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Books > Social sciences > Education > Teaching of a specific subject
Why aren't more schools seeing significant improvement in students'
reading ability when they implement Response to Intervention (RTI)
or Multitiered Systems of Support (MTSS) in their literacy
programs? These frameworks serve as a way for educators to identify
struggling readers and provide the small-group instruction they
need to improve their skills. But the success stories are too few
in number, and most schools have too little to show for their
efforts. What accounts for the difference? What are successful
schools doing that sets them apart? Author and education consultant
Susan Hall provides answers in the form of 10 success factors for
implementing MTSS. Based on her experience in schools across the
United States, she explains the ""whys"" and ""hows"" of: Grouping
by skill deficit and using diagnostic assessments to get helpful
data for grouping and regrouping. Implementing an instructional
delivery model, including the ""walk-to-intervention"" model. Using
intervention time wisely and being aware of what makes intervention
effective. Providing teachers with the materials they need for
effective lessons and delivering differentiated professional
development for administrators, reading coaches, teachers, and
instructional assistants. Monitoring progress regularly and
conducting nonevaluative observations of intervention instruction.
Practical, comprehensive, and evidence-based, 10 Success Factors
for Literacy Intervention provides the guidance educators need to
move from disappointing results to solid gains in students'
literacy achievement.
There are particular challenges involved in teaching social work.
As with other professional disciplines, it is not simply a matter
of passing on the key elements of the knowledge base; there is also
the need to equip students to be able to make use of that knowledge
in practice and in the context of relevant professional values.
This book offers broad insights into effective social work
education. It provides insightful guidance to 50 aspects of the
social work curriculum and warns of common pitfalls and obstacles
to learning. Practical suggestions for exercises and activities are
presented in a clearly written, successful blend of theory and
practice. Neil Thompson is a distinguished, international scholar
and brings over 30 years of experience to a wide range of case
studies and transferable skills that will provide a foundation for
future social workers everywhere. This guide will be essential for
academics teaching social work, practice educators and workforce
and freelance development officers.
With an increasing global demand for entrepreneurship education,
and the need to prepare students for the challenges of an
ever-changing world of work, Colin Jones tackles the difficult
question: just where do these educators come from to meet this
demand? How to Become an Entrepreneurship Educator is the first
book to tackle how we create expert entrepreneurship educators at
all levels of education. Using activity theory as a lens, the book
unites the developmental trajectories of 20 eminent contemporary
experts at different levels of enterprise and entrepreneurship
education. Jones identifies these journeys in order to share the
collective lessons learned. By highlighting a range of global
insights, readers are enabled to reflect on their own strategies,
creating order in the domain of enterprise and entrepreneurship
education - an order that holds the power to propel the domain of
enterprise and entrepreneurship education onwards to new heights.
Such highly reflective accounts of how to teach entrepreneurship
will be an invaluable guide to educators from numerous backgrounds
to contemplate new strategies for teaching enterprise and
entrepreneurship in the context of their own choosing.
The step-by-step lessons in this book help teachers model the three
types of writing students must master to meet the Common Core
Standards: Opinion/Argument, Informative/Explanatory, and
Narrative. The lessons help students identify the key features and
purpose of each text type and support them as they practice writing
in each of these forms. Includes reproducible-guided, independent
writing frames and student self-assessment checklists. For use with
Grade 1.
Reading, writing, and research have never been more fun than with
this unique collection of flexible, easy-to-make projects. Students
simply follow step-by-step directions to create engaging banners,
collages, dioramas, quilts, scrolls, hangers, a variety of book
formats--including shape, zipper, flip, accordion-fold, and shutter
books--and much more Projects add a fun, meaningful dimension to
learning and can be used with any Social Studies topic. Perfect for
students of all learning styles. For use with Grades 2-3.
Teaching Research Methods in Political Science brings together
experienced instructors to offer a range of perspectives on how to
teach courses in political science. It focuses on numerous topics,
including identifying good research questions, measuring key
concepts, writing literature reviews and developing information
literacy skills. Illustrating the ways in which research methods
courses connect with wider topics in political science,
contributors discuss how methodological considerations can result
in recognition of previously silenced voices, and consider the
civic education mission of research methods in political science.
