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Porosoff, Lauren – Educational Leadership, 2023
Questions that challenge the curriculum can put educators on the defensive. Lauren Porosoff discusses helpful ways that educators can be proactive about creating productive and meaningful conversations with parents and community members about curriculum choices and the reasons behind them.
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Parents, Parent Teacher Cooperation, Psychological Patterns
Kempkey, Julia; Safir, Shane; Truss, Joe – Educational Leadership, 2023
After a grand jury report cited a pervasive pattern of racism and hate speech, a California school district took bold--sometimes uncomfortable--steps toward cultural change. At San Mateo Union High School District, assistant superintendent Julia Kempkey and equity coaches Shane Safir and Joe Truss faced the hard truth that no single policy,…
Descriptors: School Districts, Racism, Change Strategies, Student Leadership
Safir, Shane – Educational Leadership, 2017
How do school leaders navigate a complex change process? Simply put: They listen. This is the contention that Shane Safir puts forth in this article. She outlines five reasons for becoming a "listening leader": Listening helps leaders tune into and shift the dominant narrative; keep their finger on the pulse of complex change; stay true…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Change Strategies, Listening Skills, Leadership Styles
Toll, Cathy A. – Educational Leadership, 2017
New school leaders typically start out with enthusiasm--but sometime in their first year, they often find themselves disappointed, exhausted, and full of self-doubt. In this article, Cathy A. Toll discusses five perspectives that helped her enthusiasm for the job when she was a new school leader: (1) Teachers are well-intentioned, hard-working…
Descriptors: Principals, Success, Intention, Work Ethic
Tomlinson, Carol Ann – Educational Leadership, 2016
Teachers take seriously that "teaching is a deeply human enterprise," yet they can be candidates of worry about standards (or, perhaps more accurately, standardized tests) and where it's taking them in terms of curriculum design. If in their planning they crank out lessons solely focused on goals that young people don't care much about,…
Descriptors: Lesson Plans, Teacher Attitudes, Learner Engagement, Values
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Tschannen-Moran, Megan; Tschannen-Moran, Bob – Educational Leadership, 2014
"We can think of morale as an organizational mood," the authors write, "and we can view a school with low morale as a school that's in a bad mood." School leaders can improve mood and raise morale by implementing three strategies that promote the kind of good mood that fosters student learning and success. School leaners…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Morale, Administrator Role, Interpersonal Relationship
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Esquith, Rafe – Educational Leadership, 2014
"When did teachers became the scapegoats for factors beyond their control?" wonders Rafe Esquith in this passionate article. A 30-year veteran teacher, Esquith understands all too clearly the factors undermining teacher morale: ubiquitous tests, rules, and regulations; unfair, often ridiculous expectations; rising poverty and decaying…
Descriptors: Teacher Morale, Tests, Expectation, Values
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Cuban, Larry – Educational Leadership, 2012
Many practitioners (and the public) highly value standardizing curriculum and instruction for students. They believe that common standards and instruction will produce equal opportunity--a value dear to most policymakers and educators, and to Americans in general. Yet educators and the public also prize individual excellence. Differentiating the…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Gifted, Curriculum, Instruction
Weissbourd, Richard; Anderson, Trisha Ross – Educational Leadership, 2016
When asked about their child-rearing priorities, parents in the United States are likely to say it's more important to raise children who are caring than to raise high achievers. Schools, too, typically trumpet values such as caring, honesty, and fairness. These values are posted on walls, reiterated in assemblies, and included in mission…
Descriptors: Caring, Child Rearing, High Achievement, Institutional Mission
Shumow, Lee; Schmidt, Jennifer A. – Educational Leadership, 2015
Why and under what conditions might students value their science learning? To find out, the authors observed approximately 400 science classes. They found that although several teachers were amazingly adept at regularly promoting the value of science, many others missed out on important opportunities to promote the value of science. The authors…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Literacy, Scientific Principles, Science Interests
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Seider, Scott; Novick, Sarah – Educational Leadership, 2011
A Boston school for grades 6-12 is making a deliberate effort to help students develop ethical minds. Each year, all students take an ethical philosophy class in which they discuss the school's core values and how these values are addressed in the writings of such philosophers as Aristotle and Rousseau. Through these classes, students develop a…
Descriptors: Values, Ethics, Values Education, Ethical Instruction
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Weissbourd, Richard; Dodge, Trevor – Educational Leadership, 2012
Although most people in the United States believe, at least theoretically, in educational equality, fewer and fewer appear to care about the resource gaps between affluent and poor schools, says Weissbourd. He illustrates these gaps with vivid descriptions of what he calls an "opulence arms race" among affluent independent schools, but…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Economically Disadvantaged, Advantaged, Differences
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Nieto, Sonia – Educational Leadership, 2009
Teachers' attitudes, beliefs, values, and dispositions have a powerful influence on why teachers teach and why they remain in the profession in spite of difficult conditions that test their resolve. Conditions at the school and district levels and attitudes and actions on the part of teachers themselves are also crucial. School districts should…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Beliefs, Values, School Districts
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Howard, Rebecca Moore; Davies, Laura J. – Educational Leadership, 2009
In an age when students gravitate to online sources for research--and when tremendous amounts of both reputable and questionable information are available online--many have come to regard the Internet itself as a culprit in students' plagiarism. Some teachers go so far as to forbid students from researching online, in the mistaken assumption that…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Internet, Cheating, Ethics
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Brandt, Ron – Educational Leadership, 1988
When parents neglect their children's moral education and community influences are negative, schools need to form partnerships and work for change. This article reviews problems encountered when schools attempt to inculcate or clarify moral values and summarizes various authors' opinions on the subject. (MLH)
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Cultural Differences, Elementary Secondary Education, Moral Values
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