NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 12 results Save | Export
Greene, Betty J. – 1986
Negative motivators like threats, intimidation, criticism, denigration, the withholding of information, and the exercise of power produce temporary results but engender resentment and close the door of communication. Good leaders use positive motivators to meet people's needs, enhance efficiency, and improve working relationships. Some of these…
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Employer Employee Relationship, Interpersonal Competence, Leadership
Grimmett, Peter P.; Crehan, E. Patricia – 1987
The research on supervision and school effectiveness suggests that principals acting as supervisors of instruction make a difference in teacher performance and pupil learning. This study investigated whether effective clinical supervision requires supervisors who practice certain strategies and procedures as they dialogue with supervisees, or…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Classroom Observation Techniques, Classroom Techniques, Elementary Secondary Education
Jonas, R. Stevan; Blumberg, Arthur – 1986
Recent studies of the perceptions of teachers and supervisors about the benefits of teacher supervision show clear disagreement between the two groups. Supervisors see their efforts as helpful to teachers, whereas teachers consider supervision ineffectual. This document reports on research conducted to test the theory that positive…
Descriptors: Administrator Characteristics, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods, Evaluation Problems
Glickman, Carl D. – 1985
Effective teacher supervision for successful schools seeks to remove obstacles in the work environment that hinder teachers from seeing each other at work, receiving feedback from others, engaging in professional dialog, and participating in decisions about collective instructional actions. Just as teachers try to encourage the cognitive…
Descriptors: Action Research, Administrator Role, Cognitive Development, Curriculum Development
Este, Robert A. – 1984
This paper introduces the concept of clinical supervision as a formative evaluation tool for "fine tuning" already familiar teaching techniques and explores the implications of ethnocentrism in using clinical supervision in Native Indian education. The underlying philosophy of clinical supervision is expressed as a strong humanistic…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Canada Natives, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethnocentrism
Burke, Peter J.; Kray, Robert – 1985
This document reports on a study to determine differential attitudes of experienced and inexperienced teachers toward supervision and evaluation. The basic hypothesis was that experienced teachers would have significantly different attitudes toward the concepts of supervision and evaluation than would inexperienced interns. A sample of 100…
Descriptors: Definitions, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Criteria, Evaluation Problems
Garland, Virginia E. – 1987
This report presents three needs assessment survey models that are designed to improve the process of teacher evaluation. The surveys, which were field tested in a large urban school district, address ways administrators can qualitatively differentiate between "good" and "excellent" teaching, or "poor" and "unsatisfactory" teaching, and be able to…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods, Instructional Improvement
Furman, Gail Chase – 1988
The first of a projected series of three studies addressing the differing organizational contexts of the special education director's work and the resulting consequences, this investigation examined the work of a special education director in a "staff" position with respect to the consequences to the district at this organizational…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Role, Disabilities
Anderson, Jeanne; Fox, Susan; Weisenburger, Christine; McAuliff, Michael; Arentz, Beth – 2002
This document is a PowerPoint presentation intended for K-12 public school educators, administrators, and policy analysts as well as college and university educators involved or interested in teacher preparation programs. The presentation chronicles the partnership between Oswego State University and Parish Elementary School in north central New…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Elementary Education, Higher Education, Methods Courses
Norris, Cynthia J. – 1986
Characteristic reform measures that perfect the status quo and maintain educational order have become outdated and irrelevant to our times. Educators are calling for leaders with the ability to sense organizational needs from a holistic approach and with the insight or intuitive feel for what the organization can become. Such activity depends upon…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Style, Creative Thinking
Moore, John A. – 1996
This paper presents case studies of four middle school preservice teachers' experiences with multicultural education during their approximately 16-week student teaching practicum in the southeastern United States. Student teachers were male and female, aged 21 to 42 years; one was African-American and three were European-American. The study was…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cooperating Teachers, Cultural Awareness, Higher Education
Chase, Sue; And Others – 1996
A recurring theme in the social literature is the perceived gap between what faculty in higher education view as the goals of and preferred methods for teaching social studies and those valued and applied by practicing social studies teachers. In 1990, Ohio State University began planning an intensive school-university collaboration in the form of…
Descriptors: College Faculty, College School Cooperation, Cooperating Teachers, Faculty Development