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Educational Leadership | 5 |
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Hagberg, Hilma | 1 |
Krathwohl, David R. | 1 |
Lieberman, Ann | 1 |
Lochhead, Jack | 1 |
Miller, Lynne | 1 |
Sylwester, Robert | 1 |
Walker, Decker | 1 |
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Journal Articles | 4 |
Information Analyses | 3 |
Reports - Descriptive | 1 |
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Practitioners | 1 |
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Krathwohl, David R. – Educational Leadership, 1972
Article shows the difference between educational research techniques and problem-solving practitioners, and explores the base out of which these differences in orientation grow. (Author/ML)
Descriptors: Educational Research, Problem Solving, Research Needs, Research Utilization

Hagberg, Hilma; Walker, Decker – Educational Leadership, 1981
A work-study team is the core of a school-university collaboration benefiting everyone involved. (Author)
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Higher Education, Models, Problem Solving

Lochhead, Jack – Educational Leadership, 1981
Research in cognitive science is providing an increasingly detailed understanding of human cognition. Teachers can help students become conscious of their own reasoning processes and then learn to compare, contrast, interrelate, or coordinate various ways in which they think in order to refine their problem-solving methods. (Author/MLF)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Intellectual Development, Learning Processes, Problem Solving

Lieberman, Ann; Miller, Lynne – Educational Leadership, 1981
Studies about how schools improve indicate that the process of improvement happens simultaneously on two levels: the individual teacher level and the level of the school as an organization. Staff development, networking, and problem-centered activities are current approaches found promising for school improvement. (Author/MLF)
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Elementary Secondary Education, Organizational Development, Problem Solving

Sylwester, Robert – Educational Leadership, 1985
Research identifies two interrelated memories--one that retains facts and symbols and one that retains motor and problem-solving skills. These and other findings challenge educators to determine what students should memorize, to help them move from random memorization to creating useful concepts, and to teach students to use memory in problem…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Educational Strategies, Encoding (Psychology), Learning Processes