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Jordan, Rebecca Lee Payne – ProQuest LLC, 2016
The notably low level of reading proficiency across the United States, combined with the known importance of teachers for student success, necessitates improved understanding of teachers' knowledge, how it is acquired, and its role in instruction. This study had four goals: (1) identify whether domains of content knowledge and pedagogical content…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Grade 1, Early Childhood Education, Elementary School Teachers
McCulloch, Amy C. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
This is a quantitative study to identify and compare the beliefs held by elementary school administrators, gifted education specialists, classroom teachers, and parents of high-ability students concerning issues related to gifted education services provided by a rural school district in Southeast Georgia. Participants were administered a…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Gifted, Likert Scales, Stakeholders
Edgerton, David C. – Academy for Educational Development, 2005
The 1990 election of Dona Violeta Barrios de Chamorro as President of Nicaragua marked the end of the Sandinista era and the return of U.S. foreign assistance the following year. Education was prominent in the U.S. assistance package. Since early 1994, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Mission to Nicaragua has funded a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Financial Support, Educational Improvement, Elementary Education
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Diehl, Holly L. – Reading Teacher, 2005
This article describes an intervention program designed at a small rural school in Western Maryland to help word callers (students who can decode words easily but seem unable to comprehend). The ultimate goal of this program was to teach these children to become reflective readers with the confidence to participate in literature discussion groups…
Descriptors: Educational Opportunities, Intervention, Comprehension, Rural Schools
Dewalt, Mark W. – 2001
A 15-year study of Amish schools in the United States and Canada found that the number of Amish schools has grown dramatically from 1940 through the present. The Amish provide formal schooling only up to the eighth grade, after which adolescents are engaged in mastering a trade before entering into adulthood. The Amish once supported public…
Descriptors: Amish, Compulsory Education, Court Litigation, Educational History