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Budescu, David; Bar-Hillel, Maya – Journal of Educational Measurement, 1993
Test taking and scoring are examined from the normative and descriptive perspectives of judgment and decision theory. The number-right scoring rule is endorsed because it discourages omissions and is robust against variability in respondent motivations, item vagaries, and limitations in judgments of uncertainty. (SLD)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Guessing (Tests), Knowledge Level, Multiple Choice Tests
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Marren, 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
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Chamley, 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
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Pressley, Michael; And Others – Reading and Writing Quarterly: Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 1994
Describes a comprehension strategies instruction program called Students Achieving Independent Learning (SAIL). Relates the program to reader response and transactional theories of reading. Shows how the program works in one school system. Compares SAIL with basal series instruction programs. (HB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, English Instruction, Epistemology
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Vooijs, Marcel W.; van der Voort, Tom H. A. – Journal of Research and Development in Education, 1993
Explores the impact of an in-school curriculum designed to teach children 10-12 years of age to become more discriminate consumers of violent crime series seen on television. Results show children perceiving the good guys' violent actions more critically and increasing their understanding of the differences between television and real life…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Audience Response, Criticism, Curriculum Evaluation
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Arnold, 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
Raloff, Janet – Science News, 1998
The most successful science-and-technology center exhibits owe as much to the evaluation of visitor reactions as they do to budgets and planning. Explores different types of visitor-evaluation studies and shares examples of successful exhibit designs built upon visitor evaluations, including children's physics exhibits and jellyfish as living art.…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Display Aids, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Utilization
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Wollman-Bonilla, Julie E.; Werchadlo, Barbara – Reading Teacher, 1999
Finds that with teacher scaffolding (modeling, explicit instruction, feedback, and the creation of contexts for sharing), first graders can write thoughtful, personal, and extended responses to books in their literature-response journals. Discusses teacher and peer scaffolding, and literacy development. Describes in detail the children's…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Grade 1, Journal Writing, Language Arts
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Thomason, Nita Davison – Dimensions of Early Childhood, 1999
Describes how children develop a concept of death, and presents suggestions for classroom experiences to help young children cope with death. Considers children's attendance at funerals and how to answer children's questions about death. Lists 14 children's books about death. (KB)
Descriptors: Bereavement, Books, Childrens Literature, Cognitive Development
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Church, Gladdys Westbrook – Inquiry, 1997
Puts forth Louise Rosenblatt's 1938 Reader-Response Theory as a dominant teaching approach in English education, with Rosenblatt's influence readily apparent in contemporary research. Asserts that English professors today can work the magic of the literary experience through the use of the Reader-Response Theory in the teaching of literature.…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, English Instruction, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
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Ament, Elizabeth A. – Art Education, 1998
Contends that art educators should work toward an educational practice that works to change discriminatory practices, encourages students to reflect about how and why art is produced in all cultures, and recognizes human commonalities in art. States that an art program grounded in feminist views will focus on diverse artistic traditions. (CMK)
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
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Henning-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
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Egawa, Kathy – New Advocate, 1998
Shares the author's experiences as a third-grade teacher facing the dilemma of not having multiple copies of good literature available. Tells the story of how she developed effective instructional strategies for using the limited resources she was able to find. Describes how, despite less than ideal resources, children engaged in rich, thoughtful…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Class Activities, Grade 3, Language Arts
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Shevlin, Michael; O'Moore, Astrid Mona – British Journal of Special Education, 2000
This article describes an Irish program linking mainstream pupils (n=30) and their counterparts with severe and profound learning difficulties (n=16) and assesses the social and educational benefits for all involved. The program had a positive impact on the emotional reactions of young people toward interacting with their peers with learning…
Descriptors: Attitudes toward Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Response, Foreign Countries
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Queen, 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
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