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Showing 16 to 30 of 147 results Save | Export
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Hollingshead, Barbara – NASSP Bulletin, 2009
Hall and Hord's (2005) concerns-based adoption model (CBAM) served as the framework to study a districtwide implementation of Rachel's Challenge in Rockwall, Texas. This article describes CBAM principles and strategies that were used to increase awareness of the change process during the first year of implementing the character education program.…
Descriptors: Program Implementation, Values Education, Educational Change, Barriers
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Holler, Rachel A.; Zirkel, Perry A. – NASSP Bulletin, 2008
The primary purpose of this study is to determine a preliminary national percentage of students who are "504-only." The survey data reveal that 504-only students represent 1.2% of the public school population. There is a significant difference in the 504-only percentage with regard to school level, with middle and high schools having a…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Disability Identification, Eligibility, Public Schools
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Driver, Del; Bracey, Robert, III – NASSP Bulletin, 1980
Addresses four questions concerning the use of instructional television (ITV): Is the use of ITV punishing to the user? Is a teacher rewarded for not using ITV? Does it make any difference to a teacher whether ITV is used? Are there obstacles that prevent a teacher from using ITV? (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Educational Television, Guidelines, Program Implementation, Secondary Education
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Mosrie, David – NASSP Bulletin, 1980
Describes a six-step process for conducting a needs assessment in the schools. The approach is feasible and inexpensive as it allows each school to develop its own instrument. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Guidelines, Needs Assessment, Program Implementation, Secondary Education
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Pellicer, Leonard O.; Nemeth, Gyuri – NASSP Bulletin, 1980
The minimal procedures for implementing a management team are determining who will be on it, determining long- and short-range goals for the organization, identifying task areas as a basis for designing job descriptions and setting individual goals, holding formal meetings, and planning for periodic reassessment of progress. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Adoption (Ideas), Management Teams, Principals, Program Implementation
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Bruckner, Martha – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
The discussion that transpired in Fremont, Nebraska, over one academic year depicted faculty's struggles and growth as they wrestled with their school's significant change to block scheduling. Conversations demonstrate a staff moving from block-implementation stresses in the first quarter to a focus on teaching and learning in the fourth quarter.…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Guidelines, High Schools, Program Implementation
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Gee, Thomas C.; Forester, Nora – NASSP Bulletin, 1988
The statement that "every teacher is a teacher of reading" is an ineffective cliche. However, cooperation among secondary school content and reading teachers can be achieved through establishing schoolwide reading teams, offering services and inservice education for content teachers, pairing reading and content teachers, publishing newsletters,…
Descriptors: Inservice Education, Program Implementation, Reading Teachers, Secondary Education
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Danin, Susan T. – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
Delaware, the District of Columbia, and New Jersey have spent past three years developing math standards and frameworks with guidance from state and local stakeholders and national standards efforts. Evaluation of these states' progress concluded that reform efforts are limited, unless new assessments are aligned with standards. Professional…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Mathematics Education, Program Implementation, Secondary Education
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Savage, Ernest – NASSP Bulletin, 1993
A model of technology education should provide a framework allowing immersion into actual technological practice. The article presents a model that challenges students to apply human direction to identify problems or opportunities, select appropriate resources, and employ technological processes to produce assessable outcomes. A model laboratory…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Laboratories, Learning Activities, Models
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Sheerin, James – NASSP Bulletin, 1991
Confronted by lack of congruence among supervisors' identification of teachers' needs, teachers' identification of their own needs, and in-service training, East Brunswick (New Jersey) High School developed a comprehensive staff development program based on videotaped lessons provided by teachers and reformulated teaching behavior descriptions…
Descriptors: High Schools, Program Implementation, Staff Development, Teacher Evaluation
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Allen, Carol; And Others – NASSP Bulletin, 1984
Effective principal training should reflect the relationship of theory, training, and practice. The Contingency Framework for Administrator Development (CFAD) model is presented as a training program that can integrate administrative task areas, processes, and characteristics through theory and application. (MD)
Descriptors: Activities, Administrator Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Management Development
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Weller, L. David; Wolfe, Delores M. – NASSP Bulletin, 1985
Administrators can help teachers follow six steps to gain the skills and confidence to use computers in the classroom: (1) familiarization with microcomputers, (2) understanding classroom computer applications, (3) acquiring parent and community support, (4) finding appropriate software, (5) introducing computers to students, and (6) evaluating…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Computer Assisted Instruction, Elementary Secondary Education, Program Implementation
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Bradshaw, Lynn K. – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
Implementing technology in a classroom is a personal process that varies from teacher to teacher. The Concerns-Based Adoption Model identifies seven stages of concern that teachers may experience, from awareness to refocusing ideas. Innovative staff development strategies include establishing organizational structures to support technological and…
Descriptors: Educational Planning, Educational Technology, Program Implementation, Secondary Education
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Trimble, Susan; Miller, John W. – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
Teams can boost creativity, morale, and communication, but they can also unleash disharmony, create tension, and waste time. To maximize teaming benefits, administrators must share authority, cultivate teacher leadership, train all team members, use situational leadership, model effective team leader behaviors, provide incentives, support each…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Educational Benefits, Guidelines, Program Implementation
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Layne, Donald J.; Grossnickle, Donald R. – NASSP Bulletin, 1989
Describes Operation Snowball, an extensively used prevention model that emerged in response to drug abuse problems in school and society. Designed to engender positive student attitudes, this program combats alienation and attendant substance abuse through a process emphasizing information, education, alternatives to drugs, and environmental…
Descriptors: Alcohol Abuse, Drug Abuse, Intervention, Peer Influence
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