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Bocala, Candice; Boudett, Kathryn Parker – Educational Leadership, 2022
Collaborative data inquiry can help schools serve their students better and improve student outcomes--but only if equity is prioritized. Researchers from Harvard's Data Wise Project discuss the importance of using an equity lens when engaging in collaborative data inquiry and what this can mean in terms of disrupting system inequities.
Descriptors: Data Use, Data Analysis, Inquiry, Equal Education
Crew, Rudy; Noguera, Pedro – Educational Leadership, 2022
Students in poverty need both academic and social supports. Former New York City Schools Chancellor Rudy Crew and scholar Pedro Noguera argue that students in poverty need both intensive academic and social supports. They maintain that U.S. education policy, with its focus on academic accountability, has generally failed to grasp this dual…
Descriptors: Poverty, At Risk Students, Low Income Students, Disadvantaged Youth
Darling-Hammond, Linda – Educational Leadership, 2022
In the face of yet another crisis in teaching, it's time for a bold and comprehensive plan to revitalize and better support the profession. Education expert Linda Darling-Hammond explains how the current shortage of teachers is not entirely new, but the result of decades of cutting programs, lack of respect for the profession and poor working…
Descriptors: Teacher Shortage, Teaching Conditions, Teacher Certification, Labor Turnover
Roegman, Rachel; Samarapungavan, Ala; Maeda, Yukiko; Johns, Gary – Educational Leadership, 2019
The "Every Student Succeeds Act" requires that student's test scores be disaggregated by racial characteristics. Nevertheless, the author's recent study suggests that K-12 school principals may not intentionally think about race when they collect, interpret, analyze, and make decisions about data. By not disaggregating data by race,…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Race, Data Collection, Data Analysis
Armstrong, Thomas – Educational Leadership, 2019
Three weeks after the February 14, 2018, shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, where 17 people were killed and 17 more injured, the Florida state legislature passed a bill, which among other things, designated two new roles for each school district: a director of safe schools and a mental health coordinator. These…
Descriptors: School Safety, Violence, Weapons, State Legislation
Rebora, Anthony – Educational Leadership, 2021
Miguel A. Cardona, the former commissioner of education in Connecticut, became the U.S. Secretary of Education on March 2, 2021, taking office in the midst of an historic pandemic that had profoundly reshaped the nation's schools. In his initial months on the job, Cardona- also a one-time public school teacher and principal--has focused closely on…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Public Officials, Administrator Attitudes, Kindergarten
Hoerr, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2016
How important is it that every student in a school is excited about learning? Should a student be allowed to use all his/her strengths in learning? Do you know someone who wasn't a particularly good student but has been very successful in life? What these seemingly unrelated questions have in common is an appreciation for the range of talents that…
Descriptors: Caring, Multiple Intelligences, Teaching Methods, Educational Legislation
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Hiebert, Elfrieda H.; Pearson, P. David – Educational Leadership, 2013
Schools in the United States are making curricular changes from kindergarten through college to meet the Common Core State Standards' demands for higher expectations in reading and writing. As they make these important changes, however, they need not overturn all that they learned about effective reading pedagogy during No Child Left Behind…
Descriptors: State Standards, Literacy, Reading Instruction, Critical Reading
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Shanahan, Timothy – Educational Leadership, 2013
Urban legends are plausible stories--told as truths--that revolve around the complexities and challenges of modern life. Sociologists have not managed to pin down exactly how and why these stories get started, but they are clearly spread by word of mouth and there is usually a grain of truth in them (and sometimes, as it turns out in the case of…
Descriptors: State Standards, Academic Standards, Misconceptions, Popular Culture
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Pallas, Aaron M. – Educational Leadership, 2012
Critics of the public release of teacher evaluation scores sometimes liken these ratings to the scarlet letter worn by Hester Prynne in Nathaniel Hawthorne's classic novel. The comparison is apt. But public school teachers who are subjected to public shaming because of their students' test scores can rarely expect the opportunities for redemption…
Descriptors: Accountability, Public School Teachers, Classics (Literature), Public Education
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McAvoy, Paula; Hess, Diana – Educational Leadership, 2014
Too often, the authors assert, discussion of controversial issues in high school classrooms is channeled through the teacher, rather than engaging students in discussion with one another. Teachers fear that students won't know how to talk to one another productively about issues, or that they'll end up in shouting matches. But when…
Descriptors: Debate, Discussion, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Henderson, Anne T.; Carson, Judy; Avallone, Patti; Whipple, Melissa – Educational Leadership, 2011
Wouldn't it be great if a school's administrators and teachers could sit down with parents and exchange ideas about what part each might play in supporting students' learning--especially in schools with at-risk students? Henderson, Carson, Avallone, and Whipple describe how they helped three elementary schools in Connecticut do just that, through…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Federal Legislation, Academic Achievement, At Risk Students
David, Jane L. – Educational Leadership, 2011
The current rationale for standards-based reform goes like this: If standards are demanding and tests accurately measure achievement of those standards, then curriculum and instruction will become richer and more rigorous. By attaching serious consequences to schools that fail to increase test scores, U.S. policymakers believe that educators will…
Descriptors: Scores, High Stakes Tests, Standardized Tests, Accountability
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Brulles, Dina; Winebrenner, Susan – Educational Leadership, 2012
Schools need to address the needs of their students with high ability. Not only does this raise achievement levels schoolwide, it also attracts students from surrounding districts and recaptures advanced learners who left the school because their needs weren't being met. One practical intervention--cluster grouping--provides an inclusive…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cluster Grouping, Gifted, High Achievement
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Dill, Vicky S. – Educational Leadership, 2010
According to Dill, data suggest that one in 50 U.S. children experiences homelessness in any given year. Most educators are only gradually awakening to the prevalence of homeless students and the signs of homelessness in children. This article describes the signs of a student who is experiencing homelessness, the services and resources schools are…
Descriptors: Homeless People, Federal Legislation, Children, Teachers
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