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Books > Social sciences > Education > Schools > Secondary schools > General
The Developing Core Literacy Proficiencies program is an integrated
set of English Language Arts/Literacy units spanning grades 6-12
that provide student-centered instruction on a set of literacy
proficiencies at the heart of the Common Core State Standards
(CCSS). * Reading Closely for Textual Details * Making
Evidence-Based Claims * Making Evidence-Based Claims about Literary
Technique (Grades 9-12) * Researching to Deepen Understanding *
Building Evidence-Based Arguments The program approaches literacy
through the development of knowledge, literacy skills, and academic
habits. Throughout the activities, students develop their literacy
along these three paths in an integrated, engaging, and empowering
way. Knowledge: The texts and topics students encounter in the
program have been carefully selected to expose them to rich and
varied ideas and perspectives of cultural significance. These texts
not only equip students with key ideas for participating
knowledgeably in the important discussions of our time, but also
contain the complexity of expression necessary for developing
college- and career-ready literacy skills. Literacy Skills: The
program articulates and targets instruction and assessment on
twenty CCSS-aligned literacy skills ranging from making inferences
to reflecting critically. Students focus on this set of twenty
skills throughout the year and program, continually applying them
in new and more sophisticated ways. Academic Habits: The program
articulates twelve academic habits for students to develop, apply,
and extend as they progress through the sequence of instruction.
Instructional notes allow teachers to introduce and discuss
academic habits such as preparing and completing tasks that are
essential to students success in the classroom. The program
materials include a comprehensive set of instructional sequences,
teacher notes, handouts, assessments, rubrics, and graphic
organizers designed to support students with a diversity of
educational experiences and needs. The integrated assessment
system, centered around the literacy skills and academic habits,
allows for the coherent evaluation of student literacy development
over the course of the year and vertically across all grade levels.
At The MTPT Project we know that teaching can be a sustainable
career choice for parents, and in this essential handbook, we show
you how. Supported by case studies celebrating the best that the
family friendly schools and happy teachers in our community have to
offer, this book is a lifeline for both educators aspiring to
combine their passion for teaching with becoming a parent, and the
school leader who wants to empower them. However you become a
parent, or choose to grow your family and your career, this
handbook will provide you with the guidance and cheerleading that
you need to fulfil your personal and professional aspirations. The
book is divided into nine chapters, guiding readers from the first
considerations of family planning, all the way through to the
reality that some teachers and leaders may choose to leave
classrooms for good. Each chapter includes: the latest research on
working families legalities associated with different stages of
working parenthood (including discrimination and how to avoid it as
an employer and address it as an employee) case studies from our
community suggestions for individuals and schools recommended
further reading. Each chapter will help you to navigate the journey
from planning a family, to stepping in and out of teaching to suit
your parenting needs, to creating family friendly working
environments, whatever your role in school. With its mixture of
research-informed solutions, hints and tips, this text is perfect
for colleagues embarking on their parenting journey and school
leaders who want to take practical steps to retain and empower
valued colleagues.
What is grammar? Why is it so central to the teaching of English?
How can we teach it with confidence in secondary schools? Essential
Grammar will provide clarity, meaning and teacher expertise to this
much debated area of the English curriculum. By exploring grammar
as applied to literary analysis and using a range of examples from
commonly-taught and popular texts, this highly accessible book
provides an extensive overview of how to use grammar to enhance the
teaching of academic and creative writing. Drawing on a range of
resources, best-selling authors Webb and Giovanelli: discuss the
context of grammar teaching in schools provide a clear overview of
concepts and terminology for the teacher offer a wide range of
examples of how grammar can be applied to the analysis of texts and
the development of students’ writing debunk the unhelpful view of
grammar as a list of prescriptive rules and limits outline
grammatical concepts in a way which is clear and simple to
understand provide a huge range of practical ways to ensure that
teaching of grammatical concepts can be rigorous and successful for
all. This resource, with its grounded and straightforward approach
to grammar, will be immediately useable in the classroom with
strategies that be used by teachers in their classroom today. For
any training and practicing secondary English teachers, Essential
Grammar will be a compulsory classroom companion.
Big Gay Adventures in Education is a collection of true stories by
'out' teachers, and students of 'out' teachers, all about their
experiences in schools. The book aims to empower LGBT+ teachers to
be the role models they needed when they were in school and help
all teachers and school leaders to promote LGBT+ visibility and
inclusion. The contributors range from trainee teachers to
experienced school leaders and leading figures from the community
across the LGBT+ spectrum, as well as LGBT+ students whose lives
were improved by having an openly LGBT+ teacher. Each story is
accompanied by an editor's note reflecting on the contributor's
experience and the practical implications for schools and teachers
in supporting LGBT+ young people and ensuring they feel safe and
included in their school communities. Compiled by the co-founder
and director of LGBTed, the inspiring stories in this book are
essential reading for LGBT+ teachers and allies. Let's be the role
models we needed when we were at school and show our students that
they can be successful and happy as an LGBT+ person.
