Academic literature on the topic 'Teachers Strategies GOLD'

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Journal articles on the topic "Teachers Strategies GOLD"

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Downs, Doug. "Critical Reading in a Screen Paradigm." Pedagogy 21, no. 2 (April 1, 2021): 205–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15314200-8811398.

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Abstract An important step in teaching critical reading for online civic reasoning is building teachers’ own acceptance of and comfort with screen literacies, understanding them not as alternative to gold-standard book literacies but as normative. To do so, teachers must better understand how web-based texts, and the reading of them, differ from the “classical” critical reading most teachers are used to. This article examines the “quantum” nature of web-based texts—their fundamental instability, their reader constructedness, and their nature as processes rather than objects—and relates these features to hyper-reading and other reading strategies that research shows allow engaged readers to screen-read critically.
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Denadai, Tu, Tsai, Tsai, Hsieh, Pai, Chen, Kane, Lo, and Chou. "Workflow and Strategies for Recruitment and Retention in Longitudinal 3D Craniofacial Imaging Study." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 22 (November 12, 2019): 4438. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16224438.

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Longitudinal epidemiological studies are considered the gold standard for understanding craniofacial morphologic development, but participant recruitment and retention can be challenging. This study describes strategies used to recruit and maintain a high level of participation in a longitudinal study involving annual three-dimensional (3D) craniofacial soft-tissue imaging from healthy Taiwanese Chinese elementary school students aged 6 to 12 years. The key aspects for project delineation, implementation, and the initial three-year practical experiment are portrayed in an integrated multistep workflow: ethics- and grant-related issues; contact, approval, and engagement from partners of the project (school stakeholders and parents); a didactic approach to recruit the students; research staff composition with task design; three station-based data collection days with two educative activities (oral hygiene and psychosocial interaction stations) and one 3D craniofacial imaging activity; and reinforcement tactics to sustain the longitudinal annual participation after the first enrollment. Randomly selected students and teachers answered an experience satisfaction questionnaire (five-point Likert scale ranging from one to five) designed to assist in understanding what they think about the data collection day. Measures of frequency (percentage) and central tendency (mean) were adopted for descriptive analysis. Six of seven contacted schools accepted participation in the project. All parents who attended the explanatory meetings agreed to join the project. A cohort of 676 students (336 girls) participated at baseline enrollment, with a follow-up rate of 96% in the second data collection. The average questionnaire-related scores were 4.2 ± 0.7 and 4.4 ± 0.6 for teachers and students, respectively. These 3D craniofacial norms will benefit multidisciplinary teams managing cleft-craniofacial deformities in the globally distributed ethnic Chinese population, particularly useful for phenotypic variation characterization, conducting quantitative morphologic comparisons, and therapeutic planning and outcome assessment. The described pathway model will assist other groups to establish their own age-, sex-, and ethnic-specific normative databases.
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Taloni, Silvia, Giovanni Carlo Cassavia, Giuseppe Luca Ciavarro, Giuseppe Andreoni, Giorgio Cesare Santambrogio, and Antonio Pedotti. "An index for back pain risk assessment in nursery activities." Occupational Ergonomics 4, no. 4 (May 17, 2005): 281–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/oer-2004-4405.

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Back pain is one of the most significant socioeconomic problem in industrialized countries. Its origin is multifactorial, including physical, psychosocial and individual risk factors. Among the working population, nursery teachers are highly exposed to back pain diseases, but not many studies have dealt with this problem. So a suitable quantitative index is proposed, based on an unobtrusive video-analysis of established motor-tasks. In particular five nursery teachers were asked to perform lifting and lowering movements placing their feet at two different distances from a weight (a toy pet loaded with 8 kg, simulating a child) with different strategies (flexed, partially flexed and extended legs). The index is based on the idea that a greater trunk inclination angle determines increased loads on the lumbar spine, and so an augmented probability of spinal disorders. To validate our protocol, the same data were analyzed through a 3D biomechanical model (gold standard method), which computes the loads on L3-L4 intervertebral disc. Data show a good correspondence between the risk level suggested by the index and the one indicated by the mechanical loads: the antero-posterior shearing forces and the values of index coherently increase with the reduction of leg flexion.
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Ayimbila, Ezekiel Akotuko, and Diana Akantagriwon. "EFFECT OF CONCEPT MAPPING INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGY ACCOMPANIED BY DISCUSSION WEB ON STUDENTS’ ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT IN THE CONCEPT OF GENETICS." Journal of Education and Practice 5, no. 3 (September 1, 2021): 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.47941/jep.668.

