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Books > Social sciences > Education
Life Skills is a tool to promote skills, knowledge and values about
the self, the environment, responsible citizenship, a healthy and
productive life, social engagement, recreation and physical
activity and creative arts in all Intermediate Phase learners in
South Africa. Teaching Life Skills in the Intermediate Phase
focuses on how to encourage the optimal emotional, physical,
spiritual and mental development and wellbeing of learners.
Teaching Life Skills in the Intermediate Phase aims to answer the
call for learners that have improved self-esteem with strong
interpersonal skills while showing respect for cultural diversity
and a healthy lifestyle. In alignment with the South African
Curriculum and Assessment Policy statements (CAPS), the book covers
varies topics with regard to the holistic development of
Intermediate Phase learners. Teaching Life Skills in the
Intermediate Phase is aimed at Life Skills educators in South
African schools as well as at parents who find themselves in
fascinating, albeit challenging, territory with the personal growth
and development of their children. Dr Christina Jordaan is a senior
lecturer and head of the programme for the Intermediate Phase at
the Nelson Mandela University in Port Elizabeth. She specialises in
sexuality education, HIV/AIDS education, career guidance, child
development and issues around bullying and suicide. Mariana Naude
was the principal of various pre-school institutions in and around
Pretoria for 12 years. She later taught Grade 1 to 3 learners.
During this time she was tasked by the Department of Education to
train Foundation Phase educators on the implementation of the CAPS
Mathematics curriculum. Apart from her interest in Mathematics
education, she is also co-editor of the book Teaching Life Skills
in the Foundation Phase.
History and Geography are dynamic and diverse disciplines, but
disciplines that always displayed integrative abilities and
potential because human actions in spaces and places matter in
both. In History, the human past concerns time and space. In
Geography, space and spatiality dominate and can include humanity.
Teaching and learning History and Geography in the South African
classroom is the first textbook to consider History and Geography
as interconnected disciplines in the South African education
context. This book guides readers through developments in the
History and Geography fields, new focus areas and some refreshed
teaching and learning possibilities unlocked by technology. Drawing
on prodigious research, experts in these fields impart
recommendations for teaching, understanding, learning and assessing
these subjects purposefully. Teaching and learning History and
Geography in the South African classroom is aimed at educators and
prospective educators in the Social Sciences, History and Geography
programmes. Elize van Eeden is a professor at North-West
University, and chairs the subject group History at the Vaal
Triangle Campus. She served as chairperson of the South African
Society for History Teaching (20092017) and is editor or assistant
editor of three peer-reviewed journals accredited by the Department
of Higher Education. She has authored more than 80 peer-reviewed
articles, and has contributed chapters in 18 books as either
co-writer or editor. Elize has authored 12 History books, one being
the textbook, Didactical guidelines for teaching history in a
changing South Africa (1999). Her main research interest is
regional history in multidisciplinary research environments and its
application in regional history in teaching. Pieter Warnich is a
senior lecturer in History and Social Sciences Education at the
North-West University. He is chairperson of the subject group
History and Social Sciences Education at the Potchefstroom Campus.
His main areas of specialisation are teaching, learning and
assessment and History education curriculum studies development.
Pieter has published widely in these fields where he authored
peer-reviewed articles and chapters in books. He is co-editor of
the book Outcomes-based assessment for South African teachers
(2012). Currently he is editor of the accredited open-access
History teaching journal, Yesterday&Today.
Develop students printing skills with fun, daily practice
activities! This research-based book provides quick and effective
writing activities for first and second grade students. Designed to
motivate and excite students, these learning activities focus on
writing letters, numbers, and sentences to boost students
confidence when printing. Perfect for homeschool or learning in
classrooms, this workbook is a great tool to reinforce learning,
prevent learning loss, and build advanced handwriting skills.
Esperanza Rising: An Instructional Guide for Literature provides
lesson plans and activities for this award-winning literary work.
This valuable resource guides teachers with ways to add rigor with
complex literature. Text-dependent questions help students analyze
the text with higher-order thinking skills, with lessons focused on
story elements and vocabulary. Close reading activities throughout
the literature units encourages students to use textual evidence as
they revisit passages to respond more critically. With various
methods of assessing comprehension, this instructional guide offers
strategies for cross-curricular activities as students build a
greater understanding of this great literary work.
