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Peer reviewedTymms, Peter – School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 2001
The feelings (self-concepts and attitudes) of 21,000 British 7-year-olds toward math, reading, and school were investigated using multivariate multilevel models. The most important explanatory variables were the teacher and pupils' academic level. Other variables (age, sex, and first language) were weakly connected to attitude measures. (Contains…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Mathematics, Primary Education, Reading
Peterson, Paul E.; West, Martin R. – Education Next, 2006
No Child Left Behind (NCLB), the federal school-accountability law, is widely held to have accomplished one good thing: require states to publish test-score results in math and reading for each school in grades 3 through 8 and again in grade 10. The results appear to be telling parents whether their child's school is doing a better job than the…
Descriptors: School Effectiveness, Accountability, Federal Legislation, Educational Improvement
Peer reviewedMcMeekin, Robert W. – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2003
Suggests that networks of schools help improve school performance, and that one reason some networks are successful is that they promote the creation of sound institutional environments in member schools. Describes three such networks: the Matte Schools of Santiago, Chile; the Fe y Alegria schools in Latin American countries; and the Accelerated…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Networks
Perna, Mark C. – Techniques: Connecting Education and Careers, 2006
This article discusses how benefits can be used to market a school. Creating emotional attachment can help use benefits to market the school and its programs to a target audience. Such emotional attachment can be created through clear and concise benefit statements. Powerful benefit statements that project a clear picture of the programs, services…
Descriptors: Educational Benefits, Student Recruitment, Enrollment Management, Enrollment
Schagen, Ian – Educational Studies, 2006
Measures of school performance based on pupil attainment are becoming more sophisticated, with DfES piloting "contextualized value-added" measures. However, most such measures are based on simple sums of residuals about "expected" values, but it is clear from national data that distributions of performance are not symmetrical…
Descriptors: School Effectiveness, Evaluation Methods, Accountability, Foreign Countries
Wyse, Dominic – British Educational Research Journal, 2003
This article examines three areas that are of central importance to the pedagogy of the National Literacy Strategy Framework for Teaching (FFT) at primary level: inspection evidence; school effectiveness (SE) research; and child development evidence. Analysis of national inspection reports on the teaching of English illustrates that these cannot…
Descriptors: School Effectiveness, Inspection, Child Development, Literacy
Ascher, Carol; Maguire, Cindy – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University (NJ1), 2007
Across the nation, urban school districts struggle to raise often abysmally low high school graduation rates. New York City, with a four-year graduation rate of 57 percent, is no exception. Yet, some high schools in New York, as elsewhere, succeed beyond expectations in bringing students with low academic skills and high needs to graduation in…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, High Schools, Graduation, Enrollment
Clewell, Beatriz Chu; Campbell, Patricia B.; Perlman, Lesley – Urban Institute Press, 2007
"Good Schools in Poor Neighborhoods" contrasts highly effective schools serving urban, low-income, minority youth with their more typical, struggling counterparts. Highlighted are two disparate schools: one serving predominately African American students in a large northeastern city and one serving Latino students in a southwestern urban area.…
Descriptors: African American Students, Neighborhoods, Economically Disadvantaged, Minority Group Children
Alnoor, A. G.; xiang, G. Y. – Online Submission, 2007
The professional competences of middle school mathematics teachers has been identified, also the significance extent of such competences for chinese and yemenies mathematics teachers has been studied. The researcher used descriptive research approach. The study data collected from Specialist educators and teachers experts to determine the…
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Secondary School Mathematics, Correlation, Mathematics Teachers
Perez, Maria; Anand, Priyanka; Speroni, Cecilia; Parrish, Tom; Esra, Phil; Socias, Miguel; Gubbins, Paul – American Institutes for Research, 2007
This report presents the results from a seven-month study of successful schools in California performed by the American Institutes for Research (AIR). It explored some of the concepts underlying the "successful schools" approach to defining education adequacy and considered their implications for analyzing educational adequacy in…
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Educational Finance, Outcomes of Education, Academic Achievement
Shonewise, Enid; Weichel, Mark – Principal Leadership, 2007
What happens in a school when, despite teachers' best efforts in the classroom, students do not learn? The administrators and faculty members at Papillion-La Vista South High School in Nebraska asked themselves this question when they realized that some of their students were struggling, were not turning in work, did not seem to care, and were…
Descriptors: School Culture, Educational Improvement, Position Papers, Educational Change
Skolits, Gary J.; Graybeal, Susan – Community College Review, 2007
This study addresses a campus institutional effectiveness (IE) process and its influence on faculty and staff. Although a comprehensive, rational IE process appeals to campus leaders, this study found that it creates significant faculty and staff challenges. Campus leaders, faculty, and staff differ in their (a) knowledge and support of IE; (b)…
Descriptors: Institutional Evaluation, Community Colleges, College Faculty, School Personnel
Palardy, Gregory J. – School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 2008
This study uses large-scale survey data and a multiple group, multilevel latent growth curve model to examine differential school effects between low, middle, and high social class composition public schools. The results show that the effects of school inputs and school practices on learning differ across the 3 subpopulations. Moreover, student…
Descriptors: Social Class, Academic Achievement, School Effectiveness, Social Influences
Klein, Stephen; Freedman, David; Shavelson, Richard; Bolus, Roger – Evaluation Review, 2008
The Collegiate Learning Assessment (CLA) program measures value added in colleges and universities, by testing the ability of freshmen and seniors to think logically and write clearly. The program is popular enough that it has attracted critics. In this paper, we outline the methods used by the CLA to determine value added. We summarize the…
Descriptors: School Effectiveness, Logical Thinking, College Freshmen, College Seniors
Temple, Paul – London Review of Education, 2008
The connections between the design and use of space in higher education, and the production of teaching and learning, and of research, are not well understood. This paper reports on a literature review on these topics, and shows that higher education spaces can be considered in various ways: in terms of campus design, in terms of how space can…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literature Reviews, Influence of Technology, School Effectiveness

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