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Lowe, J. Allen – 1986
Two of the most important functions that take place in school districts are staff development and staff evaluation. The relationship between these two functions, however, is more than two separate entities with some common administrative activities. Although it is conceivable that one of these functions is driven or motivated by the other, a…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Utilization, Faculty Development, Instructional Improvement
Riley, Mary S. – 1985
This document presents hypotheses about how much understanding a user needs to perform skillfully using a computer or a computer program. A framework for characterizing user understanding is presented which includes three criteria for evaluating the representation generated during problem solving: (1) internal coherence--whether the components of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Processes, Computers
Stocking, Sally Elizabeth – 1983
Seventeen art activities are suggested for use in the intermediate-level class of English as a second language to review specific grammar points, provide conversation practice, and improve writing skills. In these art activities, students create their own visual aids and use them for a variety of language activities, such as: creating a family…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Class Activities, Classroom Communication, English (Second Language)
Wess, Robert C. – 1985
The controversial uses of the generic research essay and literature in the composition class fuse together as one issue when one considers the use of literature to teach the research essay in the freshman composition class. This pedagogical approach requires that students read a novel, selected by the teacher, write several essays about it, and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Integrated Activities, Literature
Paris, Cynthia L. – 1985
Answers to questions about how children successfully use computers were found by identifying computer skills and concepts achieved by children attending the 1984 Computer Camp for Young Children at the University of Delaware. A total of 43 children from 4 through 7 years of age attended 1-1/2 hour sessions each day for 4 weeks. Computer activities…
Descriptors: Computer Literacy, Computer Software, Curriculum Development, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Lynch, Claire – Business Education Forum, 1974
The here-and-there approach to teaching and evaluating business and office skills will teach the skills, but training the totally competent office employee can best be accomplished by integrating and evaluating those skills as the business and office graduate will find them on the job--as a total performance. (Author/BP)
Descriptors: Business Education, Classroom Techniques, Clerical Occupations, Curriculum Development
Haapio, Marja – Adult Education in Finland, 1973
Descriptors: Adult Education, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Background, Cultural Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Labianca, Dominick A. – Science Education, 1975
Describes a way of teaching science designed to stimulate interest among non-science majors to help make science a more meaningful subject to them. Attention is focused on the study of a particular type of air pollution and on the use of the discipline of art to examine the effects of this pollution. (EB)
Descriptors: Air Pollution, College Science, General Education, Higher Education
Battist, Sondra – Sch Arts, 1969
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Creative Art, Grade 6
Gold, Janet T. – 1981
An understanding of an author's structure of ideas assists readers in comprehending a text. Three kinds of writing activities relate to a reading comprehension subskill. (1) sequencing--the logical presentation of events, times, places, ideas or steps in a procedure to accomplish a task or to comprehend an event--for which a teaching progression…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Integrated Activities, Prediction, Reading Comprehension
Gold, Janet T. – 1981
A program of written composition based on reading comprehension can help students gain greater in-depth understanding of reading materials. Once the reading comprehension skill has been clearly defined for the class, the writing activity can provide clarification by allowing for analysis of the definition through written manipulation of language.…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Integrated Activities, Reading Comprehension, Reading Instruction
Carter, John Marshall – 1981
Both literature teachers who take the time to teach historical background and history teachers who take the time to incorporate literature into their classes will help students to discover that life is multidimensional. Some practical activities are required to correlate language arts with social studies. One such activity involves assigning…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Techniques, Elementary Secondary Education, History
New York City Board of Education, Brooklyn, NY. Div. of Curriculum and Instruction. – 1979
This manual is designed to help elementary and secondary school administrators to create an Arts in General Education (AGE) program consistent with the needs of their school community. The history of AGE, a program developed in New York City in the mid 1970s, is reviewed. The rationale for the program's underlying concept, that is, that the arts…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Art Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Fine Arts
Routh, Robert D. – 1977
Image making, like writing and speaking, is a carrier of ideas. This paper presents photography as therapy, a useful concept for advocates of humanistic education. The paper shows that Western civilization, due to its preoccupation with science, technology, and commerce, enhances and promotes left-hemispheric brain functions (verbal, analytical,…
Descriptors: Cerebral Dominance, Educational Objectives, Humanistic Education, Humanization
Morine, Greta – 1975
This paper contends that integrative teacher decisions, the links that unite classroom events, are lacking in many classrooms. The author first presents examples of integrative decisions. These examples involve (a) teacher planning, (b) classroom interaction, and (c) pupil feedback. The author uses these examples to demonstrate that there are…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Decision Making, Feedback, Integrated Activities
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