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Books > Social sciences > Education > Schools
Science is unique among the disciplines since it is inherently
hands-on. However, the hands-on nature of science instruction also
makes it uniquely challenging when teaching in virtual
environments. How do we, as science teachers, deliver high-quality
experiences in an online environment that leads to age/grade-level
appropriate science content knowledge and literacy, but also
collaborative experiences in the inquiry process and the nature of
science? The expansion of online environments for education poses
logistical and pedagogical challenges for early childhood and
elementary science teachers and early learners. Despite digital
media becoming more available and ubiquitous and increases in
online spaces for teaching and learning (Killham et al., 2014; Wong
et al., 2018), PreK-12 teachers consistently report feeling
underprepared or overwhelmed by online learning environments
(Molnar et al., 2021; Seaman et al., 2018). This is coupled with
persistent challenges related to elementary teachers' lack of
confidence and low science teaching self-efficacy (Brigido,
Borrachero, Bermejo, & Mellado, 2013; Gunning & Mensah,
2011). Teaching and Learning Online: Science for Elementary Grade
Levels comprises three distinct sections: Frameworks, Teacher's
Journeys, and Lesson Plans. Each section explores the current
trends and the unique challenges facing elementary teachers and
students when teaching and learning science in online environments.
All three sections include alignment with Next Generation Science
Standards, tips and advice from the authors, online resources, and
discussion questions to foster individual reflection as well as
small group/classwide discussion. Teacher's Journeys and Lesson
Plan sections use the 5E model (Bybee et al., 2006; Duran &
Duran, 2004). Ideal for undergraduate teacher candidates, graduate
students, teacher educators, classroom teachers, parents, and
administrators, this book addresses why and how teachers use online
environments to teach science content and work with elementary
students through a research-based foundation.
The Impact of PDS Partnerships in Challenging Times is the follow
up to Doing PDS: Stories and Strategies from Successful Clinically
Rich Practice (2018). The first book included stories that
described our experiences across more than twenty-five years of PDS
partnerships. We sought to examine and chronicle the innovative
ways we negotiate school-university collaboration while explaining
the development of the SUNY Buffalo State PDS consortium. This
second volume strives to explore the impact of our endeavors
individually at each school/community site and collectively as an
entire consortium to point to the important ways that
school-university partnership contributes to all stakeholders and
where we might do better. SUNY Buffalo State's PDS roots go back to
1991 with one local school partner. Today this school-university
partnership consortium connects with over 100 schools with
approximately 45 signed agreements each semester in Western New
York, nationally, and internationally. The SUNY Buffalo State PDS
consortium is grounded in three frameworks for clinically rich
practice: (a) the National Association for Professional Development
Schools Nine Essentials (Brindley, Field, & Lesson, 2008); (b)
CAEP Standards for Excellence in Educator Preparation, Standard 2
(http://caepnet.org/ standards/standard-2, 2018); and (c) the
Buffalo State Teacher Education Unit Conceptual Framework
(https://epp.buffalostate.edu/conceptualframework, 2018). Through
specific examples, each chapter utilizes a case study approach to
describe the nature of various partnerships situated in research
with a focus on the impact of the partnership. The chapters are
intentionally succinct to provide a focused look at a particular
partnership activity as each contributes to the larger goals of the
entire consortium. Every chapter follows a similar structure -
defining a challenge identified by the members of the consortium, a
review of the relevant literature, an explanation of how the
school/community liaison team responded to the challenge and the
data gathered to determine impact, an "impact at a glance" chart to
report the findings, and an identification of the necessary next
steps in the project.
Pupil Book Study is a window into the 'lived experience' of pupils,
as opposed to just the observed experience. It is also a mirror in
which to reflect professional practice and identify what helps
learning, and what hinders it by outlining clear and coherent
structures in which to talk with pupils and look at their books.
