YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Classroom Observation Analysis
Essays 901 - 930
more difficulty in attracting and retaining qualified teachers. Nowhere is this issue more prominent than in urban schools" (Sawk...
Wilson (2001) notes, however, that: "To take a meaningful role, online educational resources must become...
greater I.Q.s than those with smaller brains but size is not all that matters ("Big," 2004). The question that should be asked: "I...
into place better structures to address problematic behaviors in the classroom setting. 2. Special Educators have responded that...
students with special needs. B. A Questionnaire will be used to survey each teacher in the school for the purpose of obtaining i...
This graphic can be used for any type of content (TeacherVision.com, 2004). * The Sequence Pattern asks the student to determine ...
tools currently in use in the classroom and in the home. In just the last decade some $9 billion has been spent in U.S. schools t...
and encouraging writing (Lacina and Austin, 2003). They also provide other sources for more knowledge, such as Web sites (Lacina a...
Within six years the name was changed again and is now well know by the acronym ADHD (1997). While the names have changed, that d...
for the remainder of this essay. The guiding principles for classroom management have been identified by some authors as: * Good ...
black women, from their perspective, was racism, not sexism. Hooks relates that her students often asked her such questions as "Ha...
not have video games, CD players, cell phones or other electronic devices, but not all school systems have been willing to take st...
stage (Berk, 2001). The anal stage is at one to three years and the phallic stage is from three to six years; latency is from si...
Numerous studies have reported findings that link visual and auditory learning with considerable development in reading. The basi...
may inevitably have to use. The Problem Statement Increasingly, the use of microcomputers in the classroom setting has bee...
models that have been shown to decrease the incidence of behavior problems in the classroom? Cooperative learning, for example, ha...
read aloud with other children in age/reading skill level groups. Reading aloud, then, provides a means of assessing learner prog...
matter and issues of gender stereotyping and identity, arguing that sex roles and identification determine variations in the motiv...
and an individual experiences the all-important sense of love and belonging/closeness and connectedness within the vast sense of l...
ideas concerning education. Rousseaus thoughts were very different. Rather then seeing the mind of the child as a blank slate, Ro...
She offers as an example a booklet used in schools entitled, "All About Me," which consists of a series of dittoed pages where the...
in coping with such "discipline problems" at the university or college level, the Anti-Coercion Discipline Model of William Glasse...
that emphasized low-level thinking instead of challenges (Shorey et al, 2004). Differentiated instruction takes into consideration...
Harris, Douglas E, and Carr, Judy F. How to Use Standards in the Classroom. Alexandria, Va.: Association for Supervision and Cur...
what schools and teachers are actually supposed to do to meet the needs of disabled children (Stout, 2001). There is strong disag...
study. However, the researchers predicted that children would "evaluate the punishments differently for the moral and conventiona...
of letting the students make discoveries on their own. That is, they tend to lecture, repeat whats in the book, and then go on to...
In eight pages this action research project proposal focuses upon the importance of positive feedback in order for exceptional stu...
pointing out that it is possible that the majority of the students nominated for the rejection category may not have disabilities ...
in middle and high schools are provided with state-funded computers to promote technology-based learning. In one school in the so...