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Showing 16 to 30 of 140 results Save | Export
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Kohn, Alfie – Educational Leadership, 2011
Decades of research shows that grades diminish students' interest in whatever they're learning, discourage students from taking academic risks, and reduce the quality of students' thinking, writes Kohn. Contrary to what many people assume, grades are not necessary to promote achievement. Attempts to "improve" grading--such as standards-based…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Grades (Scholastic), Academic Standards, Grading
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Johnston, Peter – Educational Leadership, 2012
This article begins with examples that illustrate four important points about feedback that one often misses. First, giving feedback does not necessarily mean telling students what is good or bad. Second, feedback should be inseparable from the larger classroom conversations. Third, feedback is not merely cognitive in reach, nor merely corrective…
Descriptors: Writing Skills, Feedback (Response), Faculty Development, Writing Instruction
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Wormeli, Rick – Educational Leadership, 2014
This author acknowledges that teachers agree that "adolescents aren't always interested in the topics adults consider important for them to learn." It is easy for adults who have forgotten the wonder and uncertainty of the adolescent years to declare that students today are more uninterested in school and undisciplined in life than…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Student Motivation, Teaching Methods, Teacher Education Programs
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Bouffard, Suzanne M.; Savitz-Romer, Mandy – Educational Leadership, 2012
Where students are in their development shapes how they behave and whether they succeed. An awareness of how students develop identity and motivation can help educators guide students as they set goals for the future. Bouffard and Savitz-Romer share strategies for helping students see themselves as college graduates. They also explain how the…
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Motivation Techniques, Developmentally Appropriate Practices, Student Development
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Boerman-Cornell, Bill – Educational Leadership, 2013
Graphic novels (book-length fiction or nonfiction narratives told using the conventions of a comic book) bring together text and image in a way that seems to capture students' imaginations. Right now, there is little more than anecdotal research about how graphic novels can be used within specific middle school and high school disciplines. As…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Novels, Reading Materials, Student Motivation
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Guskey, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2011
Educators seeking to reform grading must combat five long-held traditions that stand as formidable obstacles to change: (1) Grades should provide the basis for differentiating students; (2) grade distributions should resemble a bell-shaped curve; (3) grades should be based on students' standing among classmates; (4) poor grades prompt students to…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Academic Achievement, Grading, Educational Change
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Padak, Nancy; Bromley, Karen; Rasinski, Tim; Newton, Evangeline – Educational Leadership, 2012
When young readers encounter texts that contain too many unfamiliar words, their comprehension suffers. Reading becomes slow, laborious, and frustrating, impeding their learning. That's why vocabulary knowledge is a key element in reading comprehension. To comprehend fully and learn well, all students need regular vocabulary exploration.…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Misconceptions, Latin, Greek
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Smith, Lorna – Educational Leadership, 2012
Research shows that summer slide--the loss of learning over the summer break--is a huge contributor to the achievement gap between low-income students and their higher-income peers. In fact, some researchers have concluded that two-thirds of the 9th-grade reading achievement gap can be explained by unequal access to summer learning opportunities…
Descriptors: Achievement Gap, Summer Programs, Reading Achievement, Academic Achievement
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Dweck, Carol S. – Educational Leadership, 2010
In her well-known research, Carol Dweck has documented how individuals' attitudes about intelligence affect their behavior and achievement. People with a fixed mindset, she writes, believe that intelligence is inborn and unchangeable, whereas those with a growth mindset believe that intelligence can grow through practice and effort. In this…
Descriptors: Intelligence, World Views, Lifelong Learning, Teaching Methods
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Towbin, Jessica – Educational Leadership, 2010
The author, a high school language arts teacher, describes her move to a high-needs urban school after 13 years teaching in predominantly middle-class suburban schools. Unlike her former schools, in which a culture of compliance prevailed, her new school serves students who don't necessarily cooperate unless they see how the curriculum matters to…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Language Arts, High School Students, Disadvantaged Schools
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Damon, William – Educational Leadership, 2008
The author describes two 9th grade experiences that began his transformation from a lackadaisical student into a motivated learner. In the first incident, a word of advice from a teacher made him aware that his actions mattered. In the second, his engagement in writing a story for the school newspaper taught him the power of discovering new…
Descriptors: Grade 9, School Newspapers, Moral Development, Student Motivation
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Educational Leadership, 2008
Students were asked to describe a time when they felt in charge of their learning in school--when they were working not just for a grade but because they were excited and interested. This article shares what a few of them said.
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Learner Engagement, Self Motivation, Student Motivation
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Dawson, Peg – Educational Leadership, 2010
Child psychologist Peg Dawson explains that some students who appear to be lazy simply lack the executive skills they need to stay organized and get their work done. She tells the story of Josh, a student with attention problems whose academic performance started plummeting in middle school. With the help of a coach, Josh learned to manage his…
Descriptors: Time Management, Study Skills, Child Psychology, Student Motivation
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Wolk, Steven – Educational Leadership, 2008
Many of our greatest joys in life are related to our learning, but, unfortunately, most of that learning takes place outside of school. Educators can put more joy into the experience of going to school and get more joy out of working inside school by focusing on several essentials. Help students find pleasure in learning by giving them the freedom…
Descriptors: Student Experience, Educational Environment, Student Participation, Student Motivation
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Nichols, Sharon L.; Berliner, David C. – Educational Leadership, 2008
Since the passage of No Child Left Behind (NCLB), the time spent talking about, preparing for, and taking tests has increased exponentially in schools. The authors contend that all this testing has done little to increase achievement or close achievement gaps, but has had unintended negative consequences. "The tests," they write,…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Testing, Academic Achievement, Educational Environment
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