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UNICEF Office of Research - Innocenti, 2021
In sub-Saharan Africa, the loss of teaching hours due to teacher absenteeism corresponds to a waste of approximately 46 cents for every US dollar invested in education, an annual wastage of 1-3% of GDP. This brief summarizes the results of research in 11 countries in West and Central Africa under the Time to Teach study, a project in UNICEF that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employee Absenteeism, Teacher Behavior, Teacher Attendance
National Center on Education and the Economy, 2024
Using time to enable success in teaching and learning is a critical part of every school's, district's and state's journey to success. It seems that there is never enough time in schools, and leaders struggle to make the most of what they have. How best to use this precious resource is a critical question. While time in isolation from other…
Descriptors: Time Management, Influences, Success, Educational Improvement
Bettini, Elizabeth; Cumming, Michelle M.; Brunsting, Nelson C.; McKenna, John William; Cooper Schneider, Caitlin; Muller, Rebecca; Peyton, David – Beyond Behavior, 2020
Special educators are responsible for providing quality reading instruction to students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD), but they often experience difficulties fulfilling this responsibility, especially for students with EBD who are placed in dedicated settings, including self-contained classes. Administrators can help by ensuring…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Administrator Role, Teacher Administrator Relationship, Professional Development
Bettini, Elizabeth; Cumming, Michelle M.; Brunsting, Nelson C.; McKenna, John William; Schneider, Caitlin Cooper; Muller, Rebecca; Peyton, David – Grantee Submission, 2020
Special educators are responsible for providing quality reading instruction to students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD), but they often experience difficulties fulfilling this responsibility, especially for students with EBD who are placed in dedicated settings, including self-contained classes. Administrators can help by ensuring…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Administrator Role, Teacher Administrator Relationship, Professional Development
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Farrington, Jeanne – Performance Improvement, 2012
Training can often be the right answer--or part of the right answer--to help people learn how to do something that is new for them. Although some may be tempted to ignore instructional design when faced with a tight time line, that is exactly when following a systematic process can provide a recipe for success. Given six important questions, the…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Systems Approach, Educational Needs, Time Management
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Trinick, Robyn Margaret – General Music Today, 2012
With the introduction of the New Zealand government's National Standards, there are increasing demands on teachers to provide evidence of student achievement in the areas of numeracy and literacy. As a result, primary school teachers may perceive that there is neither time nor the need for music activities such as singing, which may be viewed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Standards, Literacy, Numeracy
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Vannest, Kimberly J.; Burke, Mack D.; Sauber, Stephanie B.; Davis, John L.; Davis, Cole R. – Beyond Behavior, 2011
Easy-to-use progress-monitoring and intervention techniques are attractive because most teachers are crunched for time and teacher instructional time is often consumed with paperwork, especially for progress monitoring and discipline. Some studies indicate up to 50% of a special educator's time may be spent on paperwork. Methods that serve a dual…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Time Management, Teaching Conditions, Disabilities
Public Impact, 2012
This brief shows how teachers in a Time-Technology swap school model may earn more, sustainably. In this model, schools use age-appropriate portions of digital learning (as little as about an hour daily per student) to free the time of excellent teachers to teach more students and potentially to collaborate with peers. By teaching more students,…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Elementary Secondary Education, Job Development, Models
Poliniak, Susan – Teaching Music, 2009
It seems as though everyone has an overcrowded work schedule these days, and music teachers are no exception. There are some blessed souls for whom it all comes easily. They finish what they need to when they need to, or much earlier than it is required. Their work schedules are impeccably prepped, and they have time for dozens of other…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Music Education, Music Teachers, Teaching Conditions
Online Submission, 2011
In 2011, AISD worked with the nationally recognized New Teacher Center (NTC) to create a comprehensive survey to help the district to better understand how teachers and school staff feel about critical issues that can influence educator retention and effectiveness. This report provides a district summary of staff survey results. A separate report…
Descriptors: School Districts, Teaching Conditions, Teacher Persistence, Teacher Effectiveness
Jorgenson, Olaf; Peal, Christopher – Principal, 2008
Many teachers believe that their administrators have lost touch with life in the classroom, and the resulting gap is a serious concern. Closing a perception gap between principals and teachers is critical if they are to work together for their mutual benefit and that of the children they serve. The authors of this article asked a group of veteran,…
Descriptors: Principals, Administrator Role, Teacher Administrator Relationship, Teacher Attitudes
Whitaker, Judy – Techniques: Connecting Education and Careers, 2007
Educators are like their colleagues in business in that they experience long, stress-filled days at work and then go home to hurried and rushed family schedules. For some people, every moment of every day is rushed. They rush to the doctor, hurry to take children to the soccer game, eat on the run. It is go, go, go from sunrise to sunset. Finding…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Coping, Stress Management, Teacher Burnout
Silva, Elena – Education Sector, 2009
Furman Brown has spent over a decade figuring out how to design a better school. As a first-year teacher in South Central Los Angeles in the early 1990s, he got a taste of what was wrong with the traditional public school model: It was not designed to serve students "or" teachers well. Convinced there was a better way to organize and…
Descriptors: High Schools, Teacher Effectiveness, Public Education, Models
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Billingsley, Bonnie S. – Journal of Special Education Leadership, 2010
A growing body of evidence suggests teachers first experiences in the classroom have an impact on their effectiveness, their students' achievement, and the teaching practices they will use for many years. New special educators experience many of the same challenges as other new teachers. Both general and special educators struggle with addressing …
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Disabilities, Special Education Teachers, Regular and Special Education Relationship
Blazer, Christie – Research Services, Miami-Dade County Public Schools, 2010
Burnout is a state of physical, mental, and emotional exhaustion resulting from chronic stress. It is characterized by feelings of alienation, indifference, and low self-regard, a loss of interest in work, and an inability to perform one's day-to-day job duties. Burnout within the teaching profession has been recognized as a serious problem.…
Descriptors: Work Environment, Self Efficacy, Stress Management, Feedback (Response)
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