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Greenleaf, Robert K. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
Debunks brain/education myths. The term "brain-based education" is redundant; learning is the brain's function. More brain cell connections do not equal more learning. There is no "critical period" for developing human brain capacity. All learning is emotional, and learning never ends. Tips for high-school teachers are…
Descriptors: Brain, Developmental Stages, Emotional Development, Experiential Learning
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Pressley, James S.; Whitley, Roger L. – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
When interscholastic athletic programs enhance students' intellectual and social development, athletic participation becomes a valuable educational experience. Achieving success in our society requires much more than attaining academic success. The positive relationship between interscholastic athletics and educational performance should…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Educational Benefits, Educational Policy, Extramural Athletics
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Lee, James O. – NASSP Bulletin, 2000
The current standards movement cannot succeed unless a school's culture is committed to helping all students achieve excellence. Principals must build a schoolwide culture of quality focused on learning projects. Teachers should design projects backwards, using standards and assessment rubrics based on actual student products and performances.…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Educational Environment, Excellence in Education, Guidelines
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Boehm, Richard G.; Boehm, R. Denise – NASSP Bulletin, 1994
Students who learn more geography have a dual payoff: intellectual challenge through the introduction of new, stimulating information about people, places, and regions; and exposure to career possibilities that did not exist even five years ago. The 18 national geography standards stress a spatial world view, places and regions, physical and human…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Career Exploration, Careers, Education Work Relationship
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Williams, Wendy M. – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
Reviews aspects of our cultural environment that have changed over the past half century and that may significantly affect children's intellectual development. Positive influences include increased student and parental education attainment, decreased family size, increased family resources, and shifts in parenting style. One negative factor is…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Cultural Influences, Educational Attainment, Educational Finance