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Purpose: This study explored the effect of Concept Mapping Instructional Strategy Accompanied by Discussion Web on students’ academic achievement in the concept of Genetics at Navrongo Senior High School, generally, and on gender basis. Methodology: The study adopted quasi-experimental design (pretest, posttest non-equivalent design). The sample comprised of 80 Navrongo Senior High School Form Three Gold Track and Green Track science students. Students from the Green Track class and Gold Track class were assigned experimental group and control group respectively. The experimental group class was made up of 23 males and 20 females. The control group class was also made up of 24 males and 13 females. Pretest was administered to all the participants. The experimental group was taught using Concept Mapping Instructional Strategy Accompanied by Discussion Web. The control group was taught using Conventional Teaching Method. A posttest was administered to both groups to determine the effectiveness of the treatment. The reliability of the test items was determined using test-retest reliability coefficient. The test-retest reliability coefficients of the instruments were found to be 0.70 and 0.73 for the pretest and posttest respectively. The data obtained were analysed using t-test. Results: The pretest test scores revealed that the students were homogeneous in terms of academic achievement (t-value = 1.05, p-value=0.30, p>0.05). Posttest results of students in the experimental group were significantly higher than the control group (t-value = 8.07, p-value = 0.000, p < 0.05). The result of the posttest showed that the use of concept mapping instructional strategy accompanied by discussion web in teaching genetics was more effective than conventional teaching method. There was no statistically significant difference in the academic achievement of male and female students in the experimental group (t-value = 1.68, p-value = 0.11, p > 0.05). Unique contribution to theory, practice and policy: This study recommended that Biology teachers in Navrongo Senior High School should be encouraged to teach Genetics using Concept Mapping Instructional Strategy Accompanied by Discussion Web in order to improve the academic achievement of students. Science teachers should be given the opportunity to attend workshops, seminars, conferences to enable them update their knowledge on current instructional strategies that are capable of improving the academic achievement of students. The Government, Ghana Education Service and Ministry of Education should establish professional development fund for teachers to enable them upgrade professionally and also improve on their teaching styles since most teacher are not abreast with the current or modern methods of teaching.
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Damayanti, Sinta Putri, Amrozi Khamidi, and Karwanto Karwanto. "Private Junior High School Marketing Management to Face the New Students Admission (PPDB) Policies of State Junior High School in Surabaya." International Journal for Educational and Vocational Studies 3, no. 1 (March 30, 2021): 64. http://dx.doi.org/10.29103/ijevs.v3i1.3389.

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This study was conducted to determine the marketing strategy of private schools in facing the new policies of the Surabaya City Office in the Admission of New Junior High School Students. Various internal and external factors also influence the running of the marketing strategy being implemented. This study focuses on: a) marketing strategy including school programs, strategy and gold mix (product, price, location, promotion of human resources, sarpras and service management), b) internal factors including school strengths, school weaknesses and organizational structure, c) factors external includes school opportunities, school threats and political technology, culture. The method used is qualitative research and case study type. The subjects in this study are the principal, the Deputy Principals, especially in the field of public relations who know the relationship between the institution and the wider community, teachers as learning actors, guardians of students as consumers of service users. This research was conducted in the odd semester of the 2019-2020 school year. Data collection techniques using observation, interviews, and documentation. The data analysis technique used in this study was an interactive analysis model consisting of three components, namely data condensation, data triangulation, data presentation and conclusion drawing.The results showed that the marketing strategies implemented by the Labschool Junior High School and Kemala Bhayangkari 1 Surabaya Junior High School were good and maximized by taking advantage of the advantages they had. Inhibiting factors, such as new policies and the number of competitors, can be minimized by continuing to prioritize superior programs and explore existing human resources.
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Rodríguez-Calvo, Magaly. "OLIMPIADAS COSTARRICENSES DE CIENCIAS BIOLÓGICAS COMO PROCESO FUNDAMENTAL EN EL MEJORAMIENTO DE LA CALIDAD EDUCATIVA SECUNDARIA DE COSTA RICA EN EL ÁREA DE LA BIOLOGÍA. COSTA RICAN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES OLYMPICS AS A FUNDAMENTAL PROCESS IN IMPROVING SECONDA." Revista Electrónica Calidad en la Educación Superior 3, no. 2 (November 6, 2012): 122–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.22458/caes.v3i2.449.

