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Willingham, Daniel T.; Rotherham, Andrew J. – Educational Leadership, 2020
The education field, these authors assert, often alternatively ignores, belittles, or "weaponizes" scientific findings and evidence relevant to education. They show examples of how education does a worse job than other fields at either rushing to apply approaches without enough evidence of effectiveness or…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Problems, Evidence Based Practice, Educational Practices
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Slavin, Robert E. – Educational Leadership, 2001
In the May 2001 "Educational Leadership," Stanley Pogrow wrote another article attacking the Success for All program and comprehensive reform. SFA has been highly evaluated in numerous studies and by 52 individual researchers. Pogrow is a competitor who believes his own program (Higher Order Thinking Skills) has been slighted. (Contains…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Jealousy, Misconceptions, Program Effectiveness
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Stevenson, Harold W. – Educational Leadership, 1993
Excoriates Gerald Bracey's "broadsides" against the author's own article in same "Educational Leadership" issue for misinterpreting his conclusions and methodology. Stevenson's learning gap results did not oversimplify ability-effort relationship in U.S. and Asian students; results were similar for U.S. cities with both large…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Comparative Education, Data Interpretation, Elementary Secondary Education
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Lockwood, Alan L. – Educational Leadership, 1993
Claims of character educators must be reexamined. Enthralled at the prospect of reducing violence, crime, and other irresponsible behavior, untutored readers may assume a direct relationship between values and behavior. If the public enthusiastically endorses programs based on this fallacious assumption, the resulting disappointment may doom all…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Ethical Instruction, Misconceptions, Research Problems
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jensen, Eric – Educational Leadership, 2000
Although neuroscience has much to offer teaching and learning conceptualizations, educators must be cautious about applying lab research to classrooms. Brain research seems hazy, confusing, and contradictory because it is new. Myths about synapses, low-stress learning, memorization, enrichment, and learning styles are debunked. (MLH)
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Style, Elementary Secondary Education, Enrichment