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Kabilan, Muhammad Kamarul; Embi, Mohamed Amin – Teacher Development, 2006
In terms of education, e-mail has cemented its importance, as well as its status, as the overarching Internet tool. Specifically in the research of teacher education and teacher development, e-mails have been found to be empowering teachers' collaborative and networking practices. Such use of e-mails stimulates and refreshes teachers' professional…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Professional Development, English (Second Language), Language Teachers
Rust, Frances; Meyers, Ellen – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2006
This paper focuses on the Teachers Network Leadership Institute (TNLI), an initiative designed to bring the voice of teachers into the educational policy arena through teacher action research. We view teachers' research on teaching and on school processes as an important means through which to expose the various sources of tension between policy…
Descriptors: Action Research, Educational Change, Teacher Researchers, Educational Policy
Goodfellow, Joy – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2004
Many early childhood practitioners use pedagogical documentation as an important process that enables children's thinking to be represented in a form that can be readily shared with others (Dahlberg et al., 1999). Documentation in the form of a professional portfolio provides a vehicle for reflection and an appreciation of the complexities and…
Descriptors: Portfolios (Background Materials), Documentation, Early Childhood Education, Professional Development
Eaude, Tony – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2005
I discuss philosophical and methodological difficulties in researching young children's spiritual development. I describe my research involving detailed discussions with, and observations of, 14 teachers of 4- and 5-year-olds. I highlight key issues, including what distinguishes spiritual from other sorts of development, the nature of children's…
Descriptors: Criticism, Young Children, Spiritual Development, Research Methodology
Kinchin, I. M.; Alias, M. – Journal of In-service Education, 2005
Consideration of variations in the gross morphology of concept maps can be helpful in the context of lesson planning by promoting the consideration of the multiple perspectives held by students. The three basic concept map structures are described as having particular utility at different stages of the planning process: (a) chain-type maps…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Morphology (Languages), Cognitive Structures, Microteaching
Trierweiler, Hannah – Instructor, 2005
This article presents a list of 26 adventures listed in alphabetical order that teachers can do during the summer. During the summer, teachers can trek through the Alps, build a class blog, or turn trash into cash. They can also read books or volunteer for a cause.
Descriptors: Summer Programs, Vacations, Vacation Programs, Leisure Time
Melnick, Steven A.; Henk, William A. – Educational Administration Quarterly, 2006
Background: The No Child Left Behind legislation creates an increased need for new school-based empirical studies whose implementation will depend largely on researchers' access to various school populations and records. Access decisions are typically made by superintendents, or their designees, functioning as gatekeepers who control right of…
Descriptors: School Districts, Superintendents, Decision Making, Federal Legislation
Barrow, Lloyd H. – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2006
This paper describes how interpretations of inquiry have changed during the 20th Century. These multiple meanings have resulted in (a) confusion among K-12 teachers of science and (b) various interpretations by science teacher educators. Suggestions are provided for preservice programs (both science and methods courses), professional development…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Intellectual History, Elementary Secondary Education, Science Teachers
Hanling, Lu – Chinese Education and Society, 2005
It is quite common for teachers in higher education institutions to have a second job. Why do they have a second job? What sort of second jobs do they have? What effect, if any, does a second job have on teachers' professional development and on their main job? How do they feel about a second job? This article examines this topic and makes some…
Descriptors: Teacher Surveys, Universities, Multiple Employment, Sample Size
Allen, Laura Van Zandt; Migliore, Eleanor T. – Middle School Journal (J3), 2005
This article provides the details about the Parent Support Program (PSP), a program developed by the educators at Trinity University and Jackson Middle School in San Antonio to increase parent involvement while providing authentic experiences for preservice teachers and school psychology students. The PSP began with a teacher at Jackson Middle…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Professional Development Schools, Parent Participation, Parent School Relationship
Re-Inventing the Wheel? Divergent Conceptions of the Role of Internal Verifiers within Organisations
Warmington, Paul; Wilmut, John – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2004
The work of internal verifiers (IVs) is integral to ensuring that the operation of vocational qualifications meets the local needs of learners and employers, while also maintaining reliable quality nationally and throughout occupational sectors. Arguably, though, the role of IVs in the management of vocational learning often remains narrowly…
Descriptors: Quality Control, Vocational Education, Interviews, Job Performance
De Weerdt, Sven; Bouwen, Rene; Corthouts, Felix; Martens, Hilda – Industry and Higher Education, 2006
Societal and organizational change requires people to change their professional identity continuously. Starting from two theoretical traditions that address identity and learning, the authors analysed the learning narratives of two sets of learners--participants in a two-year experiential learning programme and student interns, both in the domain…
Descriptors: Organizational Change, Experiential Learning, Transformative Learning, Self Esteem
Bechtel, Pamela A.; O'Sullivan, Mary – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 2006
There are many factors that affect the design of effective professional development (PD) programs. This review of literature focuses on some of the theoretical models used to explain teacher change, the contextual factors that impact teacher behaviors and curricular change, and the role of continuous professional development in changing teaching…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Models, Educational Change, Professional Development
Madden, Nancy A. – Journal of Negro Education, 2006
"Success for All" is a comprehensive reform model, which applies cooperative learning, tutoring, family support services, and extensive professional development to help high-poverty schools succeed with their pupils. A review of research on "Success for All" with African American students focuses on evidence that the model reduces the achievement…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, White Students, Professional Development, Family Programs
DuFour, Rick – Journal of Staff Development, 2004
Most schools and districts have created an artificial distinction between working and learning. They operate in a way that suggests teachers work (teach) 180 or so days a year and learn (attend programs) on four or five days each year set aside for professional development. The author states that school leaders must end this distinction between…
Descriptors: Professional Development, Administrator Attitudes, Attitude Change, Educational Change

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