Understanding Teacher Stress in an Age of Accountability

Understanding Teacher Stress in an Age of Accountability
Author: Richard Lambert
Publisher: IAP
Total Pages: 243
Release: 2006-03-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1607525232

School districts today face increasing calls for accountability during a time when budgets are stretched and students’ needs have become increasingly complex. The teacher’s responsibility is to educate younger people, but now more than ever, teachers face demands on a variety of fronts. In addition to teaching academic content, schools are responsible for students’ performance on state-wide tests. They are also asked to play an increasingly larger role in children’s well-being, including their nutritional needs and social and emotional welfare. Teachers have shown themselves to be more than capable of taking up such challenges, but what price is paid for the increasing demands we are placing on our schools? Understanding Teacher Stress in an Age of Accountability is about the nature of teachers stress and the resources they can employ to cope with it. Accountability is a two-way street and the authors in this volume suggest remedies for reducing teacher stress and in all likelihood increasing student learning—greater administrative support, more and better instructional materials, specialized resources targeted at demanding children, parental support, and professional recognition. Readers will discover that lack of funding, low pay, concerns about academic performance and student misbehavior, and increased public and governmental scrutiny are not exclusive to the United States. In this volume, the third in a series on Research on Stress and Coping in Education, authors from Australia, Turkey, Malaysia, and the Netherlands sound the same alarms, post the same warnings, and draw similarly disturbing conclusions.

Interthinking: Putting Talk to Work

Interthinking: Putting Talk to Work
Author: Karen Littleton
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2013-08-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1136675302

Written in an accessible and jargon-free style, Interthinking: putting talk to work explores the growing body of work on how people think creatively and productively together. Challenging purely individualistic accounts of human evolution and cognition, its internationally acclaimed authors provide analyses of real-life examples of collective thinking in everyday settings including workplaces, schools, rehearsal spaces and online environments. The authors use socio-cultural psychology to explain the processes involved in interthinking, to explore its creative power, but also to understand why collective thinking isn’t always productive or successful. With this knowledge we can maximise the constructive benefits of our ability to interthink, and understand the best ways in which we can help young people to develop, nurture and value that capability.

Translation of Cultures

Translation of Cultures
Author: Petra Wittke-Rüdiger
Publisher: Rodopi
Total Pages: 321
Release: 2009
Genre: Communication
ISBN: 9042025964

The contributors to this collection approach the subject of the translation of cultures from various angles. Translation refers to the rendering of texts from one language into another and the shift between languages under precolonial (retelling/transcreation), colonial (domestication), and postcolonial (multilingual trafficking) conditions.

Colour and Language

Colour and Language
Author: Siegfried Wyler
Publisher: Gunter Narr Verlag
Total Pages: 210
Release: 1992
Genre: Color
ISBN: 9783823342199

Linguistic Construction of Ethnic Borders

Linguistic Construction of Ethnic Borders
Author: Peter Rosenberg
Publisher: Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der Wissenschaften
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2015
Genre: Anthropological linguistics
ISBN: 9783631653777

This volume focuses on the linguistic constructs involved in ethnic borders. Ethnic borders have proven themselves to be surprisingly long-lived: in nearly all European countries and beyond, border demarcation, exclusion of foreigners, and minority conflicts are some of the most persistent challenges for nations and societies. Which linguistic factors play a role in the formation of these borders, especially those drawn along ethnic lines? Which linguistic constructs contribute to the negotiation, establishment and maintenance of ethnic groups and identities? Under which conditions can processes of linguistic convergence, hybrids, or transcultural identities be observed?

The Social Psychology of Expertise

The Social Psychology of Expertise
Author: Harald A. Mieg
Publisher: Psychology Press
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2001-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1135652147

Mieg's book, in our LEA Expertise series, will cover the issues of expertise and relate them to experts' roles in psychology, organizational studies, and sociology.

Barbarian Spring

Barbarian Spring
Author: Jonas Lüscher
Publisher: Haus Publishing
Total Pages: 108
Release: 2015-03-15
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1908323841

On a business trip to Tunisia, Preising, a leading Swiss industrialist, is invited to spend the week with the daughter of a local gangster. He accompanies her to the wedding of two London city traders at a desert luxury resort that was once the site of an old Berber oasis. With the wedding party in full swing and the bride riding up the aisle on a camel, no one is aware that the global financial system stands on the brink of collapse. As the wedding guests nurse their hangovers, they learn that the British pound has depreciated tenfold, and their world begins to crumble around them. So begins Barbarian Spring, the debut novel from Jonas Lüscher, a major emerging voice in European fiction. The timely and unusual novel centers on a culture clash between high finance and the value system of the Maghreb. Provocative and entertaining, Barbarian Spring is a refreshingly original and all-too-believable satire for our times.

Translation and Meaning

Translation and Meaning
Author: Marcel Thelen
Publisher: Lodz Studies in Language
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016
Genre: Semantics
ISBN: 9783631663905

This book presents new and innovative ideas on the didactics of translation and interpreting. They include assessment methods and criteria, assessment of competences, graduate employability, placements, skills labs, the perceived skills gap between training and profession, the teaching of terminology, and curriculum design.

Collected Philosophical Papers

Collected Philosophical Papers
Author: E. Levinas
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 228
Release: 1987-03-31
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9789024733958

Brings together some of the most important short texts of Emmanuel Levinas, a major voice in 20th-century philosophical thought. These writings originally appeared separately as lectures and journal articles over a period of 30 years. Essays introduce or clarify themes found throughout Levinas' thought, particularly his two most sweeping philosophical works, Totality and Infinity and Otherwise than Being, or Beyond Essence. Includes an introduction to his philosophy by the translator. First published in 1987. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR