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Improving the use of evidence in teacher preparation is one of the
greatest challenges and opportunities for our field. The chapters
in this volume explore how data availability, quality, and use
within and across preparation programs shed light on the
structures, policies, and practices associated with high quality
teacher preparation. Chapter authors take on critical questions
about the connection between what takes place during teacher
preparation and subsequent outcomes for teachers and students -
which has remained a black box for too long. Despite a long history
of teacher preparation in the U.S. and a considerable investment in
preservice and in-service training, much is still to be learned
about how pre-service preparation impacts teacher effectiveness. A
strong empirical basis that informs how specific aspects of and
approaches to teacher preparation relate to outcomes for graduates
and their preK-12 student outcomes will provide a foundation for
improved teaching and learning. Our book responds to stakeholders'
collective responsibility to students and teachers to act more
deliberately. Issues of data availability and quality, the uses of
data for improvement, priorities for future research, and
opportunities to promote evidence use in teacher preparation are
discussed throughout the volume to inspire collective action to
push the field towards more use of evidence. Chapters present
research that uses a variety of research designs, methodologies,
and data sources to explore important questions about the
relationship between teacher preparation inputs and outcomes.
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities (CRPD) is increasingly used to civilize grassroots
disabled persons' organizations (DPOs) around the world. The
international disability rights movement actively promotes the
CRPD's key norm that disabled persons mobilize in support of their
rights under the Convention. The unintended consequence of these
activities, however, is that local groups focused on social support
and service provision, rather than disability-rights advocacy, are
targeted for change. While the resources provided by international
actors to grassroots organizations provide new opportunities, they
also create barriers to local groups' ability to promote full civic
participation of their members in the local community. Through a
detailed account of grassroots DPOs in Nicaragua, Civilizing
Disability Society demonstrates how local organizations navigate
pressures from abroad as they attempt to concretely address the
health, education and economic needs of their members at home.
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities (CRPD) is increasingly used to civilize grassroots
disabled persons' organizations (DPOs) around the world. The
international disability rights movement actively promotes the
CRPD's key norm that disabled persons mobilize in support of their
rights under the Convention. The unintended consequence of these
activities, however, is that local groups focused on social support
and service provision, rather than disability-rights advocacy, are
targeted for change. While the resources provided by international
actors to grassroots organizations provide new opportunities, they
also create barriers to local groups' ability to promote full civic
participation of their members in the local community. Through a
detailed account of grassroots DPOs in Nicaragua, Civilizing
Disability Society demonstrates how local organizations navigate
pressures from abroad as they attempt to concretely address the
health, education and economic needs of their members at home.
As Steven Meyers writes, an odyssey need not involve a long
journey, simply a profound one. First drawn to Lime Creek for its
fly fishing, this stream serves as Meyers’s muse in seven
transcendent essays that explore journeys in the discovery of self,
of home, and what it means to be human. The essays also explore
loss and grief, of finding healing in the powerful presence of
nature and in the awareness and experience of natural cycles. The
tender eloquence of his writing and his compassion for all living
things make for a contemplation of place in the tradition of
Pilgrim at Tinker Creek and Desert Solitaire.
As Steven Meyers writes, an odyssey need not involve a long
journey, simply a profound one. First drawn to Lime Creek for its
fly fishing, this stream serves as Meyers’s muse in seven
transcendent essays that explore journeys in the discovery of self,
of home, and what it means to be human. The essays also explore
loss and grief, of finding healing in the powerful presence of
nature and in the awareness and experience of natural cycles. The
tender eloquence of his writing and his compassion for all living
things make for a contemplation of place in the tradition of
Pilgrim at Tinker Creek and Desert Solitaire.
Improving the use of evidence in teacher preparation is one of the
greatest challenges and opportunities for our field. The chapters
in this volume explore how data availability, quality, and use
within and across preparation programs shed light on the
structures, policies, and practices associated with high quality
teacher preparation. Chapter authors take on critical questions
about the connection between what takes place during teacher
preparation and subsequent outcomes for teachers and students -
which has remained a black box for too long. Despite a long history
of teacher preparation in the U.S. and a considerable investment in
preservice and in-service training, much is still to be learned
about how pre-service preparation impacts teacher effectiveness. A
strong empirical basis that informs how specific aspects of and
approaches to teacher preparation relate to outcomes for graduates
and their preK-12 student outcomes will provide a foundation for
improved teaching and learning. Our book responds to stakeholders'
collective responsibility to students and teachers to act more
deliberately. Issues of data availability and quality, the uses of
data for improvement, priorities for future research, and
opportunities to promote evidence use in teacher preparation are
discussed throughout the volume to inspire collective action to
push the field towards more use of evidence. Chapters present
research that uses a variety of research designs, methodologies,
and data sources to explore important questions about the
relationship between teacher preparation inputs and outcomes.
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