Looking in Classrooms provides a class-tested overview of the most effective teaching methods -- both qualitative and quantitative. Grounded in research, it emphasizes teacher self-improvement, decision-making skills, and reflective teaching.
This book uses yet another lens to examin differentiation and support its implementation in classrooms. It presents educators with a series of actual curricular units developed by teachers who work hard to differentiate instruction in high school classrooms. The book thus moves from defining and describing differentiation to providing the actual curriculum used to differentiate instruction.
This book examines one of the most fundamental issues in education – learning. Once understood as a highly individual process, learning is now recognised to be a strongly social event, infl uenced not only by mental processes, but also by the context in which it occurs. Much learning takes place in contexts outside the education system, in homes and families, for example, as well as in classrooms, schools and colleges. Insights from across these different contexts shed light on what learning is, and how opportunities for it can be maximized.
This exploration of children's "inquiry" - what it is, how it develops, and how it contributes to children's learning - should help elementary and language teachers to understand, appreciate, and foster children's inquiry in classrooms. In this volume, the author introduces a theoretical framework for understanding children's "inquiry" language, not as linguistic forms (questions), but as communication acts in which the child brings another into the act of sense-making. By examining these "inquiry acts", the author aims to uncover new possibilities for the understanding of how children learn and how tachers can foster their learning in classrooms, class exercises, research findings, classroom episodes, and the author's own reflections.
What do classroom teachers do on a daily basis to incorporate the study and production of texts in multiple media? What are some of their assignments? How do teachers assign grades in a classroom where the final project may be a sculpture, a film, or a website? This book answers these and many other questions by examining the work of pioneers: teachers who have transformed their classrooms in an effort to broaden the literacy of their students. Describing some of the most innovative examples of teaching and learning, this volume offers practical guidance, including actual lessons, assignments, and assessments that have been used successfully in pioneering classrooms.