Skip to main content

Home/ CTAP4 Data Assessment/ Group items tagged judge

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Anne Bubnic

Learning to Love Assessment [Carol Anne Tomlinson] - 0 views

  •  
    From judging performance to guiding students to shaping instruction to informing learning, coming to grips with informative assessment is one insightful journey.
Anne Bubnic

Early algebra-takers can make standardized test scores misleading - 0 views

  •  
    Seventh-graders who take algebra are ahead of the game but can throw off attempts to use state test results to judge their schools' performance. Most students don't take Algebra 1 until eighth or ninth grade, but a few school districts offer it to a significant number of seventh-graders. So the results released earlier this month on state math tests can be misleading, districts such as Murrieta Unified point out.
biugra biugra

Yargıtay, AKP, Anayasa Mahkemesi Mağdurları | Çek Mağdurları - 0 views

  •  
    Önce Yargıtay mağduruyduk, Yargıtay 3167 sayılı çek kanunu'nun uygulanamaz olduğunu görmezden geldi, sonra AKP tarafından 5941 sayılı çek kanunu daha ağırlaştırılmış olarak çıktı, umutlarımız Anayasa Mahkemesindeydi ve oradan bir karar çıkmış değil, zaman ise tükenmek üzere.
biugra biugra

Çek Mağdurları'nda 20 Aralık Kâbusu.. | KARŞILIKSIZ ÇEK - 0 views

  •  
    "Çek Mağdurları'nda 20 Aralık Kâbusu.."
Anne Bubnic

What Is a "Professional Learning Community"? |Richard DuFour - 0 views

  • Big Idea #1: Ensuring That Students Learn The professional learning community model flows from the assumption that the core mission of formal education is not simply to ensure that students are taught but to ensure that they learn. This simple shift—from a focus on teaching to a focus on learning—has profound implications for schools.
  • Big Idea #2: A Culture of Collaboration Educators who are building a professional learning community recognize that they must work together to achieve their collective purpose of learning for all. Therefore, they create structures to promote a collaborative culture.
  • Big Idea #3: A Focus on Results Professional learning communities judge their effectiveness on the basis of results. Working together to improve student achievement becomes the routine work of everyone in the school. Every teacher team participates in an ongoing process of identifying the current level of student achievement, establishing a goal to improve the current level, working together to achieve that goal, and providing periodic evidence of progress. The focus of team goals shifts. Such goals as "We will adopt the Junior Great Books program" or "We will create three new labs for our science course" give way to "We will increase the percentage of students who meet the state standard in language arts from 83 percent to 90 percent" or "We will reduce the failure rate in our course by 50 percent."
  •  
    The professional learning community model has now reached a critical juncture, one well known to those who have witnessed the fate of other well-intentioned school reform efforts. In this all-too-familiar cycle, initial enthusiasm gives way to confusion about the fundamental concepts driving the initiative, followed by inevitable implementation problems, the conclusion that the reform has failed to bring about the desired results, abandonment of the reform, and the launch of a new search for the next promising initiative. Another reform movement has come and gone, reinforcing the conventional education wisdom that promises, "This too shall pass."
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page