YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Issues in the Classroom
Essays 121 - 150
which had been a post office in the early 1900s. There were several minors in the restaurant but only three were six years old or ...
help teachers meet the demands of their students and motivate teachers and enhance teacher performance. Background...
to call on the same students every time. In fact, it is natural. The same students raise their hands and so the teacher calls on t...
employer as well as have some benefit to the employees. To consider training and development in this context and how it can add va...
the teacher are dependent on both the age and the developmental level of the child, as well as the curriculum for that particular ...
in their home background. By creating and maintaining a nurturing and positive learning environment in their classes, teachers can...
of rights to another group of citizens that has been routinely marginalized. Some of the positive impacts of Title IX include th...
The student population was diverse in all respects. The researcher found that students in the "technology-enriched classrooms . . ...
mean teachers use two processing systems when they teach, one is focused on the teaching script and the other is focused on the be...
health of the children. This is absolutely tragic. Asthma is obviously a problem of significant concern in this area but physicia...
productive programs and pedagogies). Proponents of this thinking dont see literacy skills developing in a vacuum unconnected to ot...
follows: "Open-ended questions power academic and social learning. Such questions encourage Childrens natural curiosity, challengi...
discusses student teachers who assign homework simply to be assigning homework, not for any specific goal or purpose. The student ...
he would ask if there were any questions at the end of each lesson but he knew there were students who did not understand but who ...
Development Institute, 2006). Piaget also noted three fundamental processes that were involved in intellectual growth, assimilat...
author emphasizes how the culture of collaboration supports and values the teachers on which learning depends. As a new teacher, ...
in terms of social advantages is more than apparent and this dichotomy extends beyond the individual to the community and to the n...
scores on the states Comprehensive Assessment Report were strongly related to increases in technological use (Page, 2002, p. 389)....
This draws upon the work of Bandura who conceptualized teacher self-efficacy as the beliefs that teachers have about their own ski...
(Barkat shah kakar, n.d.). Another important concept in terms of education is Freires discussion of the banking model and the pr...
they graduate from teacher education programs (Wiggins and Follo, 1999; Capella-Santana, 2003; Brown, 2004; Kitsantas and Talleyra...
Impact Aid; and Encouraging Freedom and Accountability (Bush, 2001). The call for accountability on a state and national ...
numbers of students classified as disabled and educated in largely segregated environments (Zernike, 2001). Mooney, et al (2003)...
been accomplished in a matter of minutes in a traditional classroom. Reflective journals are a learning strategy that is well-suit...
demands of life" (Wilms 606). The emphasis in this system was regimentation and standardization, and to a certain extent, its cult...
creativity through art is that it provides an ideal medium for teaching diverse student populations. Through art, elementary teach...
However, as is perhaps the case with all approaches to education these days, there are pros and cons to every attempted or envisio...
and "facilitate the integration of all member of the class into learning activities" (Wallace). A particular evocative suggestion ...
Slattery and Steinberg, 1999). Dewey promoted social experiences and having students solve problems in group settings (Kincheloe...
linguistics. Slang is a component of nearly every spoken language; however, the line between jargon and true common speech ...