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Murphy, Joseph – NASSP Bulletin, 1990
Principals must attend to eight curricular issues in their role as instructional leader: amount of content; extent of academic focus on coursework; focus and sequence of courses; breadth versus depth of content; differential access to knowledge; homework as an extension of content; curricular alignment; and quality of course objectives. Includes…
Descriptors: Administrator Effectiveness, Course Content, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education
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Ornstein, Allan C. – NASSP Bulletin, 1994
Discusses essential learning techniques (homework, studying, and notetaking) that students need to facilitate their own learning and improve their academic performance. Teachers can help students develop these skills by defining specific skills, selecting a few examples to illustrate them, critiquing or correcting imperfect examples, providing…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Homework, Integrated Curriculum, Learning Strategies
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Freedman-Doan, Peter; Libsch, Margaret – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
The Monitoring the Future research team found that high school seniors in the class of 1995 spent about the same amount of time doing homework as seniors in the class of 1976. However, 1991-95 college-bound seniors spent an average of 7.5 hours per week on homework, whereas their counterparts in 1976-78 spent an average of 8.1 hours weekly, a…
Descriptors: College Bound Students, High School Seniors, High Schools, Homework
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Rieck, William A. – NASSP Bulletin, 1994
It is inappropriate to judge high school teachers' failure rates without making appropriate modifications to reflect student-caused failures. Devising an adjusted failure rate addresses this problem. If properly placed students with 10 or more days absent and 10% or more missing homework assignments are removed from failure numbers, the…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Advanced Placement, Attendance, High Schools
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Kramer, Steven L. – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
A study of British Columbia high schools found that block scheduling can endanger mathematics achievement. Reduced math scores were attributed to irregular planning time, little opportunity to modify curriculum; and the provincial examination system. Longer time blocks cannot succeed without adequate planning time, curricular restructuring, and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Block Scheduling, Foreign Countries, High Schools