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Teachers' Use of Strategies to Facilitate the Communication of Preschool Children with Disabilities.
Peer reviewedRoberts, Joanne Erwick; And Others – Journal of Early Intervention, 1992
Observation of 31 teachers and their preschool students with disabilities in 2 contexts (meals and activities) showed that teachers frequently engaged children in communicative interactions, commented on ongoing activities, were highly responsive, and waited for children to respond. Teachers less frequently expanded children's utterances, prompted…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Communication Skills, Disabilities, Early Intervention
Peer reviewedScherer, Marge – Educational Leadership, 1992
Although teachers can gain as much as students from practicing conflict resolution procedures, they often remain unconvinced about benefits unless they actually try them. Drawing on experimental programs in Pittsburgh and New York City, this article describes the basics of moving adults from conflict to collaboration. Morton Deutsch's sidebar…
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Cooperation, Discipline, Dissent
Peer reviewedFuchs, Lynn S.; And Others – Learning Disabilities Research and Practice, 1992
Twenty-five general and 37 special education teachers were compared in their planning and adaptation for students with learning disabilities. Results indicated that special education teachers who used curriculum-based measurement (CBM) adapted students' programs more frequently and relied on more objective databases than did non-CBM special…
Descriptors: Diagnostic Teaching, Educational Planning, Elementary Education, Evaluation Methods
Peer reviewedO'Donoghue, Thomas A. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1994
Describes restructuring in a Western Australian school district. Provides background information and summarizes findings of a case study exploring what primary teachers thought about the restructuring of their work. The 60 teachers interviewed generally thought the restructuring process negatively influenced their curriculum work. Teachers felt…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Curriculum Development, Educational Innovation, Elementary Education
Development and Validation of Feedback Routines for Instructing Students with Learning Disabilities.
Peer reviewedKline, Frank M.; And Others – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1991
This study found that special education teachers (n=18) effectively integrated two feedback routines into their teaching: a teacher-delivered elaborated feedback routine and an elaborated feedback plus student-acceptance routine. The routines were equally powerful in reducing the number of trials to mastery for students with learning disabilities.…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Elementary Secondary Education, Feedback, Instructional Effectiveness
Peer reviewedNielsen, A. Brian; Beauchamp, Larry – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 1992
A study examined the effect of conceptual kinesiology training on the feedback patterns of preservice physical educators who, before and after training, viewed videotapes of familiar and novel skills then provided corrective feedback. Training resulted in significant increases in the corrective, accurate trial-specific feedback for both skills.…
Descriptors: Feedback, Higher Education, Learning Strategies, Physical Education
Peer reviewedColeman, Laurence J. – Journal for the Education of the Gifted, 1991
An expert teacher was studied, using ethnographic and phenomenological techniques, as he planned and taught 2 philosophy courses to gifted students, ages 12-18. The paper provides an overview of the teacher's thoughts and an explanation of the impact of an unwritten and unobservable collection of knowledge on the teacher's observable planning and…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Gifted, Knowledge Level, Lesson Observation Criteria
Peer reviewedDuker, Pieter C.; van Lent, Chretienne – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1991
Consequences were withheld for high-rate gesture requests of 6 mentally handicapped individuals (ages 12-40), to increase the proportion of gestures used spontaneously. Results suggest that the teacher's nonresponding to high-rate spontaneous gesture requests increased individuals' use of previously taught but unused gesture requests. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Adults, Body Language, Classroom Communication, Communication Skills
Peer reviewedMarren, Eamon; Levacic, Rosalind – Educational Management and Administration, 1994
Summarizes research into the positive and negative views about school-based management (local management of schools) held by senior managers, governors, and classroom teachers in 11 schools within 1 British local education authority. LMS has concentrated financial tasks within a small elite group of senior managers and governors, with governors…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Decision Making, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedChamley, John; And Others – NASSP Bulletin, 1994
Educational change must be facilitated, not dictated, to be successful. Since most new curriculum programs ignore complex classroom realities, teachers usually view them negatively. Facilitative principals create the necessary conditions for change by progressing through three stages: creating new roles and expectations, mobilizing proponents for…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Change Agents, Curriculum Problems, Educational Change
Peer reviewedArnold, David Harvey; McWilliams, Lorette; Arnold, Elizabeth Harvey – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Used least squares analysis and simultaneous structural equation modeling to examine the bidirectional relationship between day-care teachers' lax, overreactive discipline and young children's behavior problems. Found that teachers' laxness strongly influenced child misbehavior and child misbehavior influenced teachers' overreactivity and laxness.…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Causal Models, Day Care, Discipline
Peer reviewedHenning-Stout, Mary – Journal of School Psychology, 1999
An ethnographic study of the experiences of graduate students (N=8) learning to consult revealed three primary themes. Content analysis and subsequent structural corroboration of three datasets indicated participants' application of procedures, awareness of professional perspectives, and emphasis on attending relationships. Discusses implications…
Descriptors: Consultation Programs, Content Analysis, Counselor Training, Data Analysis
Bell, Linda – Reaching Today's Youth: The Community Circle of Caring Journal, 1999
Reflects on emotional demands experienced by teachers working with depressed students. Describes the pain behind students' depression through personal accounts. Shares strategies on how teachers can remain hopeful and focused on students' needs, including making sure personal needs are met, acknowledging when something positive happens, and…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Emotional Problems, Emotional Response, High School Students
Peer reviewedQueen, J. Allen; Isenhour, Kimberly Gaskey – NASSP Bulletin, 1998
If administrators fail to seek faculty support for block scheduling, teachers may feel undervalued, angry, and adversarial. When principals allow teacher committees to take leadership roles, teachers can assume ownership of the new model. Adminstrators must establish teacher confidence in transitions, maintain effective communication, monitor…
Descriptors: Administrator Behavior, Administrator Responsibility, Block Scheduling, Change Strategies
Nelson, Wade W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1998
In Minnesota, imperial forces would implement a controlling, if well-intentioned system designed to make teachers and students conform to standards not of their choosing. Based on outcome-based education precepts, the proposed reform ideas are retreads of tried and untrue conservative concepts with a history of failure. When minimum expectations…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Accountability, Competency Based Education, Conservatism