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Las Olimpiadas Costarricenses de Ciencias Biológicas (OLICOCIBI) potencian el nivel cognitivo mediante competencias académicas dirigidas a estudiantes y docentes de secundaria, donde se optimiza el proceso de enseñanza aprendizaje mediante la aplicación biotecnológica de la biología. Parte de los objetivos es que la población académica segundaria, mediante este tipo de actividades,pueda fortalecer y mejorar la educación científica en Costa Rica. Estas olimpiadas promueven el estudio activo, participativo y significativo de las ciencias biológicas a nivel de la enseñanza media y preuniversitaria. Además, es una actividad que abre espacios de participación a todas los centros educativos, tanto públicos, como privados, y abarca todas las sedes regionales del país. Estas justas se dividen en dos categorías;la A para estudiantes de X, XI y XII nivel y la B para estudiantes de VIII, IX y X nivel.La organización de este evento requiere de la estructuración y coordinación de un trabajo integral y en equipo de varias instancias del gobierno como lo son: Universidad Nacional (UNA), Universidad Estatal a Distancia (UNED), Universidad de Costa Rica (UCR), Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología (MICIT), Ministerio de Educación Pública (MEP) y otras instituciones emblemáticas en el campo social, científico y biológico del país.Los antecedentes de OLICOCIBI se iniciaron en el 2007 y la recalcada labor que se ha realizado año tras año, ha impulsado la participación de Costa Rica en la Olimpiada Iberoamericana de Biología (OIAB), obteniendo desde el año 2008 destacados resultados como medallas de bronce, plata y oro, logrando posicionar a Costa Rica en los más altos niveles cognitivos. Es por ello que esta actividad fue declarada de interés institucional por las Universidades Públicas, y de interés educativo por el Ministerio de Educación.Palabras clave: Olimpiadas de Biología, educación secundaria, calidad educativa, estrategias metodológicas, procesos de enseñanza y aprendizaje, docentes y estudiantes.Abstract The Costa Rican Biological Sciences Olympics (OLICOCIBI), enhance the cognition level through academic competitions directed by students and high school teachers, where the teaching learning process is optimized through the biotechnology application of biology. Part of the goal is that the academic high school population can increase and develop a better scientific education in Costa Rica with those kinds of activities.The Olympics promote an active, participatory and significant study method of biological sciences when it comes to middle or secondary and pre-university education. Also, is an activity that opens up alcoves of participation to every single educational school both public and private ones, as well as regional headquarters of the country. The same are divided in two categories; A for students of X, XI, XII level and B for students of VII, IX and X level. The organization of this event, requires the structuring and coordination of an integral unity and a team of several government agencies such as: Universidad Nacional (UNA), Universidad Estatal a Distancia (UNED), Universidad de Costa Rica (UCR), Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología (MICIT) Ministeria de Educación Pública (MEP) and other emblematic institutions from the social, scientific and biological field. The background of OLICOCIBI stared in 2007 and the crimped work that has been done year after year, has increase the partaking of Costa Rica in the Iberoamerican Biology Olympics (OIAB); acquiring since the year of 2008, distinguish results like bronze, silver and gold medals, achieving to put Costa Rica as one of the highest cognitive levels; therefore, this type of activity was declared as an institutional interest by Public Universities and also as an education interest by the Ministry of Education (MEP). Keywords: Biology olympics, high school education, education quality, methodological strategies, teaching and learning process, teachers and students.
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Vitiello, Virginia E., and Amanda P. Williford. "Alignment of teacher ratings and child direct assessments in preschool: A closer look at teaching strategies GOLD." Early Childhood Research Quarterly 56 (2021): 114–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecresq.2021.03.004.

