary Education, Intellectual Development, Multiple Intelligences
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Hoerr, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 1997
Educators at the New City School in St. Louis, Missouri, employ a schoolwide approach to multiple intelligences. The school changed its practices in three primary directions: curriculum development, student assessment, and communication with parents. Learning centers, living museums, videotaped portfolios, and standardized exam results attest to…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Collegiality, Curriculum Development, Elementary Education
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Emig, Veronica Borruso – Educational Leadership, 1997
By expanding her teaching and assessment strategies according to multiple-intelligence principles, a New Hope, Pennsylvania high school teacher has reinvigorated her social studies classes. To evaluate her work and her students' progress, she developed a form called the Multiple Intelligences Inventory. She generally alternates a…
Descriptors: High Schools, Instructional Innovation, Learning Activities, Multiple Intelligences
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Lambert, Wendy Ecklund – Educational Leadership, 1997
Describes a Florida high school teacher's efforts to combine multiple-intelligences theory with project-based learning in her U.S. history classes. Beginning each year with get-acquainted and personal-inventory activities, students tackle research projects on certain aspects of the Expansion Era in U.S. history and present findings to classmates.…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Cooperative Learning, High Schools, History Instruction
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Merrefield, Gayle Emery – Educational Leadership, 1997
Describes a Jewish Community Center's efforts to adapt Gardner's multiple-intelligences theory to a preschool special-education program. Since most students had moderate speech disorders, teachers decided to deemphasize linguistic expression in favor of the other seven intelligences. They created successful units exploring patterns and size…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Fairy Tales, Instructional Innovation, Multiple Intelligences
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