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Nurenberg, David; Tuller, Liana – Teachers College Record, 2023
Background: For the last century, the dominant practice in U.S. high schools has involved sorting students by perceived ability level, yet 40 years of research has yielded consistent evidence that these practices harm the learning of students placed in lower-level classes; evidence is inconsistent about benefits for students in classes designated…
Descriptors: High School Students, Acceleration (Education), Honors Curriculum, History Instruction
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Offen, Bilinda – New Zealand Journal of Teachers' Work, 2020
Facilitating a more responsive style of teaching in primary mathematics has implications for not only teaching practice, but also for how we plan for our learners. Grouping decisions, task selection and teacher confidence in mathematical content are important considerations when developing inquiring mathematical communities. This article…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Preckel, Franzis; Schmidt, Isabelle; Stumpf, Eva; Motschenbacher, Monika; Vogl, Katharina; Scherrer, Vsevolod; Schneider, Wolfgang – Child Development, 2019
Effects of full-time ability grouping on students' academic self-concept (ASC) and mathematics achievement were investigated in the first 3 years of secondary school (four waves of measurement; students' average age at first wave: 10.5 years). Students were primarily from middle and upper class families living in southern Germany. The study sample…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Academically Gifted, Self Concept, Academic Achievement
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Hansen, William B.; Rulison, Kelly L. – Prevention Science, 2022
Teachers often group students into teams to organize their classrooms and network-informed interventions hold great promise as a way to facilitate positive peer influence and promote the diffusion of intervention effects. Yet thus far, relatively little research has explored how teachers or prevention scientists can best use social network…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Grade 5, Grade 6
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Tan, Cheng Yong; Dimmock, Clive – Educational Studies, 2022
The knowledge base on various forms of structuring students' learning by ability grouping is more robust than that on teachers' instructional practices being implemented within these groupings. The present study examines if student-reported mathematics teachers' instructional practices vary among schools with different degrees of implementing…
Descriptors: High School Students, Principals, Educational Practices, Mathematics Achievement
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Neumann, Eszter – Journal of Education Policy, 2021
With the rise of accountability policies since the early nineties, the daily operation of English schools has profoundly changed. Through the in-depth analysis of ability grouping practices in one English secondary school, this paper aims to explore how the accountability shift and datafication impacted the practice of student grouping and…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Secondary School Students, Accountability, Educational Change
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Fitzgerald, Louise; Hunter, Jodie; Hunter, Roberta – Mathematics Teacher Education and Development, 2021
Both in New Zealand and internationally, there has been a focus on the use of differentiation in mathematics instruction to raise achievement levels and provide equitable outcomes. New Zealand has a long history of the use of ability grouping to provide differentiation. Recently, this practice has been challenged in a large scale professional…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Individualized Instruction, Mathematics Instruction, Ability Grouping
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Towers, Emma; Taylor, Becky; Tereshchenko, Antonina; Mazenod, Anna – Education 3-13, 2020
Grouping pupils by attainment is frequently practised in primary schools yet is associated with detrimental effects for middle- and lower-attaining children. Drawing on a mixed methods study, we find that attainment grouping practices at key stage 2 in primary schools are seldom straightforward. Although grouping by attainment appears to be the…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Elementary School Students, Teacher Attitudes, Ability Grouping
Kate Antonovics; Sandra E. Black; Julie Berry Cullen; Akiva Yonah Meiselman – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
Schools often track students to classes based on ability. Proponents of tracking argue it is a low-cost tool to improve learning since instruction is more effective when students are more homogeneous, while opponents argue it exacerbates initial differences in opportunities without strong evidence of efficacy. In fact, little is known about the…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Track System (Education), Ability Grouping, Grade 4
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VanTassel-Baska, Joyce – Gifted Child Today, 2019
After reviewing curriculum materials and observing instructional practices, the author identified trends and issues in school districts related to the implementation of differentiated curriculum and stakeholders' views. Although primary stakeholders hold positive views of a differentiated curriculum, limited differentiation is being used in the…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Gifted Education, Individualized Instruction, Educational Trends
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Roberts-Holmes, Guy; Kitto, Eleanor – Education 3-13, 2019
Despite research demonstrating that attainment-based grouping has little, if any, overall benefits there is an increasing trend towards ability grouping in the early years. Using an ethnographic case study the article demonstrates how different pedagogical approaches are used with different 'ability' groups. The pedagogical experiences of…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Young Children, Early Childhood Education
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Wilkinson, Shaun D.; Penney, Dawn; Allin, Linda; Potrac, Paul – Sport, Education and Society, 2021
The micro-level enactment of educational policy has received little attention in the physical education [PE] literature, particularly as it relates to setting policy. This study employs enactment theory to provide original insights into the ways in which setting policy was enacted by PE teachers in three mixed-gender secondary schools in England.…
Descriptors: School Policy, Secondary Education, Physical Education, Physical Education Teachers
Antonovics, Kate; Black, Sandra E.; Cullen, Julie Berry; Meiselman, Akiva Yonah – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022
Schools often track students to classes based on ability. Proponents of tracking argue it is a low-cost tool to improve learning since instruction is more effective when students are more homogeneous, while opponents argue it exacerbates initial differences in opportunities without strong evidence of efficacy. In fact, little is known about the…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Academic Ability, Track System (Education), Grade 4
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Skrabankova, Jana; Popelka, Stanislav; Beitlova, Marketa – Journal of Baltic Science Education, 2020
Graphs are often used to represent mathematical functions, to illustrate data from social and natural sciences, or to specify scientific theories. With increasing emphasis on the development of scientific research skills, the work with graphs and data interpretation are gaining in importance. The research involved an eye-tracking experiment…
Descriptors: Graphs, Physics, Science Instruction, Eye Movements
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Knutsen, Bård; Svendsen, Bodil – Education, 2020
This study is conducted in Norway, this study investigated data from a case study with two science teachers. The Norwegian school system is built upon the principle of equality for all students. The idea is that comprehensive school is best suited to provide equal opportunities in school and society. The only criteria for group affiliation are…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Teacher Expectations of Students, Secondary School Students, Adolescents
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