YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Social Development in the Elementary School Classroom
Essays 1231 - 1260
is not an easy thing to accomplish (for your reference, p. 8). Children have different personalities, different levels of intellig...
mean teachers use two processing systems when they teach, one is focused on the teaching script and the other is focused on the be...
follows: "Open-ended questions power academic and social learning. Such questions encourage Childrens natural curiosity, challengi...
productive programs and pedagogies). Proponents of this thinking dont see literacy skills developing in a vacuum unconnected to ot...
in terms of social advantages is more than apparent and this dichotomy extends beyond the individual to the community and to the n...
The student population was diverse in all respects. The researcher found that students in the "technology-enriched classrooms . . ...
sound components of a word and so can break a word down by sounds (NRP, 2000; Kamii and Manning, 2002). The following is a classr...
them in providing special education and related services" (IDEA revised, 2007). The revisions to IDEA are contained in Public Law...
real possibility. The grade level for which this proposal is aimed is 4th grade. Age appropriate content will be for ten to eleve...
were encouraged to ask questions about pronunciation and vocabulary meanings. Each of the groups was asked to identify any words ...
researcher then used a purposeful sampling to select "typical case teachers who could be observed in their classroom setting. Usi...
study will assess existing learning styles and educational strategies used to assess the impacts of ESL/TESOL and Bilingual educat...
discusses student teachers who assign homework simply to be assigning homework, not for any specific goal or purpose. The student ...
and "facilitate the integration of all member of the class into learning activities" (Wallace). A particular evocative suggestion ...
However, as is perhaps the case with all approaches to education these days, there are pros and cons to every attempted or envisio...
models that have been shown to decrease the incidence of behavior problems in the classroom? Cooperative learning, for example, ha...
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...
repeat this process in order to provide a basis through which the concepts can be internalized. Testing, then, occurs after an ad...
qualifications (2004). While teacher qualification is something that many have paid attention to, and this is something that No C...
matter and issues of gender stereotyping and identity, arguing that sex roles and identification determine variations in the motiv...
read aloud with other children in age/reading skill level groups. Reading aloud, then, provides a means of assessing learner prog...
in classroom focus relative to the introduction of technology, but also suggests the problem of gender bias may come into play in ...
more difficulty in attracting and retaining qualified teachers. Nowhere is this issue more prominent than in urban schools" (Sawk...
classrooms across the world. However, as you ably point out, for all its glitter, computer technology is not pure gold. The Allia...
in coping with such "discipline problems" at the university or college level, the Anti-Coercion Discipline Model of William Glasse...
Wilson (2001) notes, however, that: "To take a meaningful role, online educational resources must become...
walls (Books, 1998). Different constructs determine children who are useful and those who are not as well as those who are used (B...
class bias" and goes on to explain that children are labeled LD when it is a surprise that they are poor performers. One can imagi...
with what we already know to create new knowledge" (Marzano, 1992, p. 5). In other words, to truly learn, a student must interac...