NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
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 1 to 15 of 70 results
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Molle, Daniella – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2013
For more than a decade, the professional development literature has shown that most teachers are not adequately prepared to teach English learners (ELs)--that holds true for both specialist and mainstream teachers (see, for example, August & Hakuta, 1997; Beykont, 2002). Research that focuses on professional development for teachers of ELs,…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, English Language Learners, Discourse Analysis, Ethnography
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Birmingham, Daniel J.; Pineda, Ben; Greenwalt, Kyle A. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2013
This article investigates one small aspect of the work of secondary social studies teacher preparation at Michigan State University (and, of course, the surrounding public schools where so much of this preparation actually takes place). The authors have come to see that there cannot be a successful program without having close, warm, collegial…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Social Studies, Collegiality, Secondary School Teachers
Day, Christopher – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2012
The work and lives of teachers have always been subject to external influence as those who are nearing the end of their careers will attest, but it is arguable that what is new over the last two decades is the pace, complexity, and intensity of change as governments have responded to the shrinking world of economic competitiveness and social…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Educational Researchers, Empathy, Teacher Educators
Tricarico, Katie; Yendol-Hoppey, Diane – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2012
Differentiated Instruction (DI) is an approach that recognizes the strengths and weaknesses of diverse learners and requires the teacher to base instructional accommodations on student strengths and weaknesses. Specifically, teachers use DI strategies to adjust the content, process, or product of instruction depending on student needs. Given the…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Classroom Techniques, Student Needs, Alternative Teacher Certification
Norman, Patricia J. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2011
Planning is a central task of teaching and a central focus in learning to teach. But what does planning entail, and how is planning best learned? What challenges do experienced teachers serving as school-based teacher educators face in becoming teachers of planning? What role can university teacher educators play in helping mentor teachers learn…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Mentors, Cooperating Teachers, Teacher Educators
Cuenca, Alexander – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2011
A key factor in learning to teach during student teaching is the cooperating teacher, who supports and mentors prospective teachers. In the apprenticeship that is student teaching, the cooperating teacher serves as a gatekeeper to the experiential learning of pre-service teachers. Although several studies indicate the significant influence…
Descriptors: Cooperating Teachers, Student Teaching, Student Teachers, Experiential Learning
Staples, Jeanine M. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2010
In this analytic conceptual essay, and from her standpoint as an African American woman teacher/researcher, the author presents a rich description of a personal sensibility and promising professional practice for literacy educators and those who prepare Reading/English/Language Arts teacher candidates for service among students who are…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Ideology, Gender Bias, Teaching Methods
Musanti, Sandra I.; Pence, Lucretia – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2010
This article presents a study of the Collaboration Centers Project (CCP), which is a pseudonym for a three-year, federally-funded program that focused on helping in-service teachers better address the needs of English language learners (ELLs) in their classrooms. The CCP is important to study because of its clear intention to integrate real…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Teacher Collaboration, College School Cooperation, Professional Development
Bowers, C. A. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2010
There are powerful forces of resistance that must be acknowledged when introducing educational reforms that foster ecological intelligence. The foremost source of resistance is the paradigm gap that now separates generations. That is, the vast majority of university professors, classroom teachers--and thus the general public that has been educated…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Personal Autonomy, Educational Change, Ecology
Fenstermacher, Gary D.; Osguthorpe, Richard D.; Sanger, Matthew N. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2009
In this article, the authors introduce what they believe is an important distinction between teaching morality and teaching morally. In P-12 schools, the moral education debate often focuses on character education programs or other moral curricula. Such programs and curricula are championed as a means of teaching morality and transmitting moral…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Values Education, Moral Development, Moral Values
Brubaker, Nathan D. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2009
Negotiating authority, a multifaceted, on-going process of mutual bargaining over the power to determine or the right to control, permeates all facets of teaching experience. Considered by many educational theorists to be an outgrowth of collaborative dialogue and decision-making that helps foster active student engagement and investment in…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Education Courses, Democracy, Undergraduate Study
Namaghi, Seyyed Ali Ostovar – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2009
Teaching must be recognized "as a socially constructed activity that requires the interpretation and negotiation of meanings embedded within the context of the classroom." As part and parcel of this interpretation and negotiation, there is a continual redefinition of teacher identity. "Teaching and teacher identity are socially constructed through…
Descriptors: Language Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Self Concept, Teacher Role
Tupper, Jennifer – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2009
There is a propensity, when considering the meaning(s) of citizenship, to think in terms of universality and equality rather than difference and inequity. In a North American context, citizenship often operates as a taken for granted status with the requisite rights and responsibilities associated with membership in a nation. In education, how…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Curriculum Development, Citizenship, Democracy
Bullough, Robert V., Jr. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2008
In the current political context, researchers have, as Ivor Goodson (1992) earlier argued, a special obligation: "to assure that "the teachers' voice" is heard, heard loudly, heard articulately." But not just any "voice" will do--teacher troubles need to be tightly linked to issues, biography to history. On every front, directly and indirectly,…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Teacher Role, Teacher Motivation, Teacher Characteristics
Christianakis, Mary – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2008
In this article, the author interprets the phenomenon of teacher research using feminist theories as a heuristic for analysis. She begins with definitions of teacher research. Following, she employs feminist theories to explain teacher research as an emancipatory act. Based on an inductive analysis of the literature, she discusses three arguments:…
Descriptors: Feminism, Teacher Researchers, Researchers, Social Theories
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5