Pupil Book Study gives headteachers, senior and middle leaders a
systematic toolkit to evaluate the impact of the curriculum through
studying teaching and learning. Infused with cognitive science
research and evidence-informed practice, it offers schools the
architecture for excellence; helping remove the risk of making
assumptions. Pupil Book Study is a guide for schools that offers 7
specific and fully exemplified areas to focus quality assurance
systems. The keystone between teaching, learning and the
curriculum, Pupil Book Study offers schools the tools to explain
why things are as they are and presents solutions to the areas that
limit or hinder progress. Schools report that Pupil Book Study has
been some of the most powerful and impactful work they have ever
undertaken, resulting in positive change. In November 2020, Pupil
Book Study was shared with the Deputy Director, Senior HMI and
Policy makers at Ofsted.
This guidebook is designed to be the elementary school teacher's
friend in addressing a wide variety of questions regarding the use
of educational and instructional technologies. It can serve as a
companion and guide through the myriad challenges and opportunities
related to the effective use of technology in one's classroom and
school. A sample of U.S. elementary school teachers provided us
with detailed answers about their experiences with using technology
in their teaching. Specifically, they shared their challenges,
barriers, ideas, and suggestions for working successfully with
administrators, technology specialists, students, fellow teachers,
and parents when teaching with technology. We have organized the
teachers' experiences and recommendations according to each
stakeholder group. Rather than recommending or reviewing specific
educational technology companies, applications, or tools, we
provide a large number of strategies that are "built to last" and
should be applicable regardless of the specific tool under
consideration. We assume that it doesn't ultimately matter what the
tool or technology is that you're using-it's how and why you're
using it for teaching and learning that will determine whether it
is successful or not. The "how" and "why" aspects encompass the
built-to-last strategies included in this guidebook.
As social studies standards shift to place a higher emphasis on
critical thinking, inquiry, interaction, and expression, many
teachers are scrambling to figure out how to appropriately shift
their instruction accordingly. This book provides examples and
ideas for working with elementary and middle school students to
build social studies skills and knowledge in order to become
independent learners and thinkers. Teaching these skills helps to
support students in ways which are important to them, and to
society at large. Real Classrooms, Real Teachers: The C3 Inquiry in
Practice is aimed at in-service and pre-service teachers, grades
3-8. This text includes six sections: an introduction, one section
for each of the four dimensions of the C3 Framework for Social
Studies State Standards (National Council for the Social Studies,
2013), and a conclusion. Each chapter begins with a vignette based
on a real-life social studies lesson authored by a practicing
teacher or researcher. This is followed by a sample lesson plan
associated with the vignette and suggestions for appropriate texts
and supporting materials, as well as suggestions for modifications.
Motivate reluctant readers with this collection of easy-to-read
passages that cover a wide range of high-interest topics. Grouped
according to the key reading strategies they reinforce, each
reproducible passage comes with test-formatted comprehension and
vocabulary questions, as well as writing activities. A great
supplement to your reading program! For use with Grades 6-8.
Early childhood educators are keenly aware of the importance of a
child's transition to ""real school."" This transition is occurring
earlier in a child's life now that school districts nationwide are
moving to pre-kindergarten experiences for 3- and 4-year olds.
Annually, more than one million children attend public school pre-k
programs overseen by elementary school principals who, although
veteran educational leaders, were not trained to oversee these
programs. Although pre-k classrooms are rapidly growing and deserve
special attention, school leaders must be reminded that early
childhood means more than pre-kindergarten; it extends through
third grade. School leadership needs to understand the principles
of early childhood education to effectively support all children
age three to grade three. Professional and Ethical Consideration
for Early Childhood Leaders is a collection of innovative research
that crafts an overall understanding of the importance of early
childhood leadership in today's schools. The book employs
strategies to improve support for children in early childhood
years, examines the different roles of early childhood leadership,
analyzes best practices for implementation in early childhood
contexts, and explores improvements for leadership preparation for
schools with pre-k through third-grade children. While highlighting
a wide range of topics including advocacy, cultural responses, and
professional development, this publication is ideally designed for
educators, administrators, principals, early childhood development
teachers, daycare instructors, curriculum developers, advocates,
researchers, academicians, and students.
