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Publication Type
Showing 3,166 to 3,180 of 6,790 results
Peer reviewedFang, Fan – Educational Leadership, 1996
Thanks to a small grant, Chinese bilingual students at a San Francisco Mission District middle school became the first students to communicate electronically in Chinese and to publish the world's first online student newspaper in Chinese. By year's end, students participated fully in all academic activities in Chinese and made tremendous progress…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Chinese, Chinese Americans, Cultural Exchange
Peer reviewedMcKenzie, Jamie – Educational Leadership, 1996
Poorly organized and dominated by amateurs, hucksters, and marketeers, the net requires efficient navigating devices. Students at Bellingham (Washington) Public Schools tackle information overload by contributing to virtual museums on school Web sites, using annotated Web curriculum lists, and conducting research in cooperative teams stressing…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Information Management, Internet, Learning Strategies
Peer reviewedBrownlee-Conyers, Jean; Kraber, Brenda – Educational Leadership, 1996
In 1994, the Glenview (Illinois) Public Schools created three technology-rich educational environments (TREEs) that use alternative teaching and learning methods through networked communication technologies. Each setting consists of three teachers and about 75 heterogeneously grouped students (ages 9-12) who work collaboratively to solve problems…
Descriptors: Computer Networks, Educational Benefits, Educational Innovation, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedMonahan, Brian; Tomko, Sue – Educational Leadership, 1996
Schools in two New York State counties are creating Web home pages with little money or technical expertise. Approaches to Web page construction include using commercially developed software (like Pagemaker or Claris Works); trying out downloaded shareware programs; using an online service (America Online, Prodigy, or Compuserve); and programming…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Elementary Secondary Education, Internet, Programming
Peer reviewedO'Neil, D. Kevin; Gomez, Louis M. – Educational Leadership, 1996
Describes a Northwestern University project exploring how to orchestrate distant mentoring ("telementoring") relationships between science students and workplace scientists. The goal was to develop an audience of (volunteer) scientists to offer students ongoing advice and criticism. Challenges included finding appropriate volunteers, sustaining…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, High Schools, Mentors, Science Education
Peer reviewedSchnitzer, Denise K. – Educational Leadership, 1996
The Internet offers educators a wealth of grant resources and information on securing funds for projects. The first step is finding a funding source whose goals match those of the desired project's. Certain Net search engines have excellent capabilities. Grantsweb has accessible, organized links to federal and nonfederal grants sources. Other…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Government, Financial Support, Grantsmanship
Peer reviewedLevin, James A.; Thurston, Cathy – Educational Leadership, 1996
Network-based learning, unlike word processing or programming, does not require numerous computers and unlimited connection time. It can motivate students to become involved in a wide range of learning activities. Implementation barriers include infrastructure and access, the telecommunications-curriculum gap, and insufficient support and…
Descriptors: Computer Networks, Educational Innovation, Elementary Secondary Education, Information Networks
Peer reviewedLieberman, Ann – Educational Leadership, 1996
Organized across schools, districts, or states, educational reform networks offer teachers and administrators a chance to discuss their work and tackle problems in a trusting, supportive atmosphere. Networks can develop flexible activities and responsive structures, replace prescription and compliance with a culture of continuous inquiry, and help…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Leadership Responsibility, Networks
Peer reviewedEdwards, June – Educational Leadership, 1996
To help future teachers understand how problems of poverty, abuse, and indifferent medical care affect children's learning, the elementary education faculty at SUNY-College at Oneonta (New York) instituted a new graduation requirement called "Early Field Experiences." Elementary education majors must complete 40 hours of field observations in…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Classroom Observation Techniques, Disadvantaged Youth, Education Majors
Peer reviewedWoods, Cyndy Jones – Educational Leadership, 1996
The Thomas J. Pappas Regional Education Center in Phoenix, Arizona, is a magnet school for homeless students from unorganized territories, military installations, Indian reservations, and national forest lands. This "accommodation" school, supported by federal grants, in-kind business donations, and committed volunteer mentors from the local…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Homeless People, Intervention, Magnet Schools
Peer reviewedSanders, Mavis G. – Educational Leadership, 1996
In Baltimore, Maryland, 49 schools are working with the National Network of Partnership-2000 Schools at Johns Hopkins University to build comprehensive, permanent partnership programs with their families and communities. This article profiles three elementary schools that attribute their success to action teams, six types of family involvement,…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Community Involvement, Cooperative Programs, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedLeach, Jenny – Educational Leadership, 1996
The Open University of United Kingdom's Postgraduate Certificate of Education program is an 18-month, part-time course that annually trains over 1000 graduate teachers via electronic conferencing and open learning methods. The program provides every student and tutor with a Macintosh computer, printer, and modem and builds on face-to-face contacts…
Descriptors: Conferences, Distance Education, Electronic Mail, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedO'Neill, John – Educational Leadership, 1996
Describes three networks of British schools that are successfully banding together to assist one another with restructuring, school-based management, curriculum changes, staff development, and record keeping. Networks varied in size and scope, but all three were committed to dialog, cooperation, and solidarity in the interest of improving…
Descriptors: Cooperative Programs, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Peer reviewedVeugelers, Wiel; Zijlstra, Henk – Educational Leadership, 1996
Faced with government-mandated restructuring, Dutch secondary schools and universities are networking to tackle school and professional development concerns. The collegial network helps teachers interpret and influence government policies, learn from one anothers' experience, tap into external expertise, and develop new educational approaches,…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Networks
Peer reviewedJohnson, Joseph F., Jr.; Ginsberg, Margery – Educational Leadership, 1996
School support teams--external groups of teachers, pupil services personnel, and reform experts--assist schools as they plan, implement, and improve their schoolwide Title I programs. Team members of the Texas School Support Initiative, begun as a 1994-95 pilot project involving 12 schools, learned the value of building trust, starting with…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Legislation, High Risk Students, Instructional Improvement


