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Miller, Andrew – Educational Leadership, 2022
College- and career-readiness skills can easily get lost if you don't have a clear school-wide plan for teaching them. While curriculum in schools is primarily meant to ready students for college and career skills, ensuring those skills actually transfer is another story. Andrew Miller lays out a system for teaching and assessing key…
Descriptors: College Readiness, Career Readiness, Skill Development, Teaching Methods
Darvin, Jacqueline – Educational Leadership, 2017
Cultural Political Vignettes (CPVs) are hypothetical situations involving ethical or social dilemmas presented to students in the form of brief vignettes. They help students consider and discuss questions about ethics, society, and responsibility, and develop both skills (like critical thinking) and dispositions (like empathy) needed to be a…
Descriptors: Vignettes, Critical Thinking, Empathy, Social Problems
Boyles, Nancy – Educational Leadership, 2016
Today's state literacy standards and assessments demand deeper levels of knowledge from students. But many teachers ask, "What does depth of knowledge look like on these new, more rigorous assessments? How do we prepare students for this kind of thinking?" In this article, Nancy Boyles uses a sampling of questions from the PARCC and SBAC…
Descriptors: State Standards, Literacy, Knowledge Level, Educational Needs
Levine, Peter – Educational Leadership, 2016
Educating students to be good, informed citizens remains a core purpose of K-12 schools. The purposes of civic education, however, are contested, notes Levine, director of the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement. Levine argues that a citizen is someone who seriously asks, "What should we do?"--someone who…
Descriptors: Civics, Citizenship Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Role of Education
Rollins, Suzy Pepper – Educational Leadership, 2016
Most students have gaps in their background knowledge and basic skills-gaps that can stand in the way of learning new concepts. For example, a student may be excited about studying probability--until he realizes that today's lesson on probability will require him to use fractions. As his brain searches frantically for his dim recollection of the…
Descriptors: Concept Teaching, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Achievement Gap, Teaching Methods
Claxton, Guy; Costa, Arthur L.; Kallick, Bena – Educational Leadership, 2016
People use various terms to refer to traits and tendencies connected to social-emotional behavior and ways of thinking or approaching problems--from 21st century skills to mindsets to habits of mind. Such traits are also often called soft skills or non-cognitive skills. The authors contend that these latter terms imply that these traits and…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Interpersonal Competence, Social Development, Emotional Intelligence
Snow, Carrie C. – Educational Leadership, 2017
One essential way to support students with autism is to "show up" for them. Showing up means connecting and building relationships with learners and trusting students to show us what they most need to boost their learning and social growth. Snow shares scenarios from her years as a special educator that showcase ways educators can…
Descriptors: Autism, Student Needs, Special Education, Teacher Role
Flynn, Mike – Educational Leadership, 2017
In some math classrooms, students are taught to follow and memorize procedures to arrive at the correct solution to problems. In this article, author Mike Flynn suggests a way to move beyond answer-getting to true problem solving. He describes an instructional approach called three-act tasks in which students solve an engaging math problem in…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Problem Solving, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Guskey, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2014
Why does professional learning for educators have such a mixed history? Why is it so hard to find solid research evidence of professional development programs that actually improve student learning outcomes? Part of the answer, writes Thomas R. Guskey, is that professional learning experiences for educators are rarely well planned. Consequently,…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Program Effectiveness, Planning, Program Development
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Neuman, Susan B. – Educational Leadership, 2014
Universal preschool has the potential to close the knowledge gap--but only if we consider how to best teach preschoolers. Unbridled enthusiasm for universal preschool must be balanced with thoughtful consideration of what goes on in these classrooms, and what activities will most support children's learning. Content-centered classrooms help…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Preschool Curriculum, Preschool Teachers, Preschool Children
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Johnston, Peter – Educational Leadership, 2012
This article begins with examples that illustrate four important points about feedback that one often misses. First, giving feedback does not necessarily mean telling students what is good or bad. Second, feedback should be inseparable from the larger classroom conversations. Third, feedback is not merely cognitive in reach, nor merely corrective…
Descriptors: Writing Skills, Feedback (Response), Faculty Development, Writing Instruction
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Dobbertin, Cheryl Becker – Educational Leadership, 2012
What if teachers not only made clear the learning expectations at the start of each unit, but also helped students see where they stand in relation to those expectations? Students would realize what specific skills and understandings they most needed to work on and would clearly see the need for differentiation in the class. Dobbertin describes…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Expectations of Students, Skill Development, Individualized Instruction
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Khan, Salman; Slavitt, Elizabeth – Educational Leadership, 2013
Summit San Jose is part of the Summit Public Schools network, a group of charter schools in California's Bay Area. In 2011, when Summit San Jose first opened its new high school with a cohort of 9th graders, the teachers decided to pilot Khan Academy. At the time, they had piloted their math resources and platform with five classrooms in Los…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Mathematics Instruction, High Schools, Teaching Methods
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Hess, Diana – Educational Leadership, 2011
Adults in the United States have been migrating to ideologically homogenous communities, a phenomenon that researchers have called "the big sort." Thus, the need for young Americans to engage in civil discussion of controversial issues has never been greater. Public schools are an ideal place to undo the big sort because controversial issues fit…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Democracy, Democratic Values, Citizenship
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Guskey, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2010
Schools are frequently inundated with demands to implement new instructional interventions and teaching methods that are not yet backed up by a solid body of research. Fortunately, many of these innovations include elements of more established strategies for which evidence of positive effects does exist. Guskey describes the core elements of one…
Descriptors: Mastery Learning, Teaching Methods, Response to Intervention, Feedback (Response)
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