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Peer reviewedBallard, Mary; Argus, Tucky; Remley, Theodore P., Jr. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
By addressing bullying issues, school personnel may prevent more serious violent behavior. This article reviews bullies' and victims' characteristics and describes a school-based intervention plan for managing bullying behavior on the playground and classroom, educating parent/teacher organizations and counselors, and publicizing and implementing…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Bullying, Elementary Secondary Education, Intervention
Peer reviewedJuntune, Joyce E. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
As one Houston middle school demonstrates, a magnet program for gifted students can be successfully integrated with a regular program via music and art electives and whole-school activities. Gifted students are accelerated in many but not all courses; regular students can choose to be accelerated in specific content areas. (11 references) (MLH)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Acceleration (Education), Elective Courses, Inclusive Schools
Peer reviewedMojkowski, Charles – NASSP Bulletin, 2000
A curriculum implementation monitoring system should be relatively inexpensive, unburdensome for faculty, and improvement oriented; produce information to guide staff development; and refrain from covertly evaluating teachers. A self-assessment checklist should report teachers' perceptions about degree of implementation, difficulty level, and…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Check Lists, Committees, Curriculum Development
Peer reviewedRitt, Barbara; Gomery, Jill – NASSP Bulletin, 1987
Describes a staff development program used at Corbett Middle School in Gresham, Oregon, that introduced learning style theory and in subsequent years focused on helping teachers implement teaching methods that applied the theory effectively and creatively. The program's goals, processes, support services, and evaluation are discussed. (PGD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Faculty Development, Instructional Improvement, Junior High Schools
Peer reviewedHamilton, Stephen F.; Mamary, Albert – NASSP Bulletin, 1983
Urges accurate assessment of program implementation and the determination of student performance in areas not measured by achievement tests. Offers indicators of hard-to-measure levels of achievement in teachers and students, as they have been developed in the Johnson City, New York, Public Schools' mastery learning approach. (JW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Rating, Elementary Secondary Education, Mastery Learning
Peer reviewedEvans, Robert W. – NASSP Bulletin, 1983
Sketches the Ohio Department of Education strategy for making effective schools, that is, by defining school effectiveness and by citing the general factors influencing the conduct of effective programs. (JW)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Program Effectiveness, Program Implementation, Program Improvement
Peer reviewedWeller, Sylvia J.; Weller, L. David – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
A rural Georgia high school has established a framework of continuous improvement to help it become a learning organization. Teachers are involved at all organizational levels--from school management to instructional practices. Teams of teachers are testing new ideas and knowledge, using data and simple statistical tools to discover what works,…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Educational Quality, High Schools, Instructional Improvement
Peer reviewedMcMurrin, Lee R. – NASSP Bulletin, 1989
Outlines initiatives that principals, superintendents, and boards of education should take to implement and support a Discipline-Based Art Education program. Discusses values and benefits of DBAE, inevitable obstacles to change, and ways to generate support. In these initiatives and activities, the principal is the prime mover. (MLH)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Art Education, Boards of Education, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedSchoelkopf, Jim – NASSP Bulletin, 1995
A Portland, Oregon, high school adopted the tech-prep/school-to-work career pathway structure five years ago. This model offers a framework for a student's career development, based on a broad selection within a career path, such as human services, business and management, industrial and engineering systems, and other endeavors. Choice is flexible…
Descriptors: Career Education, Education Work Relationship, High Schools, Program Descriptions
Peer reviewedHoover, John T., Jr. – NASSP Bulletin, 1995
Describes a student-behavior-modification process and ongoing research project involving 650 of the highest risk youth from a population of 11,000 6th to 12th graders. After identifying at-risk students, researchers isolated routine problem behaviors and examined how they could be modified. Students work their way back to a regular school setting…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Behavior Problems, High Risk Students, Program Implementation
Peer reviewedCultice, Wendell W. – NASSP Bulletin, 1992
Outlines a 14-step process for establishing a suicide prevention program, including collecting data; gaining administrative approval; seeking legal advice; establishing an ad hoc crisis intervention committee; collecting sample forms; appraising agency resources; developing a written policy; appraising community resources; involving the media;…
Descriptors: Crisis Intervention, Data Collection, Junior High Schools, Policy Formation
Peer reviewedHerman, Jerry J. – NASSP Bulletin, 1993
An effective administrator evaluation system builds in feedback opportunities, two-way communication, opportunities for improvement, enforcement of strengths, and a clear understanding of the system. The system must be valid, reliable, meaningful, useful, and feasible. Procedural answers to the why-what-when-where-what-who questions are discussed…
Descriptors: Administrator Evaluation, Due Process, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Criteria
Peer reviewedHess, Fritz; Shablak, Scott – NASSP Bulletin, 1990
Describes the Central New York Education Consortium's efforts to develop university-school district partnerships and devise a positive approach to ethical instruction. The group identified essential "schools of character" aspects, such as clean, orderly environment, constant curriculum evaluation criteria, administrator role modeling,…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Consortia, Cooperative Programs, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedGrover, Charles A. – NASSP Bulletin, 1994
Theater participation aids students in several areas, including self-expression, self-development, self-understanding, self-esteem, self-discipline, analytical skills, empathy, human understanding, and competition. Balance between academics and the arts is essential if students are to be prepared to live well-rounded, meaningful lives in the…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Competition, Educational Benefits, High Schools
Peer reviewedHackmann, Donald G. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
Shares information on current scheduling trends within Iowa and explains why some schools have adopted a more cautious schedule-modification posture. In Iowa, there is strong support for cocurricular activities, including music and art, and faculty resistance, based on instructional issues. Test scores are high with a traditional schedule. (13…
Descriptors: Art Education, Block Scheduling, Extracurricular Activities, High Schools


