ids are different, for a variety of reasons, and ignoring those differences means failing to meet their real needs.
Education Week: What Is 'Excellence for All'? - 0 views
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As one new study shows, responsibly recognizing those differences can drive achievement for all kids involved. Looking particularly at Massachusetts middle schools, most of which have abandoned the practice of tracking, the Brookings Institution’s Tom Loveless found something surprising. Schools that tracked students had significantly more math pupils performing at the “advanced” and “proficient” levels, and fewer students at the “needs improvement” and “failing” levels. And the opposite was true of schools that had “un-tracked.” In short, students did better when they were in classes tailored to their needs.
Educational Leadership:Expecting Excellence:Seven Reasons for Standards-Based Grading - 1 views
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An A means the student has completed proficient work on all course objectives and advanced work on some objectives.
Educational Leadership:Coaching: The New Leadership Skill:Every Teacher a Coach - 0 views
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Great coaches ask young athletes to go to "great heights" to challenge themselves. They take care to prepare the athlete for each stage of development, but they cannot eradicate risk because it's inseparable from growth. They can, however, intervene to ensure that the risk isn't so great that it outweighs the reward of accomplishment
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The best coaches encourage young people to work hard, keep going when it would be easier to stop, risk making potentially painful errors, try again when they stumble, and learn to love the sport. Not a bad analogy for a dynamic classroom.
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passionate about their sport and understand it deeply
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