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Showing 16 to 30 of 56 results Save | Export
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Cooper, Patricia M.; Capo, Karen; Mathes, Bernie; Gray, Lincoln – Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education, 2007
The current study was designed to assess the vocabulary and literacy skills of young children who participated in an authentic literacy practice, i.e., Vivian Paley's "storytelling curriculum," over the course of their respective prekindergarten or kindergarten years. We asked: How do prekindergarten and kindergarten age children, who…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Preschool Education, Standardized Tests, Young Children
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Page, Jan – Education in Rural Australia, 2006
McConaghy suggests that improving quality learning outcomes for students in NSW rural and remote schools requires "bold pedagogical solutions ... developed in and for the specific contexts of rural NSW schooling" (2002, p.3). This paper seeks to identify elements of this pedagogical solution that could be incorporated into pre-service…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Education Courses, Rural Schools, Teaching Methods
Miller, Bruce A. – School Administrator, 1996
State mandates in Kentucky, Oregon, Mississippi, and Tennessee have raised questions concerning multiage grouping's viability. Some educators are implementing multiage classrooms and schools with insufficient forethought, planning, and stakeholder participation. A recent study underlines the importance of teacher readiness, parental involvement,…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Misconceptions, Mixed Age Grouping, Parent School Relationship
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Swidler, Stephen A. – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2005
This article describes the teaching practices at Upper Rill School, a 1-teacher school in rural Nebraska. With its 8 students, grades 1 through 8, the teacher considers the school?s size and continuity of student enrollment flexible and generative. Subject matter and grade levels are regularly integrated though common curricula. Instruction is…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Enrollment, One Teacher Schools, Rural Schools
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Christie, James F.; Stone, Sandra J. – Journal of Literacy Research, 1999
Describes the collaborative literacy activity that occurred in one teacher's sociodramatic play center in a multi-age classroom (K-2) and a kindergarten classroom. Finds the children in the multi-age group engaged in a larger amount and a broader range of collaborative literacy activities than did the kindergartners; and the collaborative…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cooperative Learning, Dramatic Play, Literacy
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Fosco, Andrea M.; Schleser, Robert; Andal, Jolynne – Reading Psychology an international quarterly, 2004
Differences in cognitive developmental level and reading achievement of elementary school children in multiage programming and traditional classrooms were explored. There is controversy regarding the benefit of multiage classrooms for learning academic subjects. According to previous research (e.g., Almy, Chittenden, & Miller, 1967; Brekke,…
Descriptors: Reading Ability, Reading Achievement, Mixed Age Grouping, Cognitive Development
Melliger, Suzanne R. – School Administrator, 2005
As teachers and schools are held more accountable for students passing the tests within a designated time frame, the pressure on teachers requires them to work and plan smarter. It takes incredibly talented and dedicated teachers to pull off the multiage program while still meeting all of the state's testing requirements. Educators must continue…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Stages, Mixed Age Grouping, Classroom Techniques
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Lolli, Elizabeth Monce – ERS Spectrum, 1997
A former principal of a nongraded elementary school discusses the nongraded, multiage philosophy, effects of multiage grouping, prevalent misconceptions, and suggestions from practice. Critics often mistakenly characterize multiage classrooms as homogeneous, unstructured, and team-taught; appropriate for kindergarten and primary children only;…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Developmentally Appropriate Practices, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Education
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Jenkins, John M. – International Journal of Educational Reform, 1998
Reviews the history of nongraded high schools, from Preston Search's pioneering efforts in Pueblo, Colorado, to early 1900s Dalton and Winnetka Plans and midcentury continuous-progress plans. Competency, not age, already determines participation in band, orchestra, choir, and athletics. Curricula should be based on the structure, methodology, and…
Descriptors: Continuous Progress Plan, Curriculum, Educational History, Educational Improvement
Wilgoren, Jodi – New York Times Education Life, 2000
A visit to a Montana one-room school reveals the characteristics and advantages of one-room schools. Small schools are crucial to student success in early grades and students from small schools tend to outperform their peers. Large schools are borrowing features such as multiage classrooms, peer tutoring, and interdisciplinary projects as they…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Elementary Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Mixed Age Grouping
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Guzel-Ozmen, Ruya – Exceptional Children, 2006
This study investigated the effectiveness of Modified Cognitive Strategy Instruction in Writing (CSIW) with mildly mentally retarded students' skills in writing problem/solution texts. Participants were from two self-contained and multiage classrooms in Turkey. Instruction had a positive impact on the amount of time students spent planning and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mild Mental Retardation, Mixed Age Grouping, Writing Strategies
Darling-Hammond, Linda – School Administrator, 1998
The negative effects of grade retention should not become an argument for social promotion. Four complementary alternative strategies include enhancing professional development for teachers, employing redesigned school structures (like multiage grouping) that support more intensive learning, providing targeted supports and services when needed,…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Delivery Systems, Elementary Education, Grade Repetition
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Miller, William – NASSP Bulletin, 1995
The realities of child development defy efforts to categorize children's abilities and attainments within the conventional graded structure. Pupil readiness varies, and children progress in all subjects at different rates. The development of multiage or cross-age groupings, sometimes coordinated with youngsters in tutoring programs, has produced…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Child Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Flexible Progression
Pardini, Priscilla – School Administrator, 2005
In this article, the author discusses multiage education. Multiage education hailed as recently as 10 years ago as a promising way to restructure schools and boost student achievement but now has fallen on hard times. Interest in the issue has waned, with new research on the topic virtually nonexistent and attendance at national multiage…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Environment, Educational History, Student Evaluation
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Chen, Kaili; Bullock, Lyndal M. – Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties, 2004
The purposes of the study reported here were to investigate the social competence of students aged from six to 12, diagnosed with emotional/behavioral disorders (E/BD) in a public self-contained school setting, and to increase the students' social competence by using a literature-based method that employs multi-age grouping, impersonation, and…
Descriptors: Children, Child Behavior, Behavior Disorders, Interpersonal Competence
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