In the groundbreaking and best-selling Teaching WalkThrus Volume 1,
Tom Sherrington and Oliver Caviglioli produced a brilliantly
concise and accessible repository to 50 essential teaching
techniques. In this follow-up second volume, Tom and Oliver team up
with 10 experienced educators to present 50 brand new WalkThrus,
covering all the key areas of teaching: behaviour and
relationships; curriculum planning; explaining and modelling;
questioning and feedback; practice and retrieval; and Mode B
teaching. Alex Quigley, Martin Robinson, Claire Stoneman, Bennie
Kara, Zoe Enser, Mark Enser, John Tomsett, Simon Breakspear,
Bronwyn Ryie Jones and Oliver Lovell bring a huge wealth of
expertise as they help to further expand and elaborate this
essential teaching manual. As always, each technique is concisely
explained and beautifully illustrated in five short steps, to make
sense of complex ideas and support student learning.
This book seeks to make fractions more accessible to both students
and teachers by introducing an element of fun. The stories, poems,
plays, and parodies contained in these pages are designed to
entertain your students and at the same time to give them a solid
grasp of important fractional concepts. The characters and
situations in each activity will also help students apply the
concepts they learn to real-life situations--a key element of the
National Council of Teachers of Mathematics' Curriculum Standards.
- from the book.Grades 3-6.
Teacher-pupil planning means teachers and students working in a
partnership to articulate a problem/concern, develop objectives,
locate materials/resources, and evaluate progress. The intent of
this volume of Middle Level Education and the Self-Enhancing School
titled, "School is Life, Not a Preparation for Life"-John Dewey:
Democratic Practices in Middle Grades Education, is to take the
thoughts about the middle grades school curriculum presented in
volume one (Middle Grades Curriculum: Voices and Visions of the
Self-Enhancing School) and demonstrate the efforts taking place in
teacher education programs and middle grades classrooms today.
Volume two is organized into two parts, efforts within teacher
education programs and efforts of practitioners in the middle
grades classrooms. We asked authors in both contexts to address the
following questions: 1. Antecedents: What knowledge, skills and
dispositions must be in place in all stakeholders to have
teacherpupil planning serve a central role in the middle grades
teacher education program or middle grades classroom? 2.
Implementation: What does the teacher-pupil planning process look
like within your teacher education program or middle grades
classroom? 3. Outcomes: What benefits (knowledge, skills, and
dispositions) are derived from the implementation of teacher-pupil
planning in your teacher education program or your middle grades
classroom?
Give students the repeated practice they need to master the reading
skill of making inferences, and succeed on tests! Each of the 35
reproducible pages features a high-interest fiction and nonfiction
reading passage with bubble-test practice questions that target
this essential reading comprehension skill. Flexible and easy to
use--in school or at home--the book also includes model lessons,
pre- and post-assessments, and an answer key.
Mobile learning is a primary learning format in the education of
young children from birth through 6th grade. This format has been
found to have a positive impact on the academic achievement,
self-efficacy, motivation, and learning attitudes of students,
including those with special needs (Ciampa, 2014; Hwang, 2014;
Nikou & Economides, 2018; Xie, Basham, Marino & Rice,
2018). In both formal and informal learning contexts, mobile
learning affords opportunities to innovate and explore new forms of
authentic experiences, meaning-making, and creativity with
untethered technology (Choi, Land, & Zimmerman, 2018; Schuck,
Kearney & Burden, 2017). This edited book acts as a springboard
to expand discussions surrounding how mobiles might best be
situated in contexts relating to young children. With a focus on
early childhood and elementary settings, this book both expands the
definition of mobiles to encompass digital-physical tools (e.g.
Osmo, probeware) and wearables. It also provides insight into how
intentional integration of mobiles supports the development and
practice of both in-service and preservice teachers working with
students in early childhood and elementary settings.
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