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Books > Social sciences > Education > Organization & management of education
From implementation in the classroom to building security,
technology has permeated all aspects of education throughout the
United States. Though hardware has been developed to identify and
prevent weaponry from entering a school, including video cameras,
entry control devices, and weapon detectors, school safety remains
a fundamental concern with the recent increase of school violence
and emergence of cyberbullying. Professionals need answers on how
to use this technology to protect the physical, emotional, and
social wellbeing of all children. Leveraging Technology to Improve
School Safety and Student Wellbeing is a pivotal reference source
that provides vital research on the application of technology in
P-12 school safety and its use to foster an environment where
students can feel safe and be academically successful. The book
will comprise empirical, conceptual, and practical applications
that craft an overall understanding of the issues in creating a
"safe" learning environment and the role technology can and should
play; where a student's wellbeing is valued and protected from
external and internal entities, equitable access is treasured as a
means for facilitating the growth of the whole student, and policy,
practices, and procedures are implemented to build a foundation to
transform the culture and climate of the school into an inclusive
nurturing environment. While highlighting topics such as
professional development, digital citizenship, and community
infrastructure, this publication is ideally designed for educators,
scholars, leadership practitioners, coordinators, policymakers,
government officials, law enforcement, security professionals, IT
consultants, parents, academicians, researchers, and students.
Concept mapping has often been acknowledged as an efficient
instrument for aiding students in learning new information.
Examining the impact this tool provides in STEM fields can help to
create more effective teaching methods. Advanced Concept Maps in
STEM Education: Emerging Research and Opportunities highlights both
the history and recent innovations of concept maps in learning
environments. Featuring extensive coverage of relevant topics
including object maps, verbal maps, and spatial maps, this
publication is ideal for educators, academicians, students,
professionals, and researchers interested in discovering new
perspectives on the impact of concept mapping in educational
settings.
Children can experience feelings they don't understand, causing
them to act out. This Redleaf Quick Guide is filled with
information on how to respond to an array of 12 common behavioral
challenges including aggression, defiance, and separation anxiety,
and offers prevention tips and developmental information that may
affect young children's behavior.
Curriculum Windows: What Curriculum Theorists of the 1990s Can
Teach Us about Schools and Society Today is an effort by students
of curriculum studies, along with their professor, to interpret and
understand curriculum texts and theorists of the 1990s in
contemporary terms. The authors explore how key books/authors from
the curriculum field of the 1990s illuminate new possibilities
forward for us as scholar educators today: How might the theories,
practices, and ideas wrapped up in curriculum texts of the 1990s
still resonate with us, allow us to see backward in time and
forward in time - all at the same time? How might these figurative
windows of insight, thought, ideas, fantasy, and fancy make us
think differently about curriculum, teaching, learning, students,
education, leadership, and schools? Further, how might they help us
see more clearly, even perhaps put us on a path to correct the
mistakes and missteps of intervening decades and of today? The
chapter authors and editor revisit and interpret several of the
most important works in the curriculum field of the 1990s. The
book's Foreword is by renowned curriculum theorist William H.
Schubert.
Education in South Africa currently poses enormous challenges to
everyone involved, including the State, parents, school governing
bodies, principals and educators. To ensure the creation of an
effective education system, a sound employment relationship between
the State and educators, and a thorough knowledge and understanding
of the correct application and implementation of education labour
law, is vital. Labour relations in education: a South African
perspective focuses on those issues that influence the daily life
of the education manager, the school governing body and the
individual educator. This title attempts to analyse, describe and
clarify the most important legal principles regulating employment
relations in the education sector - the Constitution includes, in
the Bill of Rights, a number of provisions that have a direct
bearing on education in general and fair labour practice in
education in particular. This new edition discusses recent court
cases and amended legislative provisions, and expands on some
issues that did not receive detailed attention in the first
edition. Labour relations in education is aimed at the principal as
education manager in public schools in South Africa and students of
the subject of Education Law. Deputy principals and heads of
departments, and in fact any teacher who is interested in the
management of education, will also benefit from it.
Critical and creative thinking can make a significant difference to
the quality of students' learning. But do we really need to teach
children and young people to think, and if so, how should we go
about it? The answer to the first part of the question is yes,
because the fact of the matter is that although all human beings
can think, effective thinking depends on skills and strategies that
can be learned. The answer to the second part lies within this
book. Schools as thinking communities demystifies thinking and
explains how teachers can equip students with the mental tools for
success in school and beyond. Schools as thinking communities
provides detailed descriptions, illustrated with classroom
examples, of the following ways of enhancing thinking: Habits of
Mind; CoRT (Cognitive Research Trust) and Six Thinking Hats; P4C
(Philosophy for Children); CEA (Cognitive Enrichment Advantage);
Thinking Maps; IE (Instrumental Enrichment); TASC (Teaching
Actively in a Social Context); and Cooperative Learning. One or
more of these might be chosen by a school community as a means to
nurture thinking across the curriculum in every classroom, thus
encouraging individuals to understand, manage and take
responsibility for their own thinking processes, and to value the
perspectives of others. Contents include the following: How
students and teachers develop as thinkers; The characteristics of a
thinking classroom; The process of developing a school as a
thinking community; Life skills and inclusion in a thinking
community; Challenges facing thinking schools. Schools as thinking
communities is aimed at teachers at all levels, curriculum
designers, education planners, teacher educators and interested
parents.
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