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Healy, Michelle – Educational Horizons, 2013
This article provides a description of the birth of The Odyssey Initiative. As teachers, this group of three, all educators, knew that there was outrage about the state of education in America. Griping about our nation's schools has almost become a pastime, and with very good reason. However, they found the solutions being offered to save our…
Descriptors: School Effectiveness, Teacher Effectiveness, Educational Practices, Best Practices
Wynne, Edward A.; Walberg, Herbert J. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1994
Research has demonstrated that small groups exert powerful emotional influence on members. Learning group effectiveness in American schools is hindered by groups' short-lived character. Article recommends that American educators stress group persistence by keeping discrete groups of students and teachers together over long time periods, reorganize…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Cooperative Learning, Cost Effectiveness, Elementary Secondary Education
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Bellis, Marilyn – Young Children, 1999
Explores looping, which involves one teacher staying with the same group of children for more than one year. Recognizes that, with today's changing demographics, looping can be a way to foster a family-like classroom atmosphere. Discusses advantages and disadvantages to looping. Includes a chart of looping opportunities and considerations;…
Descriptors: Family Attitudes, Family Influence, Instructional Innovation, Looping (Teachers)
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Lincoln, Robert D. – ERS Spectrum, 2000
A Connecticut principal describes how his middle school explored benefits of looping for seventh and eighth graders. Results of a study evaluating the effects of a pilot project on student discipline, attitudes, and achievement were positive enough to justify expanding looping to all seventh- and eighth-grade classes. (Contains 19 references.)…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Discipline, Educational Benefits, Grade 7
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Reynolds, Janice Carner; Barnhart, Brad; Martin, Barbara N. – ERS Spectrum, 1999
Discusses looping, or multiyear assignment of children, as a strategy to ease the retention/social-promotion dilemma. Multiyear assignment gives teachers extra time to bring low-performing students up to grade level and develop stable, caring relationships with students. A suburban Kansas school's successful program is profiled. (24 references)…
Descriptors: Accountability, Developmental Programs, Elementary Education, Grade Repetition
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Chapman, Janet – Young Children, 1999
Recounts a teacher's experiences staying with the same group of children for more than one year (looping) as they progress through kindergarten and first grade. Discusses advantages of more stability and less trauma for the child, and more instructional time and less stress for the teacher. Addresses possible disadvantages of children having…
Descriptors: Action Research, Family Attitudes, Family Influence, Instructional Innovation
Forsten, Char; Grant, Jim; Richardson, Irv – Principal, 1999
The revived interest in multiage and looping (multiyear) classrooms addresses today's children's needs for a long-term, caring, learning environment. Although these practices are not panaceas, they are time-effective and instructionally efficient, allowing for continuous learning and less repetition, when teachers have adequate support, training,…
Descriptors: Attendance, Diversity (Student), Educational Benefits, Elementary Education
Cistone, Peter; Shneyderman, Aleksandr – International Journal of Educational Policy, Research, and Practice: Reconceptualizing Childhood Studies, 2004
Looping is the practice in which a teacher instructs the same group of students for at least two school years, following them from one grade level to the next. Once a "loop" of two or more years is completed, the teacher may start a new loop teaching a new group of students. This evaluation study of the practice of looping in a large…
Descriptors: Looping (Teachers), Urban Schools, Elementary Schools, Comparative Analysis
Black, Susan – American School Board Journal, 2000
Looping, the practice of moving teachers to the next grade level along with their students, is enjoying a comeback. European and U.S. Waldorf schools have used this approach since the early 1900s. The extra time gained in learning translates into improved student achievement, discipline, and participation. (Contains 10 references.) (MLH)
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Discipline, Educational Benefits, Educational History
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Lee, Kyunghwa; Walsh, Daniel J. – Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education, 2005
This article investigates how a Midwestern early childhood teacher's practice and her views of her practice are culturally constrained. The research is framed by a cultural psychology and draws on an ethnographic and interpretive biographic study of Mary, an experienced first-grade teacher. We explore Mary's practice through four central themes:…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Psychology, Child Development, Early Childhood Education
Kaplan, Leslie S.; Owings, William A. – Principal Leadership, 2000
Principals must structure their schools' learning environments with high expectations for achievement and behavior and for positive student-teacher relationships to ensure safer, more inclusive, and higher achieving schools. Personalizing high schools as to size, groupings, schedules, tutoring, and conflict mediation is essential. (Contains 27…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Administrator Responsibility, Assistant Principals, Block Scheduling