Chapters outline quantitative and qualitative methods, feminist
methodologies and techniques for studying African-American
politics, to review and demonstrate the many avenues that
instructors of research methods courses might take. This crucial
guide to teaching will benefit instructors of courses in research
methods in political science, as well as faculty leaders
instituting new courses in political science. Its theoretical
insights into civic education will also be useful to scholars of
education more broadly.
_______________ 'Another brilliant book that's jam-packed with
top-class tips you won't want to miss.' - MC Grammar, teacher and
parent 'Every classroom and every home needs this book!' -
Stephanie Elliot, teacher _______________ Maths Like a Ninja gives
every child the maths support they need at their fingertips, both
in the classroom and at home. Perfect for Key Stage 2 children,
aged 7 and up. From the creator of the bestselling Write Like a
Ninja, this handy pocketbook is full of key concepts, mathematical
vocabulary and practical advice to support every child's growing
independence in maths. Whether a child is stuck on a fractions
question or struggling to remember what 'composite numbers' are,
they'll find the answer in this all-in-one quick-reference tool.
This engaging, easy-to-use book is fully matched to the National
Curriculum for mathematics and will ensure children can do maths
with confidence. It supports teachers in planning lessons and
parents in supporting from home as well as empowering Key Stage 2
children to get the help they need easily and independently. For
more must-have Ninja books by Andrew Jennings (@VocabularyNinja),
check out the Vocabulary Ninja, Comprehension Ninja and Arithmetic
Ninja classroom and home learning resources.
With the rigorous reading standards called for in the Common Core
State Standards, teachers need easy access to reading passages at
an increasing level of complexity so students will have
opportunities to read closely and stretch their skills as the
school year progresses. This collection of passages offers just
that. Each of the 25 passages comes with text-dependent
comprehension questions, including open-ended questions that
require students to use higher-order thinking skills when writing
their responses. The lessons include teaching tips that target the
challenges students will encounter in the passage and provide
text-complexity information-- quantitative (Lexile level),
qualitative, and reader and task considerations--to help teachers
meet the needs of their class. For use with Grade 5.
Give children playful opportunities to master the top 50
high-frequency words with this engaging collection of "sight-word
trees " These systematic reproducibles give students plenty of
practice with must-know sight words to dramatically improve their
reading, writing, and spelling skills. Perfect for homework and a
great way to get kids on target to meet the Foundational Skills for
Reading outlined in the Common Core Standards For use with Grades
K-2.
Classroom as Organization (CAO) is a powerful teaching methodology,
particularly well-suited for teaching business topics, that can
enliven students' learning experience while giving them the
opportunity to practice and develop workplace-related skills. This
book provides a comprehensive background to the CAO teaching
methodology, including its origins, evolution, and various
applications. From this basis, the considerations of how to teach
and design a CAO are explored. The book distills lessons learned
from the literature and the authors' practice into a comprehensive
design that can be easily implemented by educators new to this
methodology. Detailed templates from the authors' own practice
enable educators to turn their classroom into an organization,
empower the students to run that organization, and watch the
learning experience come alive. If you are not familiar with CAO,
this book provides a comprehensive resource. If you are familiar
with CAO, but have been afraid to try it, this book provides the
support to take the next step in your practice of experiential
teaching and learning. This book was written for experiential
educators as well as business or organizational behavior and
management professors looking for a creative way to engage students
while creating a deep and meaningful learning experience.
Role-play simulations are a popular method for active learning in
business education. Instructors in a variety of business
disciplines use role-plays to facilitate student engagement and
promote more dynamic class environments. In this book, the authors
provide instructors of all experience levels with frameworks for
understanding role-play simulations and implementing them in their
classes. Professors Bolinger and Stanton have taught role-plays in
the classroom and online for over 30 years combined. In Role-Play
Simulations the authors describe the history and theories
underlying the use and articulate the chief benefits of the method.
They explain when and why role-play simulations are useful in
business education classes and discuss a variety of considerations
for implementing them, from advance preparation to post-activity
debriefing. The book walks the reader through specific examples of
different length simulations and their resource requirements.
Included with their insights is an annotated bibliography with
additional resources and examples of published role-play
simulations across a variety of business disciplines. Whether new
or experienced in using active learning methods and role-play
simulations in the business classroom, instructors will benefit
greatly from the wealth of information provided. The information
and advice provided will also benefit corporate trainers,
executives, or other practitioners who would like to learn more
about the use of role-play simulations as a teaching tool.
