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Peer reviewedLove, Ida H. – Educational Leadership, 1988
Describes a Time Awareness Program initiated at a Kansas City, Missouri, elementary school to address time wastage problems involved with starting the day, changing subjects, and attending assemblies. The key to successful learning is to allow teachers to teach all day without breaking the teaching/learning cycle. (MLH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Scheduling, School Schedules, Time Factors (Learning)
Peer reviewedFisher, Charles; And Others – Educational Leadership, 1979
Teachers will improve student learning if they attend to allocated time, engaged time, and student success rate. (Author)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Classroom Techniques, Elementary Education, Success
Peer reviewedHofferth, Sandra L.; Jankuniene, Zita – Educational Leadership, 2001
What students do after school depends on where they go, their gender and family characteristics, and with whom they spend time. Most students go straight home, play or watch TV, and are unsupervised, but not alone. Schools equalize learning opportunities for poorer students. Time at home affects recreational reading opportunities. (Contains 10…
Descriptors: After School Programs, Elementary Education, Family Income, Family Life
Hamilton, Joan; Johnston, Sheryl; Marshall, Jane; Shields, Carolyn – Educational Leadership, 2006
Four dissimilar schools each respond to a learning challenge by questioning set-in-stone thinking and taking risks. A K-8 school in Toronto bypasses the traditional--and problematic--long summer vacation to follow a balanced calendar model. Students attend school year-round with two-week breaks scattered throughout the year; both remedial and…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, School Schedules, High Schools, Teaching Models
Peer reviewedDriscoll, Mark – Educational Leadership, 1983
Computers can offer fun games, but they need to nurture thoughtful learning as well. (Author)
Descriptors: Educational Games, Elementary Education, Mathematics Instruction, Microcomputers
Peer reviewedCanady, Robert Lynn – Educational Leadership, 1988
Now that regular elementary classroom teachers must plan their lessons around special "pull-out" programs, their responsibilities are compounded and their control over instructional time considerably diminished. This article discusses the benefits of parallel block scheduling as a possible solution. Includes seven endnotes. (MLH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Lesson Plans, Planning, Scheduling
Peer reviewedHillerich, Robert L. – Educational Leadership, 1982
Reports on observations in 34 class periods of six elementary teachers teaching spelling. Notes that much of the time was not devoted to actual instruction. Reviews the methods of spelling instruction that research has found effective and recommends ways that administrators can help improve spelling instruction, including classroom observation.…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Classroom Observation Techniques, Elementary Education, Spelling Instruction
Peer reviewedHandley, Patricia – Educational Leadership, 2002
Describes benefits of small classes based on 28 years of experience as elementary teacher. Includes establishing a successful classroom community, more time for students, fewer discipline problems, personalized assessment, and more opportunity to use best teaching practices. (PKP)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Community, Discipline Problems, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedFielding, Linda G.; Pearson, P. David – Educational Leadership, 1994
A successful reading instruction program requires ample time for actual text reading; teacher-directed comprehension strategy instruction; opportunities for peer and collaborative learning; and time for discussing what has been read. To develop independent, motivated, lifelong readers, a substantial part of children's reading instructional time…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Education, Lifelong Learning
Peer reviewedFinn, Jeremy D. – Educational Leadership, 1998
Researchers have identified four types of at-home parental engagement consistently associated with school performance: actively organizing and monitoring children's time, helping with homework, discussing school matters with children, and promoting reading activities. Research has not consistently linked parents' in-school engagement and student…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Elementary Education, Family Environment, Literacy Education
Peer reviewedCawelti, Gordon – Educational Leadership, 2000
A turnaround school in Mission, Texas proves poverty and underachievement are not synonymous. The 1998 passing rate on state assessments was 90.7 percent, compared to 41.2 percent in 1993. Factors include committed faculty, a strong principal, extended reading practice and instructional time, incentives and recognition, and pre-assessment…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Attendance, Elementary Education, Hispanic Americans

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