This engaging book offers an in-depth introduction to teaching
mathematics through problem-solving, providing lessons and
techniques that can be used in classrooms for both primary and
lower secondary grades. Based on the innovative and successful
Japanese approaches of Teaching Through Problem-solving (TTP) and
Collaborative Lesson Research (CLR), renowned mathematics education
scholar Akihiko Takahashi demonstrates how these teaching methods
can be successfully adapted in schools outside of Japan. TTP
encourages students to try and solve a problem independently,
rather than relying on the format of lectures and walkthroughs
provided in classrooms across the world. Teaching Mathematics
Through Problem-Solving gives educators the tools to restructure
their lesson and curriculum design to make creative and adaptive
problem-solving the main way students learn new procedures.
Takahashi showcases TTP lessons for elementary and secondary
classrooms, showing how teachers can create their own TTP lessons
and units using techniques adapted from Japanese educators through
CLR. Examples are discussed in relation to the Common Core State
Standards, though the methods and lessons offered can be used in
any country. Teaching Mathematics Through Problem-Solving offers an
innovative new approach to teaching mathematics written by a
leading expert in Japanese mathematics education, suitable for
pre-service and in-service primary and secondary math educators.
Provides an annotated listing of recommended reading material for
students in grades seven through nine.
When the original Visible Learning published in 2008 it instantly
became a publishing sensation. Interest in the book was
unparalleled; it sold out in days and was described by the TES as
revealing 'teaching's Holy Grail'. Now John Hattie returns to this
ground-breaking work. The research underlying this book is now
informed by more than 2,100 meta-analyses (more than double that of
the original), drawn from more than 130,000 studies and involving
more than 400 million students from all around the world. But this
is more than just a new edition. This book is a sequel that
highlights the major story, taking in the big picture to reflect on
the implementation in schools of Visible Learning, how it has been
understood - and at times misunderstood - and what future
directions research should take. Visible Learning: The Sequel
reiterates the author's desire to move beyond claiming "what works"
to "what works best" by asking crucial questions such as: Why is
the current 'grammar of schooling', so embedded in so many
classrooms and can we improve it? Why is the learning curve for
teachers after the first few years so flat? How can we develop
teacher mind-frames to focus more on learning and listening? How
can we incorporate research evidence as part of the discussions
within schools? Areas covered include: * The evidence base and
reactions to Visible Learning * The Visible Learning model * The
intentional alignment of learning and teaching strategies * The
influence of home, students, teachers, classrooms, schools,
learning and curriculum on achievement * The impact of technology
Building upon the success of original, this highly anticipated
sequel expands Hattie's model of teaching and learning based on
evidence of impact and is essential reading for anyone involved in
the field of education either as a researcher, teacher, student,
school leader, teacher trainer or policy maker.
Current trends in education suggest that pupils should have more
responsibility for their own learning, but how can they if they
don't understand the what, the why and the how? This practical
guide explores the idea that a metacognitive approach enables
pupils to develop skills for lifelong learning. If pupils can
identify the what, the why, and the how of their learning, they can
begin to formulate strategies for overcoming challenges and for
continuous improvement. In this book, the authors truly engage with
research into the link between metacognition and learning, and the
idea that if you can effectively articulate your thoughts and
strategies regarding how you learn, you might then be in a better
position to take actions in order to improve and to be able to
learn best. An appendix of useful resources is also included, which
offers a range of activities surrounding the language of learning,
reflection and metacognition, as well essential advice on how to
develop metacognition in the early years (4-8), middle years
(8-10), and upper years (10-13). Metacognition in the Primary
Classroom demonstrates how important it is for children to be
well-enough informed to play an active role in learning better.
Having the language skills to talk about your learning, and the
opportunity to share ideas and strategies with others, enables all
concerned to explore and develop approaches in order to learn
better. This book is a crucial read for anyone interested in
ensuring that pupils take an active role in their own learning.
* Provides practical strategies and approaches to help you run your
existing learning activities in new and more effective ways *
User-friendly, accessible layout with each strategy presented on a
double page spread alongside illustrations * Includes guidance on
how to implement the strategy and potential pitfalls. * Draws on
examples from a wide range of education fields and applicable to
different environments and age ranges.