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Lambert, Richard G., Do-Hong Kim, and Diane C. Burts. "Using Teacher Ratings to Track the Growth and Development of Young Children Using theTeaching Strategies GOLD®Assessment System." Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment 32, no. 1 (May 6, 2013): 27–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0734282913485214.

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Putri, Ayu Aprilia, and Suparno. "Recognize Geometry Shapes through Computer Learning in Early Math Skills." JPUD - Jurnal Pendidikan Usia Dini 14, no. 1 (April 30, 2020): 43–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.21009/jpud.141.04.

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One form of early mathematical recognition is to introduce the concept of geometric shapes. Geometry is an important scientific discipline for present and future life by developing various ways that fit 21st century skills. This study aims to overcome the problem of early mathematical recognition of early childhood on geometry, especially how to recognize geometric forms based on computer learning. A total of 24 children aged 4-5 years in kindergarten has to carrying out 2 research cycles with a total of 5 meetings. Treatment activities in each learning cycle include mentioning, grouping and imitating geometric shapes. There were only 7 children who were able to recognize the geometric shapes in the pre-research cycle (29.2%). An increase in the number of children who are able to do activities well in each research cycle includes: 1) The activities mentioned in the first cycle and 75% in the second cycle; 2) Classifying activities in the first cycle were 37.5% and 75% in the second cycle; 3) Imitation activities in the first cycle 54.2% and 79.2% in the second cycle. The results of data acquisition show that computer learning application can improve the ability to recognize geometric shapes, this is because computer learning provides software that has activities to recognize geometric shapes with the animation and visuals displayed. Keywords: Early Childhood Computer Learning, Geometry Forms, Early Math Skills Reference Alia, T., & Irwansyah. (2018). Pendampingan Orang Tua pada Anak Usia Dini dalam Penggunaan Teknologi Digital. A Journal of Language, Literature, Culture and Education, 14(1), 65– 78. https://doi.org/10.19166/pji.v14i1.639 Ameliola, S., & Nugraha, H. D. (2013). 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Barış, Serap A., Füsun Yıldız, İlknur Başyiğit, Haşim Boyacı, and Ahmet Ilgazlı. "Prevalence of smoking and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease amongst teachers working in Kocaeli, Turkey." Multidisciplinary Respiratory Medicine 6 (October 21, 2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/mrm.2011.434.

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Aim: To evaluate smoking and COPD prevalence amongst teachers working in the schools of Kocaeli City, Turkey.Method: In this cross-sectional study, a questionnaire focusing on respiratory symptoms and smoking habits was adminis- tered to all participants who accepted to join the study. All sub- jects also underwent a physical examination and a pulmonary function test performed with portable spirometer. According to GOLD criteria, subjects who had post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC < 70% and negative reversibility test were classi- fied as COPD. Results: A total of 685 teachers were included [female n = 307 (45%), male n = 378 (55%)] with mean age 38.9 ± 8.9 years. Smoking habit was evaluated in 660 subjects: 291 (44.1%) were smokers, 252 (38.2%) were non-smokers and 117 (17.7%) were ex-smokers. Pulmonary function test was available in 651 subjects and 510 (78.3%) were defined as normal on spirometric analysis. Small airway obstruction was found in 115 of the cases (17.7%) in whom FEF25-75 level was found to be lower than 70% predicted. FEV1/FVC level was lower than 70% in 16 subjects (2.5%). Five subjects who had positive reversibility test were excluded from the study. The remaining 11 subjects who were considered as COPD consisted of 2 (18%) females and 9 (82%) males. Six of these subjects were aged over 40 years. Conclusion: Spirometry has an important role in early diagno- sis of COPD. Spirometric evaluation of cases with risk factors for COPD could be helpful in diagnosing patients before the progressive decline in lung function begins. Further studies are needed to evaluate whether the interventional strategies at this stage such as smoking cessation could prevent the progression of disease.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Teachers Strategies GOLD"

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Mason, Crystal. "Teacher Biases as an Influence on Early Childhood Assessments." ScholarWorks, 2019. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/7235.

