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Swaffield, Sue; Major, Louis – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2019
One remarkable feature of the contemporary school landscape in England is the number of schools that have chosen the co-operative framework to shape their work and relationships. When a group of schools decides to become a co-operative trust, leadership challenges arise both in the process of establishing an inclusive collaborative cluster and in…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Instructional Leadership, Teacher Attitudes, Foreign Countries
Jacobs, George; Seow, Peter – Online Submission, 2014
This paper describes eight principles that can be used to promote cooperative interactions among students working in online environments. The principles derive from a well-established approach to education, known variously as cooperative learning and collaborative learning. Each principle is explained as to what it means, why it is important and…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Interaction, Computer Mediated Communication, Educational Principles
Alberta Education, 2010
The ministry has identified one core business that is an ongoing key responsibility. It is called "Core Business One: Lead and Support the Education System So That All Students Are Successful at Learning." The core business includes four goals with specific outcomes that describe the end results the ministry wants to achieve in…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Foreign Countries, Accountability, Educational Policy
Sessions, Robert – 1995
A popular image today is that students are "consumers" and teachers are "producers" and "sellers" of education. Many in academia claim that economic metaphors distort and corrupt the true nature of education and they offer a variety of alternative images of the relationships between teachers and students: traveler/guide, worker/boss, artistic…
Descriptors: Accountability, Educational Philosophy, Educational Principles, Educational Strategies
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Christenson, Sandra L. – School Psychology Quarterly, 2003
In this article, family-school partnerships are discussed as a viable and essential way to increase the opportunities and supports for all students to enhance their learning progress and meet the recent demands of schooling inherent in accountability systems and most notably of Title I No Child Left Behind legislation. School psychologists are…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, School Psychologists, Accountability, Family School Relationship