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Kenney, Mary Kate – Online Submission, 2007
There is an increasing interest in the practice of teachers staying with a group of students for more than one year. This is referred to as looping in educational practice. The problem of constant uncertainty or change of a new teacher year to year, creates less academic time and student anxiety. The purpose of this study is to examine the effects…
Descriptors: Educational Methods, Primary Education, Educational Practices, Classroom Techniques
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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)
Fielden, Frank, Ed. – Of Primary Interest, 2000
This document is comprised of four consecutive issues (Winter 1999-Fall 2000) of a newsletter providing information on current research and practice to professionals teaching in the primary grades. The newsletter is published by the National Association of Early Childhood Specialists in State Departments of Education (NAECS/SDE); participating…
Descriptors: Day Care Effects, Educational Practices, Educational Trends, Grade 2
Grant, Jim; And Others – 1996
Looping is a very simple concept, whereby a teacher moves with his or her students to the next grade level, rather than sending them another teacher at the end of the school year. Schools all over the country are finding that this simple idea is having a profound effect on their students. This handbook describes the many benefits of looping and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Guides, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Looping (Teachers), Nontraditional Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Chirichello, Michael; Chirichello, Carol – Childhood Education, 2001
Describes one teacher's experience with looping between first and second grades. Highlights responses to surveys, whereby parents and students demonstrated positive social, academic, and emotional advantages to looping, including improved student-teacher relationships, less anxiety, and improved teacher's understanding of students' strengths and…
Descriptors: Action Research, Elementary School Students, Grade 1, Grade 2
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hampton, Frederick M.; And Others – ERS Spectrum, 1997
In 1993, East Cleveland Schools teamed with Cleveland State University and the Cleveland Foundation to pilot FAST (Families Are Students and Teachers). Kindergartners stay with the same teacher through second grade and benefit from summer enrichment programs and school/home interactions. A strong relationship-oriented program, coupled with…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attendance, Blacks, Family Programs
Krogmann, Jessica; Van Sant, Rebecca – 2000
This action research project sought to enhance parent, student, and teacher relationships and maximize academic time in the elementary school setting by implementing looping, the practice of teachers progressing with the same students through two or more grades. The targeted population consisted of second graders in a middle-class, blue-collar…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Action Research, Change Strategies, Classroom Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kuball, Yazmin E. – Young Children, 1999
Describes a preschool teacher's transition from a traditional kindergarten to a multi-age, multi-year (looping) program. Lists common complaints heard from more-traditional teachers receiving children from more-developmentally appropriate classrooms. Explains the importance of using whole language with quality children's books for Spanish-speaking…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education Programs, Bilingual Students, Continuous Progress Plan, Developmental Continuity
Grant, Jim, Comp.; Richardson, Irv, Comp. – 1996
Studies have criticized age-graded schools as creating a barrier to meeting the goals of equity and instructional excellence in schools. This handbook provides research on multiage classroom practices and argues that a multiage system better addresses and meets students' needs. Information is presented on the following topics: educational reform,…
Descriptors: Art Education, Case Studies, Class Size, Classroom Environment