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Peer reviewedAlexander, Robin; And Others – Research Papers in Education: Policy and Practice, 1996
Classroom observation, a survey of several hundred primary grade teachers in the United Kingdom, and interviews with teachers found that National Curriculum requirements have produced considerable change in curriculum planning, management, assessment, and recordkeeping, against a backdrop of relative continuity of deeper pedagogy, especially in…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Classroom Communication, Classroom Observation Techniques, Compliance (Legal)
Peer reviewedGilbert, Lori – Primary Voices K-6, 2000
Explains the author's organized yet reflective approach to getting her fifth-grade students to read in literature circles. Discusses her slow and thorough process of building a community, and teaching students to respond to literature. Discusses resources for literature circles, and describes the first literature circle in her classroom (after…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Grade 5, Intermediate Grades
Peer reviewedJohnson, Holly – New Advocate, 2000
Discusses the phenomenon of girls falling silent in the classroom and its detrimental effects on their learning. Observes 11 middle school girls in their reading classrooms and the "girls only" literature circles they participated in. Describes how they benefited from these "girls only" literature circles. Argues it is…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Classroom Communication, Females, Junior High Schools
Peer reviewedSkehan, Peter; Foster, Pauline – Language Teaching Research, 1997
Given recent claims that task-based instruction has desirable pedagogic qualities, this article investigates the effects of choosing different types of tasks, as well as different task implementation conditions, on the fluency, accuracy, and complexity of the language that is produced when tasks are carried out. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, College Students, Decision Making, English (Second Language)
Duckworth, Eleanor; Hills, Shirley – Active Learner: A Foxfire Journal for Teachers, 1997
Suggests ways in which a teacher or visitor can tell whether children are gaining from their science activities: classroom presence of real things to learn from, children working with these materials, and more talking by students than by the teacher. Lists observational questions about student work, behavior, and communication that can be used to…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Elementary Education
Marshall, Candice – Science and Children, 2006
In this article, the author, at the very foundation of her teaching, was trying to establish an environment that would promote inquiry and create an investigative mindset in her first-grader students. First, she assessed her first-grade students' thinking about scientists by asking them to draw and write about what a scientist looks like and does.…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Science Instruction, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Science
Peterson, Kenneth D.; Wahlquist, Christine; Brown, Julie Esparza; Mukhopadhyay, Swapna – Journal of Personnel Evaluation in Education, 2003
Parent or guardian perceptions play a specialized role in the evaluation of school teachers. Parents are important stakeholders in teacher success, they are in some instances partners in the teachers' work, parents have unique personal information about student learning, and they can report on the teacher duties to inform parents about the…
Descriptors: Parents, Teacher Evaluation, Teacher Competencies, Teaching Skills
Nystrand, Martin – Research in the Teaching of English, 2006
In the current research climate favoring rigorous experimental studies of instructional scripts using randomly chosen treatment and control groups, education and literacy researchers and policy makers will do well to take stock of their current research base and assess critical issues in this new context. This review of research on classroom…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Educational Objectives, Discussion, Classroom Communication
Martin, Sonya N.; Milne, Catherine; Scantlebury, Kathryn – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2006
In classrooms from kindergarten to graduate school, researchers have identified target students as students who monopolize material and human resources. Classroom structures that privilege the voice and actions of target students can cause divisive social dynamics that may generate cliques. This study focuses on the emergence of target students,…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Classroom Techniques, Classroom Communication, Teacher Student Relationship
Erchick, Diana B.; Kos, Raylene – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2003
When teacher educators approach their work in preservice methods classrooms, they may confront more than teaching and learning voices in those classrooms. The likelihood of this is increased in those contexts where the teacher educators maintain a commitment to education that addresses cultural issues. In this article, the authors introduce their…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Teacher Educators, Methods Courses, Classroom Environment
Barker, Lecia J.; Garvin-Doxas, Kathy – Computer Science Education, 2004
The authors conducted ethnographic research to provide deep understanding of the learning environment of a selection of computer science classrooms at a large, research university in the United States. Categories emerging from data analysis included (1) impersonal environment and guarded behavior; and (2) the creation and maintenance of informal…
Descriptors: Research Universities, Student Attitudes, Ethnography, Federal Aid
Brown, Raymond; Renshaw, Peter – Mind, Culture, and Activity, 2006
Bakhtin's (1981) concept of chronotope provides a way of viewing student participation in the classroom as a dynamic process constituted through the interaction of past experience, ongoing involvement, and yet-to-be-accomplished goals. Although the actual design and use of classroom space may be important in facilitating a participatory pedagogy,…
Descriptors: Student Participation, Teaching Methods, Educational Environment, Learner Engagement
Mori, Reiko – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2004
Based on qualitative data (class observations, interviews, a letter from the researcher to the teacher about her classroom practice, videotapes, and documents), this paper reconsiders the staying-in-English rule, a popular classroom rule that requires learners to stay in English. It presents an ESL classroom example in which circumstances and…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Language Usage, Student Motivation, Language of Instruction
Gourlay, Lesley – Language Teaching Research, 2005
The three-part Initiation, Response, Follow-up (IRF) cycle, or Triadic Dialogue, has been shown to be a common pattern in classroom discourse, and is widely used in EFL classrooms. The value of Triadic Dialogue has been debated in general education, where it has attracted criticism for being over-formulaic and restrictive, although recent research…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Group Activities, Multilingualism, Business English
Sawyer, R. Keith – Teaching Education, 2004
Effective classroom discussion is improvisational, because its effectiveness derives from the fact that it is not scripted. Instead, the flow of the class is unpredictable, and emerges from the actions of both teachers and students. In this article, I apply principles from training classes for improvisational actors to provide practical…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Discussion, Creative Activities, Classroom Communication

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