* Aimed at anyone involved or thinking about being involved in
teaching and learning mathematics at school * Packed full of
practical and fun lesson ideas and activities. * Explores the
broader goals and issues of mathematics education challenging some
of the stereotypical misunderstandings. * Each chapter focuses on
My lesson and how it works, What happens and why it matters, and
How could it be different? * Lessons and activities are informally
differentiated for age under three main headings - older primary,
younger secondary and more advanced.
A Practical Guide to Teaching Physical Education in the Secondary
School is written for all student teachers on university and
school-based initial teacher education programmes. It offers a
wealth of tried and tested strategies together with practical
activities and materials to support your teaching to enhance
pupils' learning. It is designed for you to dip in and out of, and
enable you to focus on specific areas of teaching, your programme
or pupils' learning. This third edition is fully updated with the
most recent developments in teaching physical education and
features five brand new chapters. Key topics covered include:
Planning schemes of work, units of work and lessons Safe practice,
risk assessment and risk management Promoting positive behaviour
Applying theories of learning to your practice Overcoming barriers
and maximising the achievement of all pupils Assessing learning
Physical literacy NEW Health related learning NEW Using digital
technologies NEW Reflective practice and action research Managing
your workload, resilience, health and well-being NEW Working with
your mentor NEW Photocopiable resources offer assistance in lesson
observation, planning, preparation, teaching and evaluation. An
annotated 'Further resources' section at the end of each chapter
provides information about some useful additional resources to
support you in your development as a teacher. Illustrated
throughout with examples of existing good practice, this highly
practical resource offers valuable support and guidance to all
student teachers as well as those in the early years of their
teaching career. Although A Practical Guide to Teaching Physical
Education in the Secondary School, 3rd Edition can be used
successfully on its own, it is also a companion to Learning to
Teach Physical Education in the Secondary School, 5th Edition and
can be used to reinforce the basic teaching skills covered in that
core textbook.
MATHEMATICAL JOURNEYS-a unique book of math ideas for teachers,
homeschoolers, and anyone who wants to learn about the world of
mathematics. Unlock secrets and joy behind math ideas. Discover how
math concepts evolve and connect. Stimulate curiosity and the awe
behind mathematics. Develop creative and inspiring ways to
introduce us to mathematical ideas. Important tool enhances and
enriches mathematics distance learning Are you a teacher, parent,
homeschooler, or just plain curious or perplexed by mathematics, if
so Mathematical Journeys will open new vistas into why math is so
important and essential in our lives while expanding your knowledge
of math. Pappas' new book focuses on looking at math ideas not
often covered in the traditional classroom...showing us that math
is more than knowing how to add, subtract or solve equations.
Explore such ideas as Discovering the golds of mathematics or
Delving into non-Euclidean geometries. Pappas' design and writing
style makes us wanting to learn more about math.
This book offers both a scholarly and practical overview of an
integrated language and literature approach in the 16-19 English
classroom. Providing a comprehensive overview of the identity of
the subject, it outlines the pedagogical benefits of studying a
unified English at post-16 and provides case studies of innovative
classroom practice across a range of topics and text types.
Including contributions from practising teachers and higher
education practitioners with extensive experience of the post-16
classroom and drawing on a range of literature, this book covers
the teaching of topics such as: Mind style in contemporary fiction
Comparative poetry analysis Insights from linguistic cohesion
Criticality through creative response Written to complement the two
other Teaching English 16-19 titles in the NATE series, Teaching
English Language and Literature 16-19 is the ideal companion for
all practising A-level English teachers, of all levels of
experience.
For thousands of years, religion has been a key element of human
societies. Whenever we, as educators, exclude or minimize
religion's vast role in society, we leave out a large part of our
world's shared history. This is a serious act of educational
omission, even neglect, on the part of our nation's public middle
and secondary schools, particularly when adolescents are so ready
to engage in meaningful conversation about the world that surrounds
them. Our book's central purpose is to provide middle-level and
high school teachers with the necessary background knowledge and
pedagogical skills necessary to help adolescents become religiously
literate learners and citizens. Currently, there is no text like
ours on the market that both covers a number of world religions,
and presents concrete recommendations for teaching and learning
this material. Our book is meant to educate the following
audiences: teacher educators, middle-level and high school teachers
in all content areas, administrators, school boards, and parents.
For us, educating for religious literacy is all about bringing
adolescents into the 21st century of teeming religious and
spiritual diversity - a long-neglected component of the
multicultural curriculum in public schools. In a post-9/11 world,
religious literacy requires that students understand the whats and
whys of differing religious beliefs, both in their own country and
elsewhere. It means looking for commonalities, as well as
differences, between and among the great wisdom traditions - both
nationally and internationally. It is about understanding how all
of us might live peacefully in a religiously diverse world. Our
book accomplishes these goals by being informative, practical,
experiential, case-based, and, above all, accessible to beginners.
