What Happens In Classrooms Instructional Practices In Elementary And Secondary Schools 1994 95
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What Happens in Classrooms?
Author | : Robin R. Henke |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 220 |
Release | : 1999-01-01 |
Genre | : Elementary school teaching |
ISBN | : 9780160500718 |
This report presents estimates of the proportion of teachers who use a wide range of teaching practices, including those frequently recommended in curriculum and teaching standards and those that have traditionally been part of teachers' practice. The report analyzes data from the 1994-95 Teacher Follow-up Survey, which administered a series of items on instructional practices to a national sample of K-12 teachers in all subject areas. The report examines teachers' practices in four areas: roles that teachers and students play in learning activities; materials and technology used in the classroom; kinds of learning tasks that students complete in the classroom and at home; and how teachers assess and evaluate student learning. The report discusses whether teachers' choices of instructional strategies vary with characteristics of teachers and their students. The report concludes that U.S. teachers use a wide variety of instructional strategies on a weekly basis, including strategies recommended by reformers and traditional techniques. Student grade level and class subject area relate to the strategies for instruction that teachers choose. Teachers' instructional choices are partly responses to characteristics of their students. Teachers who participate in recent faculty development are more likely to use recommended teaching practices than those who do not. Four appendixes present detailed tables, standard error tables, technical notes and methodology, and the Teacher Follow-up Survey (questionnaire for current teachers). (Contains approximately 75 references.) (SM)
NAEP 1998 Civics Report Card for the Nation
Author | : |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 196 |
Release | : 1999 |
Genre | : Academic achievement |
ISBN | : |
Product description (from NCES): This publication presents the results of the NAEP 1998 civics assessment for the nation. The results are based on assessing a sample of students who are statistically representative of the entire nation. For this subject, in contrast to the other major subject reports presented this year in reading and writing, there were no additional state level results. Students' performance on the national assessment is described in terms of their average civics score on a 0- to 300 scale and in terms of the percentage of students attaining each of the three achievement levels: Basic, Proficient, and Advanced.
SAGE Handbook of Research on Classroom Assessment
Author | : James H. McMillan |
Publisher | : SAGE |
Total Pages | : 577 |
Release | : 2013 |
Genre | : Education |
ISBN | : 1412995876 |
The Sage Handbook of Research on Classroom Assessment provides scholars, professors, graduate students, and other researchers and policy makers in the organizations, agencies, testing companies, and school districts with a comprehensive source of research on all aspects of K-12 classroom assessment. The handbook emphasizes theory, conceptual frameworks, and all varieties of research (quantitative, qualitative, mixed methods) to provide an in-depth understanding of the knowledge base in each area of classroom assessment and how to conduct inquiry in the area. It presents classroom assessment research to convey, in depth, the state of knowledge and understanding that is represented by the research, with particular emphasis on how classroom assessment practices affect student achieventment and teacher behavior. Editor James H. McMillan and five Associate Editors bring the best thinking and analysis from leading classroom assessment researchers on the nature of the research, making significant contributions to this prominent and hotly debated topic in education.
In the Middle
Author | : Martha Naomi Alt |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 220 |
Release | : 2000 |
Genre | : Education |
ISBN | : |
Prompted by widely held concerns about middle schools' academic rigor and the effectiveness of activities designed to help early adolescents develop in non-academic realms, many middle school educators have renewed efforts to develop curricula and instructional strategies that challenge students academically and expand their intellectual interests, to ensure that teachers receive appropriate training to meet student needs, and to create more nurturing and supportive environments. This report uses data from the Schools and Staffing Survey and the accompanying Teacher Follow-Up Survey to describe various aspects of middle schools, examine how they have changed over time, and compare middle schools with elementary and secondary schools. Following an introduction exploring policy issues related to middle schools, the report examines data in the areas of: (1) organization of schooling, including locations, size and other characteristics, and classroom organization and class size; (2) programs and services, including health-related services; (3) decision making and management, including site-based decision making and principals' and teachers' perceptions of their influence; (4) staffing, including qualifications, teacher workload, and staff turnover; and (5) school climate, including teacher satisfaction, and teachers' and administrators' ratings of problems at their schools. The concluding section of the report explores areas for future research. Tables and notes are appended. (Contains 66 references.) (HTH)
The Next Generation of Citizens
Author | : |
Publisher | : DIANE Publishing |
Total Pages | : 85 |
Release | : 2001 |
Genre | : Civics |
ISBN | : 1428926283 |
History Lessons
Author | : S.G. Grant |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 281 |
Release | : 2014-04-04 |
Genre | : Education |
ISBN | : 1135625883 |
In this book, extended case studies of two veteran teachers and their students are combined with the extant research literature to explore current issues of teaching, learning, and testing U.S. history. It is among the first to examine these issues together and in interaction. While the two teachers share several similarities, the teaching practices they construct could not be more different. To explore these differences, the author asks what their teaching practices look like, how their instruction influences their students' understandings of history, and what role statewide exams play in their classroom decisions. History Lessons: Teaching, Learning, and Testing in U.S. High School Classrooms is a major contribution to the emerging body of empirical research in the field of social studies education, chiefly in the subject area of history, which asks how U.S. students make sense of history and how teachers construct their classroom practices. Three case study chapters are paired with three essay review chapters intended to help readers analyze the cases by looking at them in the context of the current research literature. Two concluding chapters extend the cases and analyses: the first looks at how and why the teachers profiled in this book construct their individual teaching practices, in terms of three distinct but interacting sets of influences--personal, organizational, and policy factors; the second explores the prospects for promoting what the author defines as ambitious teaching and learning. Many policymakers assume that standards-based reforms support the efforts of ambitious teachers, but until we better understand how they and the students in their classes think and act, that assumption is hollow at best. This book is a must have for faculty and students in the field of social studies education, and broadly relevant across the fields of curriculum studies and educational policy.
Kindergarten Teachers
Author | : Elvie Germino-Hausken |
Publisher | : Department of Education Institute of Education Sciences |
Total Pages | : 78 |
Release | : 2004 |
Genre | : Education |
ISBN | : |
Kindergarten classroom activities typically cover many of the language arts and math concepts and skills that provide important foundations for learning throughout the elementary school years. Kindergarten teachers play an important role in children's kindergarten experiences. This report examines aspects of the kindergarten experience through a national profile of teachers of the kindergarten class of 1998-99 in the U.S. It presents data collected from questionnaires completed by 3,102 kindergarten teachers. The report describes the demographic characteristics and professional qualifications of the kindergarten teachers in both public and private school kindergartens. Also examines data on the schools and classrooms where they teach. Tables and graphs.