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Brasch, Richard A. – School Administrator, 1994
Describes a three-unit inservice training course on cognitive styles developed by a Pennsylvania school district and approved by the state's education department. Course learnings may be applied to lesson planning, journal-writing observations, peer-coaching experiences, student-teacher learning style differences, analysis of teaching/counseling…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Elementary Education, Inservice Education, Staff Development
Foriska, Terry J. – Schools in the Middle, 1994
A principal gained the cooperation of five teachers (representing science, history, reading, English, and remedial reading) for using diagnostic information to drive instructional practice. After administering the cognitive section of the NASSP Learning Style to students and tabulating results, the principal worked with teachers to personalize…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Data Collection, Instructional Leadership, Secondary Education
Peer reviewedKuskie, Marlene; Kuskie, Larry – Technology Teacher, 1994
The more time and effort that a technology education teacher takes to make facilitative responses, the more the student will take responsibility for learning outcomes. Responses focusing on feelings, attitudes and values, clarifying and supporting, and questioning and supporting provide a basis for counseling and interacting with students. (JOW)
Descriptors: Counseling, Learning Processes, Secondary Education, Teacher Effectiveness
Peer reviewedBurniske, R. W. – English Journal, 1994
Describes the way one teacher used extensive journal writing by students over assigned readings and the pros and cons of such an activity. Considers how teachers should respond to and evaluate student journal writings. Provides advice on how such journals can be used to develop writing voice. (HB)
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Instruction, High Schools, Journal Writing
Coe, Gretchen; And Others – Writing Notebook: Visions for Learning, 1994
Presents six teachers' responses to the "Private Eye" workshop (which encourages thinking by analogy and incorporating writing in many forms into content area teaching). Notes that the workshop was described in two articles in the November/December 1993 issue of this journal. Notes the energy that flows out of the teachers' writing about…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Content Area Writing, Elementary Secondary Education, Teacher Response
Peer reviewedDively, Ronda Leathers – Composition Studies/Freshman English News, 1993
Discusses the possibly embarrassing and awkward situation that results when a writing teacher must respond to student texts written from a religious perspective. Provides a theoretical basis that allows for teachers to encourage students to study and critique religious discourse in an academic manner. (HB)
Descriptors: College English, Discourse Modes, English Instruction, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBeason, Larry – Research in the Teaching of English, 1993
Studies the writing processes of noncomposition students, particularly the patterns of feedback and revision in four writing-across-the-curriculum courses. Analyzes the first and final drafts of 20 students. Highlights several issues for further research. (HB)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Teacher Response, Writing Across the Curriculum
Peer reviewedScribner, Jay Paredes – Journal of School Leadership, 1999
Examines urban high-school teachers' professional-development experiences through the lenses of personal teaching efficacy and professional learning, highlighting interview responses of 20 teachers with highest and lowest scores. Degree of personal teaching efficacy influences how individual teachers experience professional development. Programs…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, High Schools, Individual Needs, Interviews
Peer reviewedLittle, Thomas S.; Dacus, Nannette B. – Educational Leadership, 1999
A Tennessee elementary school's adoption of a looping program, allowing teachers to stay with their classes for two years, resulted in improved student confidence and teacher/parent relationships. Looping places less pressure on young students to learn all curriculum objectives in one year. Lessons and benefits are summarized. (MLH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Looping (Teachers), Parent Teacher Cooperation, Program Implementation
Peer reviewedApol, Laura – Journal of Children's Literature, 1998
Explores the relationship between literary theory and children's literature in teacher-education classrooms, positioning itself in the gap between books and children, texts and readers, and theory and practice in literature. Concludes by offering the author's experience as an example of the richness the use of literary theory brings to an…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Higher Education, Student Reaction
Maidenberg, Claudia – Thrust for Educational Leadership, 2000
Staff at the Cucamonga (California) School District discovered no magic key to improving mediocre student performance in their schools. Academic gains became evident only after implementing several steady-improvement strategies in teaching, instructional technologies, learning focus, libraries, remedial reading, and summer school. (MLH)
Descriptors: Accountability, Change Strategies, Elementary Education, Language Arts
Peer reviewedO'Neill, Peggy – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1998
Argues that student self-assessment and reflection need to be central components of writing instruction and that the response sequence between teacher and student should routinely include them. Offers examples of this sequence with two students, and presents nine specific classroom strategies that put self-assessment and reflection at the center…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Teacher Response, Teacher Student Relationship
Ladson-Billings, Gloria; Gomez, Mary Louise – Phi Delta Kappan, 2001
A project conducted by two university instructors and a group of Madison-area primary teachers attempted to improve at-risk students' early literacy capabilities. The Teachers Helping Teachers project helped participating teachers create their own small professional-development communities, emphasize children's strengths, and improve instruction.…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Instructional Improvement, Literacy Education, Primary Education
Peer reviewedNewcombe, Geoffrey; McCormick, John – Educational Management & Administration, 2001
To examine teachers' role in school-based budgeting, 141 government schools were surveyed in New South Wales, Australia. The study discovered that teachers' actual involvement in both first-order and technical financial decision-making was positively associated with trust in the decision-making process and its leaders. (Contains 55 references.)…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, School Based Management, Teacher Participation
Peer reviewedEnnis, Catherine D. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1996
Summarizes a study exploring the effects of student confrontation on high school teachers' intended curricula. Examines the context of confrontation through 10 urban teachers' discourses. Teachers eliminated controversial content and even altered formal curricula to maintain control and avoid confrontation. Constructing a more meaningful learning…
Descriptors: Blacks, Context Effect, Hidden Curriculum, High Schools