This book helps mentors working with beginning teachers of
religious education to develop their own mentoring skills and
provides the essential guidance their mentee needs as they navigate
the roller coaster of their first years in the classroom. Offering
tried-and-tested strategies, it covers the knowledge, skills and
understanding every mentor needs. Practical tools offered include
approaches for developing subject knowledge and lesson planning, as
well as guidance for the effective use of pre- and post-lesson
discussion, observations and target setting to support beginning
religious education teachers. Together with analytical tools for
self-evaluation, this book is a vital source of support and
inspiration for all those involved in developing the next
generation of outstanding religious education teachers. Key topics
covered include the following: Models of mentoring Your knowledge,
skills and understanding as a mentor Developing mentees' religious
literacy through classroom practice Supporting the planning of
effective and creative RE lessons Developing mentees' knowledge and
skills in the RE curriculum Supporting the delivery and evaluation
of lessons Observations and pre- and post-lesson discussions and
regular mentoring meetings Helping new religious education teachers
develop their professional practice Filled with the key tools
needed for the mentor's individual development, this book offers an
accessible guide to mentoring religious education teachers with
ready-to-use strategies that support, inspire and elevate both
mentors and beginning teachers alike.
The book focuses on the most difficult aspect of learning/teaching
Chinese as an additional language-literacy acquisition.
Theoretically, this book provides frameworks and evidence from both
cognitive and sociocultural perspectives on the nature of CAL
reading development. Pedagogically, the book showcases how to teach
and assess CAL reading skills. Methodologically, this book includes
empirical studies using both qualitative and quantitative methods.
Geographically, the authors/contributors are from different parts
of the world: North America, Europe and Asia. Their
participants/subjects/students in these studies have diverse
backgrounds. In terms of scope, the book covers a much broader
spectrum of issues about CAL reading research and classroom
teaching than has previously been available. Writing is also
discussed in the book. In terms of technology, the book includes
discussion on how the use of computers, the Internet and social
media impacts students' Chinese literacy acquisition. The book also
presents some findings on how to use technology to teach different
subskills of CAL reading.
This highly controversial and compelling book exposes the
government's city academies project: the ways in which companies
and rich individuals have been persuaded to sponsor academies,
their real reasons for sponsoring them, the lies that have been
told in support of the academies project, and the disastrous effect
it will have on Britain's schools. It brings together existing
research, by the author and others, and adds new research, to build
up a picture of a deeply flawed idea, which is educationally
disastrous and inherently corrupt. In his provocative yet
fascinating tour de force, Francis Beckett pulls the plug on the
most high-profile educational scam for decades.
Underachievement is approached from a broad, integrated perspective
in this insightful look at the talented adolescent who always
performs below his or her optimum level of achievement. Professor
Griffin examines the psychological, social, and scholastic reasons
behind the phenomenon of the distracted and disengaged high school
student. The result of this in-depth study: A unique volume
describing effective student learning behavior, providing
curricular and instructional proposals for motivating
underachievers, and offering a construct that provides the basis
for understanding the various factors that account for academic
achievement.
The combined impact of linguistic, cultural, educational and
cognitive factors on mathematics learning is considered in this
unique book. By uniting the diverse research models and
perspectives of these fields, the contributors describe how
language and cognitive factors can influence mathematical learning,
thinking and problem solving. The authors contend that cognitive
skills are heavily dependent upon linguistic skills and both are
critical to the representational knowledge intimately linked to
school achievement in mathematics.
- One-stop resource explains culturally responsive teaching
conceptually and offers practical ways to apply in the classroom -
Specifically addresses culturally responsive teaching in music
education context, with vivid first-person examples from music
educators - Single-authored narrative makes this book clear and
accessible for students
This fully updated fifth edition of Learning to Teach Physical
Education in the Secondary School is a comprehensive, yet
accessible guide for all student secondary physical education
teachers. Practical and insightful advice is combined with theory
and research to support you in developing as a student teacher.
This core text is an ideal guide to support you in developing your
knowledge for teaching, your basic teaching skills and your ability
to reflect critically on what you are doing and why, enabling you
to cope in a range of teaching situations. Including updated
material to cover changes in policy and practice, curriculum and
assessments, the fifth edition of this essential textbook focuses
on: Starting and developing your teaching journey Planning,
teaching and evaluating physical education lessons for effective
pupil learning Looking beyond your teacher education. New chapters
include Essential knowledge bases for teaching physical education
Guidance on using digital technologies Health in the physical
education lesson Written with university and school-based initial
teacher education in mind, Learning to Teach Physical Education in
the Secondary School is an essential source of support and guidance
for all student physical education teachers embarking on the
challenging journey of developing as an effective teacher.
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