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Kraft, Matthew A.; Hattie, John – Educational Leadership, 2021
In a candid conversation, two preeminent education researchers discuss the state of the field and their own methodological differences. Matthew A. Kraft, an influential education scholar and former K-12 teacher, talks with John Hattie, renowned author of Visible Learning. They debate their different viewpoints on effect sizes, discuss how evidence…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Effect Size, Educational Researchers, Evidence Based Practice
Tomlinson, Carol Ann – Educational Leadership, 2020
A veteran educator tells stories of four children she taught who each struggled with trauma and were at risk of disconnecting from school and sliding into tragic life outcomes. She shares lessons she learned from reaching out to each child and general lessons about helping students with trauma--including to never go it alone.
Descriptors: Trauma, At Risk Students, Teaching Methods, Child Development
Hattie, John – Educational Leadership, 2021
Perhaps the greatest tragedy to come from COVID-related distance learning would be "not" learning from this experience to improve teaching when teachers and students physically return to classrooms. A robust discussion of the evidence of success during this pandemic school could be a major boost to the process of teaching and learning.…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Distance Education, School Closing
Pollock, Jane E.; Tolone, Laura J.; Nunnally, Gary S. – Educational Leadership, 2021
Innovative teaching means the teacher is the creator, but unfortunately it does not necessarily mean the same for the students. Innovation is not just "doing" something new; it is "thinking" of new ways to improve a product, a method, or an idea. How can educators teach students to become better innovators themselves? This…
Descriptors: Educational Innovation, Lesson Plans, Planning, Thinking Skills
Hammond, Zaretta – Educational Leadership, 2020
Structured protocols can help teachers ensure equitable participation and create more culturally responsive discussions. Zaretta Hammond, author of "Culturally Responsive Teaching and the Brain," shares five steps for incorporating protocols in your classroom so that every student is heard.
Descriptors: Equal Education, Student Participation, Culturally Relevant Education, Teaching Methods
Hattie, John; Fisher, Douglas; Frey, Nancy – Educational Leadership, 2016
Although research indicates that feedback can be one of the most effective instructional strategies for improving student performance, getting students to listen and act on feedback can be complicated. If feedback is vague and personal, students may pay attention only to positive comments that are positive and boost their self-image ("That…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Barriers, Goal Orientation, Success
Snow, Carrie C. – Educational Leadership, 2017
One essential way to support students with autism is to "show up" for them. Showing up means connecting and building relationships with learners and trusting students to show us what they most need to boost their learning and social growth. Snow shares scenarios from her years as a special educator that showcase ways educators can…
Descriptors: Autism, Student Needs, Special Education, Teacher Role
Minahan, Jessica – Educational Leadership, 2019
Up to two-thirds of U.S. children have experienced at least one type of serious childhood trauma, such as abuse, neglect, natural disaster, or experiencing or witnessing violence. Trauma is possibly the largest public health issue facing our children today (CDC, 2019). Traumatized students are especially prone to difficulty in self-regulation,…
Descriptors: Trauma, Teaching Methods, Violence, Child Health
Anne M. Beninghof – Educational Leadership, 2016
Beninghof challenges a common misconception--that in a good co-teaching classroom, no one should be able to tell which one is the special education teacher and which is the regular classroom teacher. Co-teaching is a partnership of two teachers with different areas of expertise. Instead of just lending an extra pair of helping hands, the…
Descriptors: Team Teaching, Units of Study, Misconceptions, Expertise
Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2014
According to Dylan Wiliam, the traditional classroom practice in which a teacher asks a question, students raise their hands, and the teacher calls on a volunteer does not actually provide much useful information--and it may even impede learning. When teachers ask questions in this way, they're only engaging the most confident students in the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Questioning Techniques, Teacher Role, Student Role
Bergmann, Jonathan; Sams, Aaron – Educational Leadership, 2014
What if all students had an opportunity to work through content at their own pace? What if all students had to master content before they moved on? The authors take their flipped-classroom model to the next level by flipping their classroom for mastery. In the flipped-mastery model, the teacher begins by organizing content around specific…
Descriptors: Mastery Learning, Teaching Methods, Educational Objectives, Concept Formation
Lalor, Angela Di Michele – Educational Leadership, 2012
The feedback process in school--and its effect on learners--resembles a global positioning system (GPS). When students receive clear, high-quality feedback that is tied to learning targets, student learning moves forward. When they are deprived of feedback or given feedback that is barely connected to learning targets, students get frustrated,…
Descriptors: Performance Based Assessment, Feedback (Response), Teaching Methods, Classroom Techniques
Wiggins, Alexis – Educational Leadership, 2014
When Alexis Wiggins returned to full-time teaching after having a baby, she took with her an idea from the book "A Path With Heart" by Buddhist Jack Kornfield. The idea was that each day might go better if she viewed everyone she encountered during that day, including any student or parent who seemed to make her teaching life harder, as…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Role, Student Role, Classroom Techniques
Thiers, Naomi – Educational Leadership, 2016
Richard DuFour, a leading advocate for creating professional learning communities in schools, shares his insights on why teaching has become an "embattled profession" and the steps teachers and school leaders can take to enhance teachers' practice and their working lives. DuFour explains how recent reforms aimed at educators themselves…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Teacher Morale, Academic Achievement, Educational Change
Fisher, Douglas; Frey, Nancy – Educational Leadership, 2014
Students love to talk. So do teachers. When there's a balance in the classroom between student and teacher discourse, good things happen. When students assume increased responsibility for discussions, when they interact with a wide range of peers on diverse topics and supply evidence for their thinking, great things happen. Noted educators…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Student Participation, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Teaching Methods