Skip to main content

Home/ ActionResearch/ Group items tagged students

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Amanda Curtin

Cool Cat Teacher Blog: Teaching students with new tools, enthusiasm, and belief that te... - 1 views

  •  
    This blog focuses on the art of using Wiki pages to teach. On this blog teachers can ask questions and share experiences that surround using Wikis within classroom settings.
Amanda Curtin

Effects of training, prompting, and self-monitoring on staff behavior in a classroom fo... - 0 views

  •  
    This study looked at how accurately staff implemented a token economy before and after a treatment package A treatment package of prompting and self-monitoring with accuracy feedback was then introduced. Results showed all participants improved with prompting, self-monitoring, and feedback from staff.
carl ericson

Tom Friedman bangs his drum - 0 views

  •  
    More predictable easy pap from Tom Friedman, the NYTImes resident billionaire sage. He reports that we are falling fast and that we, in order to field a strong military and compete in global economics, need to make serious changes in the quality of our national teacher stock. He points to countries that require teachers to graduate in the top third of their college class and he advocates establishing a federal/national teacher's college, similar to a military academy, as a symbolic leader in the all out public relations battle needed to get people to take schooling seriously. He does closes by acknowledging that students and parents have to get on board, too.
Alison Palmucci

HIGHLY reccommended for CCT Action Researchers: HGSE's Evaluation Exchange - 0 views

  •  
    The "Evaluation Exchange" is a periodical published by the Harvard Graduate School of Education. It reports new ideas in evaluating programs and policies.This is a great resource because they include short yet in-depth articles focused on evaluation. I am sure that most CCT students could find useful resources and information within this site. One article I read, called "Evaluating the Impact of Professional Development," was of interest to me because it directly relates to my topic of evaluating a potential professional development opportunity for teachers.
Renessa Ciampa Brewer

Project-Based Learning: Building Communities of Reflective Practitioners - 3 views

  •  
    (access full PDF via Umass databases page to SAGE journals online) "In this article we delve into the potential learning capacity inherent in project-based organizations derived from conclusions drawn from action research as well as extensive field experience. We propose project-based learning as a means to deal with the challenge of sustainable growth of learning capacity, i.e. developing learning capabilities that enable reasoning beyond the short term; knowledge creation and sharing beyond the individual or team. Based on stories from the field, we explore the distinguishing features of project-based learning and ways in which project-based learning can be instrumental in building communities of reflective practitioners."
  •  
    This is an interesting perspective on learning styles and options. I've experienced working in a Charter School with this philosophy, project based learning, which of course is appealing to some learners, but not all. It is an excellent option to pursue for particular students who may thrive in this learning environment, where they might otherwise flounder in a traditional setting. It would be nice to see this option incorporated more widely in regular public schools in addition to traditional tracks (business, college prep, vocational education). Mary Ann p.s. E.K. READ THIS ONE!
Mary McGurn

Guidelines for Developing and Implementing Humor in Nursing - 2 views

  •  
    This article can be used for those who may want to begin using humor in your class without losing sight of the learning objectives.
  •  
    This is a great read and humor has many long term benefits for overall health and well being. In nursing, it can be very stressful and humor can be a very effective measure to relieve stress.
  •  
    The brain-based learning material that I have been reading recommends surprise as an important tool to gain and hold students' attention. Humor fits with this. The article recommends a highly organized, thought-out, and planned approach which may work for some but other teachers might just want to wing it.
mary lou horn

Homogeneous groupings for improving math learning - 2 views

http://www.nefstem.org/project/final_reports/Badillo.pdf This is an action research project report from and educator who was concerned about group domination by the more skilled student. It speak...

started by mary lou horn on 13 Nov 10 no follow-up yet
Roberta Bersani

Teaching Middle & High School Students to Read and Write Well - 0 views

  •  
    6 Features of Effective Teaching for Middle Schools & High Schools
mary lou horn

http://www.nysut.org/cps/rde/xchg/nysut/hs.xsl/educatorsvoice_14842.htm - 3 views

This is a brief report on an Action Research project that spans three years. It includes some student samples and reports positive outcomes. An interdisciplinary team of 4 worked to infuse critic...

started by mary lou horn on 21 Nov 10 no follow-up yet
kcmoore64

Revolution in Education - 1 views

  •  
    This YouTube clip shows a talk given by Sir Ken Robinson on how we need to revolutionize our educational systems. It resonates with what Myles Horton said in his interview about "molding" vs. "liberating." Schools have been about preparing students to become productive members in an industrial based society. Like Horton, Robinson argues that we need to break free of that model. Robinson also has a couple of good talks on Ted.com related to education. Some of us watched his talk on how schools kill creativity when we took Creative Thinking.
Gina Dillon Podolsky

YouTube - Project Based Learning - 0 views

  •  
    A video of three Canadian teacher's effort to incorporate project based learning into their curriculum.
  •  
    This got me thinking again about inquiry and problem-based learning. Engagement and ownership while working through/with their own ideas allows students to grow.
‹ Previous 21 - 31 of 31
Showing 20 items per page