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Welbourn, Vivian – 1986
A review of the literature on the relationship between ability grouping and student achievement reveals that most researchers have found that homogeneous grouping does not significantly affect achievement. A few studies attempted to relate student achievement to teacher ability and instructional strategies; however, they found no significant…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Class Organization, Classroom Environment, Elementary Education
Zigmond, Naomi; And Others – 1986
The booklet examines issues and strategies in serving learning disabled (LD) secondary students. Chapter 1, on program development, reviews such program options as varieties of the resource room model and self-contained class and examines three major factors involved in decisions about program emphases: (1) administrative practices, (2) teacher…
Descriptors: Class Organization, Classroom Techniques, Delivery Systems, Learning Disabilities
Baron, Eleanor B. – 1992
Classroom management and effective discipline are skills that all beginning teachers must learn. Classroom management refers to those procedures or routines a teacher uses to maintain a smoothly running classroom; discipline refers to those techniques or strategies a teacher uses to respond to specific acts of student misbehavior. This booklet,…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Class Organization, Classroom Techniques, Discipline Policy
Pearce, Kathryn; And Others – 1992
The New Designs for the Comprehensive High School project should provide for an organization of the school that is aligned with learner outcomes and learning process. Components of the organization must be aligned among themselves. High school models for organizing learners that meet student needs for connectedness and improved interpersonal…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Class Organization, Curriculum, Educational Change
George, Paul S. – 1983
American schools might improve their performance by emulating certain successful businesses that, while distinctly American, have much in common with Japanese corporations. William Ouchi attributes Japanese business success to worker involvement; the typical Japanese corporation, he asserts, unifies its employees around a corporate philosophy…
Descriptors: Class Organization, Classroom Techniques, Curriculum Development, Educational Change