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Spohn, William A. – School Administrator, 1987
Educational supervision must be tied to improving staff skills in several critical areas--planning, diagnosis, monitoring, evaluating, and modifying programs to meet individual students' needs. To address supervisors' training deficiencies in these areas, this article recommends a workable training model and outlines desirable supervisor…
Descriptors: Administrators, Elementary Secondary Education, Planning, Program Evaluation
Curtis, Rob – Child Care Information Exchange, 1987
Advises directors of ways to include day care workers in the decision-making process. Enumerates benefits of using staff to help focus and direct changes in the day care center and discusses possible pitfalls in implementation of a collective decision-making approach to management. (NH)
Descriptors: Administrator Guides, Day Care Centers, Decision Making, Early Childhood Education
Erickson, Lawrence – Executive Educator, 1987
Offers suggestions for spending staff development money effectively. Ideas include the following: (1) keep your money close to the classroom; (2) use consultants to train your own trainers; (3) beware of embarking on numerous small-scale reforms; and (4) beware of pressure to copy other school improvement methods. (CJH)
Descriptors: Consultants, Cost Effectiveness, Educational Improvement, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedMatarazzo, James M. – Special Libraries, 1987
Discusses the value of continuing education for staff members of special libraries as reported by information professionals in a study of excellence in corporate libraries. Background on the Special Libraries Association's Professional Development Program is also provided, and the importance of keeping current with the literature is emphasized.…
Descriptors: Librarians, Library Associations, Library Education, Professional Continuing Education
Heller, Robert W.; And Others – Executive Educator, 1988
As participants in an annual survey, most school executives rated their graduate preparation as impractical, and few had found mentors among their professors. Mixed reviews were given on-the-job training through internships, assessment centers, workshops, seminars, and staff development programs. Lack of sufficient funding affected participation…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Assessment Centers (Personnel), Elementary Secondary Education, Management Development
Peer reviewedNeubert, Gloria A.; Bratton, Elizabeth C. – Educational Leadership, 1987
Describes a staff development project using a coaching model in which teachers team teach in the classroomn. In this model the teacher and the coach (a teaching peer) plan, execute, and evaluate performance in the class side by side. (MD)
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Elementary Secondary Education, Peer Teaching, Staff Development
Peer reviewedRed, Carol; Shainline, Ellen – Educational Leadership, 1987
Albuquerque schools developed an innovative program called "Support for Instructional Development" that includes a basic format of seminars, journals, and team teaching. Includes discussion of four principles the school system learned about the teacher's role in educational development. (MD)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Staff Development, Teacher Education
Peer reviewedHammond, Jane; Foster, Karen – Educational Leadership, 1987
Maryland's Staff Development Institute was a catalyst for the development of another principal skill development program. The program was founded by a group of principals who participated in the institute's program and felt the state needed more suppport for statewide networks and professional seminars to promote school development. (MD)
Descriptors: Educational Administration, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Leadership, Principals
Child Care Information Exchange, 1987
Provides day care center directors with relevant ideas for working with staff. Ideas include building "team spirit" among staff members; effective listening; gaining respect from staff members through effective decision-making skills; recognizing and correcting administrative errors; and effective group management techniques. (Author/BB)
Descriptors: Administrative Problems, Administrator Role, Day Care Centers, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedLeggett, Diana; Hoyle, Sharon – Educational Leadership, 1987
The Keystone Project in Fort Worth, Texas, offers teachers the skills necessary for collaboration in a four-week Lab School. Teachers return to their schools to assume either a formal role as a Cadre Trainer or an informal role as a Demonstration Teacher in promoting a supportive school climate. (MLF)
Descriptors: Collegiality, Elementary Secondary Education, Peer Coaching, Public Schools
Lambert, Linda – Phi Delta Kappan, 1988
Contends that staff development, supposedly designed to assist teachers, has instead colluded with forces to continue their colonization. Since teachers are not taking charge of their profession and participating actively in educational change, certain actions must be taken to lighten their nonprofessional workload and to build a professional…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Workload, Models
Peer reviewedBarth, Roland S. – NASSP Bulletin, 1987
A membership organization, the Harvard Principals' Center is showing that school administrators will voluntarily engage in activities promoting their growth as leaders in school improvement. The center provides an external support system in which principals are able to play a major role in their own development. (MD)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Leadership, Management Development
Peer reviewedEllis, Susan – Journal of Staff Development, 1985
The Greenwich, Connecticut, public school system is training teachers and administrators in the use of structured cooperative learning groups as part of a district-wide strategy to explore a variety of effective teaching practices. The cooperative learning program and its impact on teachers and students is described. (MT)
Descriptors: Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education, Group Instruction, Instructional Improvement
Peer reviewedAllen, G. G. – Library and Information Science Research, 1986
Discusses three major motivations for in-house library research--planning, problem solving, and staff development--in terms of the functions and responsibilities of library management. Ten stages in a research project are identified and management contribution to each is described. It is concluded that the role of management is critical.…
Descriptors: Institutional Research, Library Administration, Library Planning, Library Research
Peer reviewedPortowitz, David; And Others – International Journal of Rehabilitation Research, 1986
The Rokeach Value Survey, which requires ranking two sets of 18 values, was administered to 24 Israeli paraprofessionals before and after a 16-week training program on disability-related topics. Four terminal values (wisdom, self-respect, equality, sense of accomplishment) and three instrumental values (polite, helpful, clean) rose in importance.…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Disabilities, Foreign Countries, Paraprofessional Personnel


