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Showing 1 to 15 of 41 results Save | Export
Housiaux, Andrew; Dickson, Bowman – Educational Leadership, 2022
Teachers spend tremendous amounts of time giving students feedback and grades. Their efforts fill weekends, late nights, and planning periods. The time they spend correcting student misconceptions, engaging with their thoughts, and coaching them toward deeper intellectual work is often deeply intertwined with their identity as educators. In their…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Misconceptions, Teacher Student Relationship, Reflection
Minahan, Jessica – Educational Leadership, 2019
Up to two-thirds of U.S. children have experienced at least one type of serious childhood trauma, such as abuse, neglect, natural disaster, or experiencing or witnessing violence. Trauma is possibly the largest public health issue facing our children today (CDC, 2019). Traumatized students are especially prone to difficulty in self-regulation,…
Descriptors: Trauma, Teaching Methods, Violence, Child Health
McConchie, Liesl; Jensen, Eric – Educational Leadership, 2020
Authors of the newly revised Teaching with the Brain in Mind, Liesl McConchie and Eric Jensen offer whole-brain approaches teachers can take to engage students in new learning and retaining that knowledge.
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Learning Processes, Neurosciences
Wessel-Powell, Christy; Buchholz, Beth A.; Rust, Julie; Husbye, Nicholas E.; Zanden, Sarah Vander – Educational Leadership, 2020
Within our society's growing culture of "busyness," schools have an important counter role to play. One critical antidote to this epidemic of overload is to reorient reading instruction to cultivate intentionally present, mindful readers. In this article, the authors share five ways to foster immersive reading through daily classroom…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods, Reading Skills, Metacognition
Lemov, Doug – Educational Leadership, 2017
Recent research shows that reading comprehension relies heavily on prior knowledge. Far more than generic "reading skills" like drawing inferences, making predictions, and knowing the function of subheads, how well students learn from a nonfiction text depends on their background knowledge of the text's subject matter. And in a cyclical…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Nonfiction, Fiction, Prior Learning
McKenney, Yekaterina – Educational Leadership, 2018
Yekaterina McKenney offers a plea to writing teachers: Don't emphasize the conventions of writing, the regurgitation of facts, and correct spelling and grammar over the generation of ideas and the creativity of storytelling. She offers up fresh ideas and suggestions about how to make writing meaningful and personal for student writers--from…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Teaching Methods, Relevance (Education)
Bambrick-Santoyo, Paul; Chiger, Stephen – Educational Leadership, 2017
Part of helping students learn to read critically and with comprehension is guiding them to use writing to help think through the content and clarify what they understand--or don't. Looking at students' writing also helps teachers see how much learners are really understanding in their reading and where exactly any learner is struggling. After…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Writing (Composition), Teaching Methods, Figurative Language
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Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2014
According to Dylan Wiliam, the traditional classroom practice in which a teacher asks a question, students raise their hands, and the teacher calls on a volunteer does not actually provide much useful information--and it may even impede learning. When teachers ask questions in this way, they're only engaging the most confident students in the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Questioning Techniques, Teacher Role, Student Role
Spycher, Pam; Austin, Kim; Fabian, Thea – Educational Leadership, 2018
The authors discuss how Rowell Elementary School in California transformed instruction putting writing at the center of student learning. This shift involved helping students demystify how language works in different genres and creating authentic, meaningful writing opportunities for students, often involving cross-curriculum projects. Through…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition), Content Area Writing
Hattie, John; Fisher, Douglas; Frey, Nancy – Educational Leadership, 2016
Although research indicates that feedback can be one of the most effective instructional strategies for improving student performance, getting students to listen and act on feedback can be complicated. If feedback is vague and personal, students may pay attention only to positive comments that are positive and boost their self-image ("That…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Barriers, Goal Orientation, Success
Tovani, Cris – Educational Leadership, 2016
Middle school teacher and author Cris Tovani describes how--after years of feeling frustrated about the time spent commenting on students' work only to find their work didn't improve--she changed both how she responded to student work and what she did with the information such work revealed to her. Tovani changed the timing of her feedback and…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Teaching Methods, Teacher Attitudes, Student Evaluation
Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2016
"The only important thing about feedback is what students do with it," declares Dylan Wiliam in this article. The standard school procedure (in which a teacher looks at a piece of student work and writes something on it, and the student later looks at what the teacher has written) does not necessarily increase student learning. Teachers…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Teaching Methods, Student Needs, Assignments
John Larmer – Educational Leadership, 2016
In this article, John Larmer paints the picture of the ideal high-school graduate--one who is ready for college, career, and life in general. Among other qualities, this student is a problem solver, manages time effectively, works well with others, is open to feedback, and is innovative and creative. How do K-12 schools go about building this…
Descriptors: Workshops, Feedback (Response), Critical Thinking, Problem Solving
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Keene, Ellin Oliver – Educational Leadership, 2014
"Reader, say something smart. Right now. Share a deep insight or a subtle point. Quick. No? OK (with obvious disappointment), I'll come back to you later. Anybody else?" We've all experienced this in school, the author notes--the teacher giving up, concluding that we weren't going to say something smart in the allotted…
Descriptors: Time Factors (Learning), Teaching Methods, Thinking Skills, Cognitive Processes
Emdin, Christopher – Educational Leadership, 2016
When faced with students who have learning skills, styles, and backgrounds very different from their own, teachers can promote academic rigor by engaging in reality pedagogy. This approach proposes seven strategies, or Cs: Cogenerative dialogues (in which teachers solicit feedback from a dissimilar group of students); coteaching (in which students…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Cognitive Style, Cultural Context, Educational Environment
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