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Burgess, William V. – Today's Education, 1976
Standards for teacher education and methods of teaching have changed radically since the days of the one-room schoolhouse of one-hundred years ago.
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Corporal Punishment, Discipline Policy, Educational History
Peer reviewedChristensen, Clay Benjamin – Foreign Language Annals, 1977
This article states that affective learning is important to prevent boredom and stimulate language use. Use of affective learning activities in the language classroom is outlined and a teaching technique, the open-ended sentence is described as a method that elicits responses charged with personal opinions, feelings and humor. (CHK)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Affective Objectives, Educational Objectives, Emotional Response
Peer reviewedKorinek, Lori; Popp, Patricia A. – Preventing School Failure, 1997
Offers a rationale for social skills instruction and integration for students with, or at risk for, learning and behavior problems. It examines the social skills needed in various settings and describes a three-step process for integrating academic content with social skill development. (DB)
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Behavior Problems, Elementary Secondary Education, Inclusive Schools
Hovland, Jane; And Others – Elementary School Guidance & Counseling, 1996
Using a sampling of 1,801 students in grades K-6, provides school counselors with information about the frequency and the severity of specific behavior problems of boys and girls in classrooms. Also lists interventions recommended by teachers who report few of these problems in their classrooms. Statistical summaries appear in four appendices.…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Children, Discipline, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedIanacone, John A. – English Journal, 1996
Explains how an English teacher settled into an unproductive, formulaic approach to teaching writing and how he reformed himself and his teaching through a discovery of the processes involved in writing. Describes exercises and notebooks that furthered his new "process" approach to teaching writing. (TB)
Descriptors: Process Approach (Writing), Secondary Education, Teacher Behavior, Teacher Improvement
Peer reviewedKawamoto, Carrie – Primary Voices K-6, 1997
Describes how a teacher used the "hypothesis-test" (HT) approach with a first grader for a school year to examine up close the process of a child learning to read. Describes how the teacher saw what was happening as the children read and then brought that to the rest of the class so everyone could learn from each other. (SR)
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Instructional Effectiveness, Primary Education, Reading Instruction
Peer reviewedWharton-McDonald, Ruth; And Others – Reading Teacher, 1997
Surveys and observes highly effective primary-level teachers. Describes their classroom characteristics and instructional practices, particularly the deliberate and well-planned integration of explicit skills instruction and authentic reading and writing experiences. (SR)
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Instructional Effectiveness, Literacy, Primary Education
Peer reviewedSkiba, Russ; Peterson, Reece – Preventing School Failure, 2003
An effort to increase the implementation of effective instructional methods of school discipline and the promising results from the first year of implementation of the Safe and Responsive Schools Project are described. Results provide some evidence that school discipline need not be equated with punishment and exclusion. (Contains references.)…
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Bullying, Curriculum Design, Discipline Policy
Peer reviewedMiller, Suzanne – English Journal, 1991
Shares the observations of an educator visiting a high school classroom. Comments on how planning can support students' initial responses and their deeper thinking. Argues that teachers of literature can be both intuitively planful and planfully spontaneous in providing students with powerful language tools for shaping personal meaning. (MG)
Descriptors: Audience Response, English Curriculum, English Instruction, High Risk Students
Peer reviewedSainato, Diane M. – Education and Treatment of Children, 1990
This paper reviews teaching strategies that may facilitate independent performance on the part of preschool children with disabilities. Among these are environmental arrangements (schedules, staff assignment, room arrangement); antecedent prompts (instructions, time, task); peer-mediated interventions; and consequent events. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Class Organization, Classroom Environment, Classroom Techniques
Peer reviewedByrnes, Michael E.; And Others – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1990
A project combined precision teaching techniques and a flashcard approach known as SAFMEDS, with 4 students with learning disabilities or behavior disorders, age 14-18. Project results determined that the techniques provided students with necessary skills to pass the school district's minimum competency test in the area of local, state, and…
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Competency Based Education, Governance, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedDaves, Karen S.; And Others – Reading Horizons, 1990
Examines the relationship between what novice teachers were taught and how they are actually teaching. Finds that novice teachers are not employing the instructional practices (such as language experience, writing activities, children's literature, and learning centers) which are being cultivated in undergraduate reading courses. (RS)
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Classroom Research, Elementary Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewedScotti, William – Reading Improvement, 1989
Argues that the science lab can be an environment highly conducive to intellectual development. Discusses students' task commitment and motivation, and teacher enthusiasm, expectations, genuineness, and exemplary behavior in light of research findings and the author's personal experience. (RS)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, Science Instruction
Peer reviewedBacon, Ellen H. – Rural Special Education Quarterly, 1988
Discusses teacher education methods that assist rural preservice teachers to develop competencies relevant to behavior disorders when classroom observation is impossible. Describes the use of case studies, role playing, computer simulations, videotapes, and learning packets. Contains 18 references. (SV)
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation, Preservice Teacher Education
Peer reviewedTannehill, Deborah; Zakrajsek, Dorothy – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 1988
Results of a study of 18 cooperating teachers (CTs) supervising physical education student teachers (STs) from five colleges/universities in the Northwest indicated that: CTs provided minimal feedback; held few supervising conferences; and spent little time observing teaching. Through logs and weekly wrap-up reports, STs indicated desire for…
Descriptors: Cooperating Teachers, Feedback, Higher Education, Physical Education