At the heart of education are two fundamental questions: What
should we teach? and How should we teach it? Educators striving to
design and deliver the best-possible learning experiences can feel
overwhelmed by the possibilities. To help them make these critical
decisions, Angela Di Michele Lalor identifies five key priorities
of a curriculum that matters-practices, deep thinking, social and
emotional learning, civic engagement and discourse, and equity.
Emphasizing the importance of schools' determining their own path
forward, Lalor provides a framework for action by * Describing how
each element contributes to a rigorous, meaningful curriculum, *
Providing strategies for incorporating each element into daily
instruction and assessment, and * Offering reflection activities to
identify strengths, needs, and possible next steps. With insightful
observations, research-based background information, and real-world
examples from a variety of schools and districts, Making Curriculum
Matter presents teachers and administrators with a path for
reaching their most important overall goal: to provide
comprehensive, meaningful learning to all students.
In Forces of Influence, Fred Ende and Meghan Everette contend that
schoolwide success starts with relationships-not only between
students and adults, but also among all adults up and down the
education hierarchy. It's by leveraging these relationships that
educators can influence outcomes and effect real change. But how
can educators make sure they exert their influence astutely and
sensitively, navigating education's priorities and pressures while
keeping their work focused on the mission? This thought-provoking
book helps readers navigate this tricky terrain, introducing four
""forces,"" or levels, of influence and explaining how educators
can use them to support one another's practice and push for
positive outcomes for all learners. The authors: Explore each of
the four forces-the pull, the push, the shove, and the nudge-and
explain why they work and what research shows about their
effectiveness. Introduce the Forces of Influence Leadership Matrix
(FILM), a framework that identifies how the four forces connect and
helps readers determine when to use which force, with whom, and
how. Provide advice on how to course-correct by switching and
layering the forces for positive results-and how to recover from
setbacks. Offer copious tools to support this work, including
role-plays, self-assessments, templates, and questions to spur
reflection and action taking. Everything educators do requires them
to build, sustain, and leverage relationships. With this guide,
they no longer have to wing it.
Help students build fluency and gain confidence as English speakers
with this bilingual twist to the classic game. Includes 120
reproducible boards for 15 different themes including: school,
home, calendar, animals, transportation, weather and more. A snap
to learn and a blast to play! For use with Grades K-3.
An effective third grade workbook that provides daily social and
emotional learning (SEL) activities to help students explore
emotions, actions, relationships, and decision making. The daily
activities connect to the CASEL competencies, mindfulness, and key
affective education initiatives. This SEL workbook makes at-home
learning, whole class instruction, or small group support, quick
and easy. Help students build self-awareness, analyze
relationships, discover diverse perspectives, and apply what they
have learned with engaging lessons. The use of fiction and
nonfiction text allows for self-reflection and growth. Parents
appreciate the teacher-approved activity books that keep their
child engaged and learning. Great for homeschooling, to reinforce
learning at school, and build connections between home and school.
Teachers rely on the daily practice workbooks to save them valuable
time. The ready to implement activities are perfect to introduce
SEL topics for discussion.
This timely and essential book provides a comprehensive guide for
school leaders who desire to engage their school communities in
transformative systemic change. Sharon I. Radd, Gretchen Givens
Generett, Mark Anthony Gooden, and George Theoharis offer five
practices to increase educational equity and eliminate
marginalization based on race, disability, socioeconomics,
language, gender and sexual identity, and religion. For each
dimension of diversity, the authors provide background information
for understanding the current realities in schools and beyond, and
they suggest "disruptive practices" to replace the status quo in
order to achieve full inclusion and educational excellence for
every child.Assuming that leadership to create equity is a unique
practice, the book offers * Clear explanations of foundational
terms and concepts, such as equity, systemic inequity, paradigms
and cognitive dissonance, and privilege; * Specific recommendations
for how to build support and sustainability by engaging colleagues
and other stakeholders in constructive dialogues with multiple
perspectives; * Detailed descriptions of routines and roles for
building effective equity-leadership teams; * Guidelines and tools
for performing an equity audit, including environmental scans; * A
change framework to skillfully transform your system; and *
Reflection activities for self-discovery, understanding, and
personal and professional growth. A call to action that is both
passionate and practical, Five Practices for Equity-Focused School
Leadership is an indispensable roadmap for educators undertaking
the journey toward an education system that acknowledges and
advances the worth and potential of all students.
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Vicki Portell
Hardcover
R563
Discovery Miles 5 630
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