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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 8 results
Compton-Lilly, Catherine – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ3), 2008
A case study of one child, Alicia, is used to explore how children's identities as readers are constructed across time as they move thorough school. Attention to time helps us attend to how students draw on ongoing, familial, and historical resources in ways that are both recursive and future-oriented as they construct themselves as readers across…
Descriptors: Literacy, Reading Instruction, Case Studies, Longitudinal Studies
Clifford, Matthew; Millar, Susan B. – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ3), 2008
Federal programs, such as the National Science Foundation's Math and Science Partnership program, are promoting partnerships between K-12 school districts and higher education institutions (K-20 partnerships) in hopes of fostering greater alignment and cooperation among participating institutions and pooling resources to address persistent…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, College School Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
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, Richardson – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ1), 2006
This paper explores a distributed leadership perspective on how leaders create contexts that build and support professional communities in schools. It is argued that professional community results from intentional coordination of social interaction among teachers through the design of structures in a situation of practice. School leaders put these…
Descriptors: Leadership Responsibility, Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction, Teacher Collaboration
Shaffer, David Williamson; Clinton, Katherine A. – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ1), 2005
In this paper, we argue that new computational tools problematize the concept of thought within current sociocultural theories of technology and cognition, by challenging the traditional position of privilege that humans occupy in sociocultural analyses. We draw on work by Shaffer, Kaput, and Latour to extend the analytical reach of activity…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Thinking Skills, Metacognition, Sociocultural Patterns
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
Shaffer, David Williamson – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ1), 2005
As information and communication technologies bring people, places, and events from around the world to desktops, telephones, and televisions, the economic, social, and cultural issues of the globe are becoming increasingly, unavoidably, our own (McLuhan, 1964). Diversity is thus a broader and more complex concept than ever before…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Interests, Progressive Education, Multicultural Education
Kratochwill, Thomas R.; Shernoff, Elisa Steele – Wisconsin Center for Education Research (NJ3), 2003
The Evidence-Based Intervention (EBI) movement has gained tremendous momentum in the past few years with developments in psychology, medicine (e.g., psychiatry), education, and prevention science. The purpose of this paper is to present some of the issues relating to the adoption of EBIs in practice and, specifically, the multiple roles…
Descriptors: Intervention, School Psychology, Validity, Theory Practice Relationship