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Brody, David L.; Gorsetman, Chaya R. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2013
The effectiveness of outside experts in professional development in Jewish schools has been questioned in light of scholarly critique of this approach. This case study examines the sociocultural context of one such long-term project aimed at school improvement through early childhood (EC) curriculum development. The research identifies cultural…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Educational Improvement, Faculty Development, Day Schools
Miller, Frances A. – Principal, 2009
Teachers who are positive deviants are the most effective teachers, able to produce results and solutions to problems that others in the learning community cannot. As a result, students in their classrooms usually produce assessment scores that are higher than those of students in their colleagues' classrooms. Teachers willing to learn from their…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Principals, Teacher Empowerment, Educational Innovation
Horn, Ilana Seidel – Phi Delta Kappan, 2008
Despite the norms of privacy that pervade teacher culture and the assumptions of behind-closed-doors independence, teachers actually "need" their colleagues, whether they like it--and them--or not. Teachers are inherently dependent on one another since no one of them alone constitutes their students' education. Students move from teacher to…
Descriptors: Educational Research, High Schools, Interprofessional Relationship, Teamwork
Seed, Allen H. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2008
"A Nation at Risk" sounded the call for school improvement and offered recommendations for bringing it about. "No Child Left Behind" was even more prescriptive in its approach to raising student achievement. However, as the author of this article points out, for all their recommendations and strategies, both reform efforts neglect the essential…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Change, Teacher Competencies, Educational Improvement
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Lucey, Thomas A.; Hill-Clarke, Kantaylieniere – Teacher Education and Practice, 2008
Hierarchical educational structures employ a standards-driven decision-making atmosphere that challenges teachers' autonomy. This situation represents a critical issue for teacher educators who must consider how they will teach candidates to respond to these settings. We argue that teacher empowerment represents a moral issue that teacher…
Descriptors: Teacher Empowerment, Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Educators, Teaching Methods
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Gregson, James A.; Sturko, Patricia A. – Journal of Adult Education, 2007
This case study examined a professional development experience that was facilitated for career and technical education teachers to help foster the integration of academics and career and technical education. Unlike most professional development experiences that treat teachers as passive learners, this professional development experience was…
Descriptors: Vocational Education Teachers, Adult Learning, Professional Development, Adult Education
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Zembylas, Michalinos; Papanastasiou, Elena – Compare: A Journal of Comparative Education, 2006
This paper aims to contribute to the limited literature on teacher job satisfaction in developing countries, especially in Cyprus. Drawing on interviews with 52 teachers and administrators in 17 schools, the paper describes the sources of job satisfaction and dissatisfaction of Cypriot teachers and the impact on how teachers feel. Teachers…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Environment, Social Influences, Professional Autonomy
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Kelly, Judith M. – Journal of Negro Education, 1999
The National Writing Project's professional development approach reflects a shift from the tradition of theory dictating practice, maintaining that engaging teachers in teaching teachers empowers them to meet the challenges of increasing student diversity. By providing support in risk-free settings, teachers can collaborate as educational leaders,…
Descriptors: Diversity (Student), Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Development, Teacher Collaboration
Giba, Mary Anna – Principal, 1998
Challenged to increase leadership opportunities for teachers, an El Paso elementary school principal appointed two master teachers to a vice-principal vacancy, increased teacher collaboration time, and experimented with vertical-team representation, teacher input for hiring decisions, and creative scheduling. Only the principal can actually…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Elementary Education, Participative Decision Making, Principals
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Bishop, Harold L.; Tinley, Alice; Berman, Barbara T. – Action in Teacher Education, 1997
Presents a contemporary leadership model comprised of three elements necessary to successfully recognize and promote teacher leaders. The elements include establishing an appropriate school culture, recognizing teacher leaders, and inspiring teachers' confidence. The three elements, along with enabled teacher leadership, create positive cultural…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, School Culture, Self Esteem
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Sheets, Rosa Hernandez; Izard-Baldwin, Gloria; Atterberry, Patricia – NASSP Bulletin, 1997
To tackle low achievement and a 22% freshmen student withdrawal rate, a Seattle, Washington, high school gradually restructured its vision, policies, and curriculum. A committee fashioned the Bridge project, providing all freshmen with access to opportunities promoting academic achievement, responsibility, school spirit, fellowship, acceptance,…
Descriptors: Declining Enrollment, Dropout Rate, Parent Participation, Secondary Education
Mansberger, Nancy B. – Principal Leadership, 2005
Collaborative teacher teams, whether they are new or have been re-formed over time, require that principals understand how to support and sustain them. To sustain collaborative team structures and support teacher empowerment beyond the first years of an initiative, it is important for principals to understand how these three factors--namely, the…
Descriptors: Teacher Collaboration, Teacher Empowerment, Principals, Team Teaching
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Flores, Sergio; Roberts, William – NASSP Bulletin, 2008
High school students continue to struggle in algebra, especially in large inner-city schools with underprivileged students. Students are not the only ones skirmishing with algebra. Teachers and school leaders are just as frustrated as they search for answers to complex teaching and learning problems. Two high school principals report the results…
Descriptors: Learning Problems, High Schools, Action Research, Algebra
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Lavie, Jose Manuel – Educational Administration Quarterly, 2006
Purpose: After decades arguing the necessity of transforming schools into collaborative workplaces, teacher collaboration has been taken up by various discursive logics offering different viewpoints of the concept. This article reviews some of these discourses and looks at their main arguments, pointing to the contradictions and tensions between…
Descriptors: Teacher Collaboration, Academic Discourse, Educational Change, School Effectiveness
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Tonso, Karen L.; Jung, Maura Lobos; Colombo, Marie – RMLE Online: Research in Middle Level Education, 2006
Considered a successful university-operated, urban middle school serving an overwhelmingly African American student body, "Charter" Middle School was dechartered suddenly, then merged a year later with students from a neighborhood school to become "Choice" Middle School, a school of choice in the urban district. Using a situated learning framework…
Descriptors: Teacher Empowerment, School Restructuring, Neighborhood Schools, Middle Schools
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