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Teachers' Perceptions of the Quality of the New Expressive Arts Textbooks for Malawi Primary Schools
Chirwa, Grames W.; Naidoo, Devika – South African Journal of Childhood Education, 2016
The national government in Malawi implemented an outcomes-based curriculum reform in 2007. To facilitate implementation, new textbooks were developed for the primary school curriculum. This study intended to explore teachers' use and perception of the new Expressive Arts textbooks. The participants consisted of 192 Expressive Arts teachers, grades…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Education, Textbooks, Elementary School Teachers
Ardron, Kate; Monahan, Sarah – Primary Science, 2010
After the removal of the science SATs (Standard Assessment Tests) written paper for the end of key stage 2 (11 year-olds, year 6) in England, some teachers and leaders were jumping for joy while others were left wondering "What do we do with year 6?" Uncertainty about the future of science assessment made many feel uneasy. With no…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Science Tests, Foreign Countries, Students
Liverpool Univ. (England). – 1990
Map and compass skills are a neglected aspect of the elementary school curriculum. Orienteering--a sport that involves running a prescribed course with the aid of map and compass--may provide an avenue for teaching these skills. This study taught orienteering to 148 10-year-old children and compared the effectiveness of a serial approach based on…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Children, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Education

Giota, Joanna – System, 1995
A total of 318 grade-5 pupils in Swedish schools were questioned in regard to why English is a compulsory subject. Two hundred and one pupils thought that English is compulsory because it is a world language, 94 thought so because it is useful, and 23 thought so because some authority decided so. Contains 22 references. (MDM)
Descriptors: Educational Attitudes, Educational Policy, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students