Teaching Benefit-Cost Analysis is a unique look at the insights of
internationally recognized teachers, researchers and practitioners
addressing a difficult and controversial subject. Each chapter
presents a self-contained module that includes guidance to
additional resources, and many contain class exercises to provide
detail and inspiration that extends beyond the scope of standard
textbooks. The social evaluation of public investments by
governments, international organizations and non-profits is an
expanding field that encompasses both new and established areas of
social policy. This book expands on the methods and issues central
to the study of benefit-cost analysis, with specific topics
including risk, societal distribution of impacts, limited versus
national effects, the statistical value of a life and more. This
book?s focus on classroom engagement makes it a valuable resource
for teachers of benefit-cost analysis. Its attention to
foundational and advanced concepts will be of interest to
undergraduate or Master?s-level students of public policy,
economics and related areas, as well as professional economists who
apply benefit-cost analysis in their work.
There is a dire need for a comprehensive pedagogical resource both
on diverse approaches to teaching sports economics and the use of
sports to teach broader principles of economic concepts. This book
does exactly that. The contributions from leading scholars and
teachers in both fields will help all instructors looking to raise
their teaching game. The pedagogy in this book covers a wide array
of active and engaged teaching techniques to demonstrate
interesting ways to engage students and to get them excited about
sports economics and economic concepts in general. Chapters cover
topics such as legal case studies that impact North American
leagues, discrimination and gender bias in sports economics and
best practices for supervising undergraduate student research. The
innovative approaches and methods presented are applicable to both
small and large class sizes. Practical advice for designing field
trip-, guest speaker-, and case-study-based classes, and techniques
for using data-driven exercises, film and straightforward classroom
experiments are included. This book will appeal to two primary
audiences: undergraduate economics instructors and sports
economics/management instructors. The teaching methods may be
easily adapted to most economic classes, and the breadth of
material provides instructors with assistance in creating course
syllabi, outlining teaching plans, generating student interest, and
increasing the efficacy of their pedagogy.
With the rigorous reading standards called for in the Common Core
State Standards, teachers need easy access to reading passages at
an increasing level of complexity so students will have
opportunities to read closely and stretch their skills as the
school year progresses. This collection of passages offers just
that. Each of the 25 passages comes with text-dependent
comprehension questions, including open-ended questions that
require students to use higher-order thinking skills when writing
their responses. The lessons include teaching tips that target the
challenges students will encounter in the passage and provide
text-complexity information-- quantitative (Lexile level),
qualitative, and reader and task considerations--to help teachers
meet the needs of their class. For use with Grade 2.
Give students the repeated practice they need to master the reading
skill of comparing and contrasting, and succeed on tests! Each of
the 35 reproducible pages features a high-interest nonfiction
reading passage with test-formatted practice questions (bubble-test
and short-answer) 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.
These easy-to-manage, ready-to-reproduce practice packets are a
perfect way to target the phonics skills children need to master.
Activities include word-shape recognition puzzles, fill-in rhymes,
riddles, and stories, word searches, scrambled sentences, word
sorts, and much more. Children can work through the packets
independently and at their own pace. Perfect for in-class use or
homework. An effective tool for supporting second-language learners
and RTI instruction. For use with Grades K-3.
Compiling the experience and expertise of over 50 leading
international scholars, this Handbook of Teaching Public
Administration provides critical insights into the questions,
issues, and challenges raised by teaching practitioners and
aspiring professionals. Its global scope ensures a comprehensive
overview of the diversity of current practice in teaching public
administration. Featuring international examples of curriculum
design and practice, the Handbook positions public administration
against a backdrop shaped by global politics, history, philosophy,
and social change. Applied case studies on teaching public
administration and in-depth analyses of critical pedagogical
concepts illuminate the diverse and multidisciplinary approaches to
public administration across the globe, as well as emphasising the
widely contested nature of its teaching. Contributions from field
professionals explore questions of accreditation, curriculum
design, assessment, innovation, and practice, ultimately serving to
inform and inspire readers' pedagogical decisions. Theoretical,
empirical, and practice-focused, this incisive Handbook will be an
essential resource for public administration students, educators,
and practitioners at any stage in their study or career. It will
also serve as an engaging reference text for public administration
accreditation and approvals organisations.
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