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Vatterott, Cathy – Educational Leadership, 2014
No one teaches a toddler how to walk. No one moves his legs for him. We encourage him to stand, applaud his first step, and tell him it's OK when he falls. Yet when it comes to academic learning, writes Cathy Vatterott, we often fail to appreciate children's inborn desire for mastery or to trust their self-knowledge of how to get there.…
Descriptors: Homework, Student Participation, Teaching Methods, Student Responsibility
Pearson, George – Education Canada, 2012
Carolyn Durley is a veteran Biology teacher who adopted the Flipped Classroom in the 2011-2012 school year, the same year as Graham Johnson adopted it for Math. They both teach in Okanagan Mission Secondary School in Kelowna , B.C. This paper offers Durley's observations regarding her adoption of Flipped Classroom. She narrates her teaching…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Biology, Foreign Countries, Science Instruction
Thiagarajan, Sivasailam – Performance and Instruction, 1984
Three alternatives to instructional development are briefly described: shifting more instructional responsibility from developer to learner; implementing an instructional system utilizing paraprofessionals, content experts, and peers; and selecting and adapting existing instructional materials. (MBR)
Descriptors: Instructional Development, Media Selection, Methods, Student Responsibility
Freeman, Joan – Gifted Education International, 2001
Responsibility is described as a mixture of intellect and emotion which schools can positively develop and as particularly pertinent to the gifted as potential opinion formers. The growth of children's responsibility is considered within the school social context, individual emotional development, and the effects of the teacher and teaching style.…
Descriptors: Accountability, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Development
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Kierstead, Janet – Educational Leadership, 1985
By focusing on students' abilities to apply knowledge to achieve long-term, real-world goals rather than on students' achievement of basic skills, teachers can develop a framework of experiential, multi-task activities supported by direct instruction, thus promoting the sharing of educational responsibility by both students and teachers. (PGD)
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education, Experiential Learning, Student Responsibility
Ehrhardt, Harryette B.; Corvey, S. James – 1980
While the cognitive-style approach to individualized instruction is no panacea for all educational ills, it holds high promise as a means of helping faculty and students to develop effective learning environments. In utilizing this approach, several factors must be considered. First, a clear distinction should be made between cognitive style and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Individualized Instruction, Learning Theories, Self Concept
Cryer, Patricia – Programmed Learning and Educational Technology, 1985
Presents a model for structuring teacher workshops and discusses its implications for teaching methods used, duration of sessions, participation of those in attendance, and role changes of everyone involved. Based on Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives, this rationale for workshop structure explains each workshop stage to participants. (MBR)
Descriptors: Models, Organization, Participant Satisfaction, Participation
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Caldwell, Bettye M. – Educational Forum, 1986
Discusses the how many and how much lesson (how many people can acquire the rudiments of education, and how much they can learn), and the how few and how little lesson (how few of us assimilate the educational experience, and how little of the distillate consciously affects our decisions and actions). (CT)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Family Environment, Futures (of Society), Literacy
Dixon, Nancy M. – Lifelong Learning, 1985
Suggests a possible answer to the question "How can learning style information be used to increase learning?" It is proposed that the learner be responsible for using the learning style information and that the instructor assume the responsibility for creating an environment in which the resulting diversity can be accommodated. (CT)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Style, Cooperation, Self Concept
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Crowder, William W. – Clearing House, 1987
Argues that teachers should lead their students to a broader study of people and their needs. Offers strategies that can be used in social studies classes to help students become aware of crisis situations and how to deal with them. (FL)
Descriptors: Crisis Intervention, Curriculum Enrichment, Decision Making, Elementary Secondary Education
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Mosston, Muska; Ashworth, Sara – Educational Leadership, 1985
According to the Spectrum concept, all teaching is a chain of deliberate acts resulting from a decision-making process that begins before the teaching transaction and continues through evaluation. The Spectrum places all styles of teaching on a continuum according to whether teachers or learners are most responsible for decision making. (PGD)
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories, Student Responsibility, Teacher Behavior
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Rowe, John R. – High School Journal, 1981
Schools can help adolescents strengthen their decision making skills and sense of responsibility by 1) providing them with a wide range of opportunities to exercise these abilities, 2) employing staff who are positive models of constructive decision making and personal responsibility, and 3) utilizing curriculum that focuses on these areas.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Decision Making, Instructional Materials, Role Models
Rinke, Wolf J. – Training and Development Journal, 1985
Discusses various aspects of holistic education: (1) educators vary strategies to meet the educational need; (2) educators promote learning as a lifelong process; (3) educators accept that the learner retains ultimate responsibility for the learning process; and (4) evaluation strategies include all individuals involved in the teaching-learning…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories, Evaluation Methods, Holistic Approach
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Goodwin, Nancy – English Journal, 1985
Describes the trials and tribulations of a teacher of remedial English as she attempts to find a learning strategy that will reach her class of problem students. (RBW)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, English Instruction, Learning Experience, Learning Strategies
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Forrester, Kent – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1984
Stresses that teaching writing is a very difficult task because of, among other things, the problems in changing students' lifelong habits, their general lack of reading and summarizing skills, the intuitive nature of grammar use, and the lack of instruction in logical thinking. (CRH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Theories, Grammar, Higher Education
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