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Mahlangu, Vimbi Petrus – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2021
The paper explores the challenges of supervising postgraduate students in open distance learning in higher education. The researcher argues that inaccessibility of information and services provided by supervisors, can contribute to a low quality of students' success. The responsibility of institutions is to ensure that facilities provided to…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Supervision, Graduate Students, Barriers
Le Cornu, Rosie – Australian Teacher Education Association, 2009
One of the perennial challenges for academics working in the area of professional experiences (practicum) is how to negotiate the constantly moving and contradictory boundaries around their work. A number of questions arise. Firstly, how do they cope with the "shifting, changing landscape" (Clandinin, 2008) of the university and at the…
Descriptors: Practicums, Mentors, Foreign Countries, Professional Development
Moffett, David W.; Zhou, Yunfang – Online Submission, 2009
The Investigators hypothesized cooperating teachers' evaluations of candidates in clinical practice and field experiences would possess higher scores than those provided by clinical and education division faculty. However, the reasons for the higher scores proved to be much more complex than originally thought. While it was assumed that teachers…
Descriptors: Field Experience Programs, Cooperating Teachers, Student Teacher Supervisors, Clinical Supervision (of Teachers)
White, Barbara L.; Daniel, Larry G. – 1996
In all professions, the development of the field rests on an established knowledge base and on newer, emerging information. As a discipline, instructional supervision has been influenced by both evaluation-based and clinically oriented theories. This paper presents findings of a study that sought to determine the degree to which various…
Descriptors: Clinical Supervision (of Teachers), Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods, Supervision
Glanz, Jeffrey – 1997
Postmodernists have criticized modern conceptions of supervision as bureaucratic, hierarchical, and oppressive. This paper asserts that the postmodern proclivity to completely eschew expert supervision, evaluation, and judicious use of directive supervision is misguided, potentially limiting, and dangerous. The paper argues that collegial…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Leadership, Leadership
Della-Dora, Delmo – 1989
A summary of the Far West Laboratory findings in regard to the impact of the clinical supervision initiative (CSI) on project faculty and non-project faculty in general is presented with some detail on how the project faculty and non-project faculty at the California State University (CSU) Hayward campus seem to have been affected by CSI. The…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Faculty Development, Higher Education, Supervision
Yager, Geoffrey G.; Littrell, John M. – 1978
This guide attempts to solve problems caused when a certain designated "brand" of supervision is forced on the counselor trainee with neither choice nor checklist of important criteria. As a tentative start on a guide to supervision the paper offers the following: a definition of supervision; a summary of the various types of supervision; a…
Descriptors: Counseling Effectiveness, Counselor Training, Higher Education, Practicum Supervision
Glanz, Jeffrey – Online Submission, 2008
Drawing on historical research, this paper draws attention to Dewey's oft-neglected, but no less brilliant work published in 1929, The Sources of a Science of Education. Dewey's critique of efforts in his day to seek "quick-fixes" to practical educational and curricular issues by employing premature scientific investigations and findings has…
Descriptors: Oral History, Investigations, Educational Philosophy, Supervision
Smyth, W. John – 1986
The theory and practice of supervision developed during a period in which the legitimization of any enterprise was most effectively sought through appeals to science and scientific methods for problem-solving. The failure of scientific discipline to develop conclusively effective theories in many social fields, including supervision, suggests that…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Epistemology, Supervision, Supervisory Methods
Seager, G. Bradley, Jr. – 1975
Following a classroom observation, an audio tape was made of a supervisory conference between the principal or other supervisor and the teacher. Two analyses of the principal's conference skills were then added to the tape together with editorial comments on the analyses, and the tape was then returned to the principal. At the time of the report,…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Improvement, Principals, Supervision
Pavan, Barbara Nelson – 1985
To many people, the term "clinical supervision" now means the Hunter Model, which involves monitoring of teachers' classroom behavior for usage of Hunter's essential elements of instruction, feedback of these results, reinforcement of desired practice, and a prescription for remediation of teachers' performance. In contrast, the…
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Clinical Supervision (of Teachers), Elementary Secondary Education, Supervisory Methods
Vickers, Bettye Hamill; Sistrunk, Walter E. – 1989
To influence teaching in a way that enhances and improves student learning is the school principal's responsibility. Because perceptions are more important than actual behavior, it is essential for principals to know if their perception of their supervisory actions is in agreement with the way their teachers perceive the same supervisory…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Elementary Education, Instructional Leadership, Leadership Styles
Waite, Duncan – 1990
An ethnographic or anthropological perspective is useful for the reexamination of the assumptions and taken-for-granted nature of the practice of supervision. An indepth survey of literature on supervisors illustrates supervisory roles and the existence of a separate "supervisor culture". Specifically, the relationship between novice teachers and…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethnography, Social Influences
Johnson, Mark E. – 1984
A social learning theory approach to counselor supervision is conceptualized as a teaching-learning situation, in which counseling is viewed as a specific, trainable set of skills. In light of this approach, a four quarter graduate counselor education program, focusing specifically on the training of social learning therapists, is proposed. The…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Counselor Training, Graduate Study, Learning Processes
Ward, Betsy B.; Sistrunk, Walter E. – 1989
Increasing demands for educational accountability make it important for principals to know how and when to successfully use methods of supervision with teachers to attain the mutual goal of instructional improvement. To determine whether significant differences existed between junior high school teachers' perceptions of principals' supervisory…
Descriptors: Administration, Administrator Role, Instructional Leadership, Junior High Schools
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