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Showing 5,761 to 5,775 of 6,790 results
Peer reviewedBlack, Susan – Educational Leadership, 1993
Like British morning programs of recent decades, upstate New York program encourages parents and community residents to get involved in children's education. Parents and community residents--watercolor artists, auto mechanics, doll collectors, and others--are welcomed and valued in schools. Program's purpose is learning, not entertainment. Topics…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Educational Environment, Elementary Education, Learning Activities
Peer reviewedVersteeg, Dave – Educational Leadership, 1993
South Dakota's Rural Schools and Community Development Project was based on the belief that rural schools and communities are tightly linked and highly interdependent. School success is too often measured by how many graduates leave to pursue education or job opportunities elsewhere. (MLH)
Descriptors: Community Services, Economics, High Schools, Rural Schools
Peer reviewedBlythe, Mary C.; Bradbury, Patricia M. – Educational Leadership, 1993
Massachusetts middle school's Classroom-by-Committee program is based on town council model of subcommittees. Students briefed in self-management techniques choose committees that meet their needs while helping them develop critical thinking skills, set goals, identify problems, and generate solutions. Teachers facilitate learning, guide students…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Committees, Community Relations, Cooperation
Peer reviewedKapur, Madhavi – Educational Leadership, 1993
The headmistress of an English school in India explains how a group of eight year olds responded to finding a "ghost" in a tree in the school courtyard. First-hand observation, exploration, and hard evidence led students to a more objective interpretation of the elusive tree spirit. (MLH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Experiential Learning, Fear, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedBrick, Madeline – Educational Leadership, 1993
Instead of sending home the usual midterm progress reports, a seventh-grade English teacher decided to let students write letters to their parents about their progress in English class. Using weekly progress reports, grades, journal entry responses, compositions, and sample letters, students composed honestly worded letters and received some…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Grade 7, Junior High Schools, Letters (Correspondence)
Peer reviewedNordquist, GwenEllyn – Educational Leadership, 1993
Educators must realize that, in Japan, authentic learning means mastery of memorized information, not experiential learning and independent reasoning in preparation for life. Although many Japanese can recite long strings of facts, few can answer "why,""how,""what if," and "what do you think" questions about data. There is no cultural need for…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Comprehension, Creativity, Cultural Differences
Peer reviewedSprague, Marsha M. – Educational Leadership, 1993
Class-produced newspapers are clear examples of product-driven learning, which requires a visible, though not always tangible, product; an audience other than the students themselves; whole-class involvement; and completion during normal school hours. Further examples are provided, including a first-grade circus, a fourth-grade rain forest tour,…
Descriptors: Audiences, Class Activities, Competency Based Education, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedMyers, Steve – Educational Leadership, 1993
Describes a California high school English class's creation of various authentic learning activities to bring Dostoevsky's "Brothers Karamazov" to life. For any activity to be perceived as genuine, students must be able to apply what they are learning to their lives; there must be a goal worthy of students' and teachers' commitment and risk. (MLH)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cooperative Learning, English Instruction, Goal Orientation
Peer reviewedKrovetz, Martin; And Others – Educational Leadership, 1993
Developing their own criteria for authentic learning prompted several teachers of a three-hour interdisciplinary block combining biology, U.S. history, and American literature to critique old, favorite assignments and develop new, more powerful ones for their tenth graders. Book reports and Civil War battle research yielded to more authentic and…
Descriptors: Evaluation Criteria, Grade 10, High Schools, Interdisciplinary Approach
Peer reviewedCronin, John F. – Educational Leadership, 1993
Dispels some discouraging myths about authentic learning's context, mastery, originality, entertainment value, and task complexity. The main point is to let students encounter and master situations that resemble real life, which has its tedious and unengaging moments. Educators should work toward more (rather than complete) authenticity, exploit…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Experiential Learning, Guidelines, Learning Processes
Peer reviewedO'Brien, Bart – Educational Leadership, 1993
The traditional back-to-school assembly, featuring lengthy readings of student handbook rules and restrictions, counters visions of the positive school environment featured in many mission statements. This year's Colfax (California) High School program, based on graduates' musings about the school's familial behavior toward them, offered a message…
Descriptors: Assembly Programs, Community, Empowerment, Family Attitudes
Peer reviewedFirestone, William A. – Educational Leadership, 1993
Efforts to professionalize teaching may increase teachers' commitment, but reforms may not be entirely successful without attention paid to their pedagogical content knowledge. One hypothetical district adopted a career enhancement plan offering curriculum-specialist and teacher-leader opportunities and encouraged teacher collaboration. The…
Descriptors: Career Development, Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education, Empowerment
Peer reviewedScherer, Marge – Educational Leadership, 1993
Profiles two educators with new books about challenge of teaching. Philip W. Jackson, philosopher/professor of education, muses about teaching and quests for knowledge in "Untaught Lessons." In "You Can't Say You Can't Play," kindergarten teacher Vivian Gussin Paley advocates storytelling as way to build more moral world in the classroom and…
Descriptors: Biographies, Book Reviews, College Faculty, Educational Philosophy
Peer reviewedFullan, Michael G. – Educational Leadership, 1993
Moral purpose keeps teachers close to children's needs; change agentry causes them to develop better strategies for accomplishing their moral goals. Core capacities for building greater change capacity are personal vision-building, inquiry, mastery, and collaboration. Education faculties must redesign their programs to focus directly on developing…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Change Agents, Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedCiscell, Robert – Educational Leadership, 1993
The typical education professor has fewer than 5 years of K-12 teaching experience; those who haven't taught in public schools for 20 years undermine prospective teachers' attitudes about teaching and have little understanding about teachers' professional problems. It is hoped the character of teacher education may be altered by the massive…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Professors, Schools of Education


