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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 all 4 results
Halverson, Richard; Thomas, Christopher N. – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ1), 2007
This paper explores the ways in which school leaders are turning to student services staff as local experts in data analysis and use to meet the demands of high-stakes accountability. The authors have been collecting data, as part of a 5-year National Science Foundation-funded study, on how school leaders create data-driven systems to improve…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Inclusive Schools, Student Personnel Workers, Student Personnel Services
Halverson, Richard; Prichett, Reid B.; Watson, Jeffrey G. – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ1), 2007
Formative feedback systems live at the heart of systemic school improvement efforts. Without accurate and timely information on the results of intended interventions, school leaders and teachers fly blind in their efforts to link what they expect to what actually happens in their schools. This paper draws on the results of a 5-year National…
Descriptors: Teachers, Instructional Leadership, Educational Change, Feedback
Halverson, Richard; Prichett, Reid; Grigg, Jeffrey; Thomas, Chris – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ1), 2005
The recent demand for schools to respond to external accountability measures challenges school leaders to create school instructional systems that use data to guide the practices of teaching and learning. This paper considers how local school leaders build data-driven instructional systems (DDIS) by developing new programs and using existing…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Data, Instructional Systems, Decision Making
Shaffer, David Williamson; Halverson, Richard; Squire, Kurt R.; Gee, James P. – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ1), 2005
Will video games change the way we learn? We argue here for a particular view of games--and of learning--as activities that are most powerful when they are personally meaningful, experiential, social, and epistemological all at the same time. From this perspective, we describe an approach to the design of learning environments that builds on the…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Educational Games, Video Games, Teaching Methods