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Teacher perspectives and judgments of students' race and gender are known to influence their assessment of primary and secondary students' academic achievements. However, little is known about the effect on children's academic achievement of preschool teacher perspectives and judgments of students' race and gender, which forms the basis for this study. The purpose of this study was to analyze teacher assessment of preschool children's mathematics and science skills on the Desired Results Developmental Profile (DRDP) and Teacher Strategies GOLD (TSG), along with teacher comments written in preparation for each child's parent-teacher conference, to determine if there was a relationship between preschool teachers' assessment and comments and the race and gender of the child. Wason's theory of confirmation bias formed the theoretical foundation of this study. The research questions addressed the relationship between preschool teacher assessments recorded on the DRDP and TSG regarding children's mathematics and science skill and teacher comments coded from Racasens linguistic model and those children's race and gender. Archival data from 2 Head Start centers in a western and southwestern state were analyzed using the Mann-Whitney U test, and the point-biserial Pearson correlation. The Mann-Whitney U test found no statistically significant differences in DRDP and TSG scores by students' race and gender. The point-biserial Pearson correlation found no statistically significant correlation between race or gender and teacher comments. This study contributes to positive social change by confirming observational assessments to be free from teacher bias, supporting their continued use with preschool children to promote their learning and development.
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Allingham, Pauline Kay, and n/a. "Thank God it's Friday : occupational stress and coping among Catholic primary teachers." University of Canberra. Teacher Education, 1996. http://erl.canberra.edu.au./public/adt-AUC20060531.155625.

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Occupational stress among teachers is a painful, prevalent and costly phenomenon, one which impacts on individuals, families, schools and wider society. A growing body of evidence suggests that individuals' susceptibility to occupational stress is not determined exclusively by environmental or personality factors, but by the cognitive and behavioural transactions between the individual and potentially stressful events. Two major factors which contribute to individual stress are a person's appraisal of events as threatening or demanding, and the strategies they use in coping with those events. The purpose of this study is to explore the relationship between experience, stress levels and coping patterns in a group of primary school teachers. Two groups of teachers were surveyed, 'Starters' who were in their first year of teaching and 'Stayers' who had at least 10 years of teaching experience. Stayers were divided, on the basis of their responses, into Low-stress, Moderate-stress and High-stress groups. The aspects of coping which were explored are: 1. The range of coping strategies used by teachers in each group, 2. The frequency of use of those coping strategies for each group, and 3. The coping styles preferred by teachers in each group. The results of this study show no direct connexion between stress level and any of the demographic variables (sex, age, religion, piety, teaching experience, full-time teaching, part-time teaching and time away from teaching). Nor are significant differences found between the coping patterns of more or less experienced and more or less stress teachers. A pattern is suggested by correlational analysis, wherein inexperienced teachers (Starters) and highly-stressed experienced teachers (High-stress Stayers) show the same preference for coping styles. It is hypothesized that this similarity of preference relates to role of control in reducing stress, and that these groups are examples of different stages of adaptation to teaching. Implications for the use of these preferences in detecting teacher stress, and for the inclusion of coping strategies in teacher training are discussed.
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Lindgren, Josefine, and Rebecka Almquist. "Vägen till en god läsförståelse." Thesis, Linnéuniversitetet, Institutionen för svenska språket (SV), 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-65070.

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Abstract The aim of the essay is to investigate how two teachers in grades 4–6 work with reading comprehension in their teaching in order to enable the pupils’ reading development. The methods used in the study are questionnaires and observations which were then subjected to qualitative analysis. The result shows that both teachers use various strategies to facilitate the pupils’ development in reading comprehension. The empirical data revealed the teachers’ opinion that reading comprehension is about moving freely between different reading comprehension strategies so that the pupils can own their own learning. Judging by the observations, the classroom climate and the teacher’s competence are of great importance for the pupils’ learning.
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Wu, Fu-Yuan, and 吳福源. "The Study of the Relationship of Teachers'''''''' Classroom Management Strategies with Classroom Climate in Elementary School in Taiwan- Compare Good Teachers with General Teachers." Thesis, 1999. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/68480985667105369434.

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博士
國立政治大學
教育學系
87
The Study of the Relationship of Teachers’ Classroom Management Strategies with Classroom Climate in Elementary School in Taiwan-Compare Good Teachers with General Teachers- Fu-Yuan Wu Abstract The purpose of this study aimed to understand the relationship of teachers’ classroom management strategies with classroom climate, and to explore the differences of good teachers and general teachers in classroom management strategies and classroom climate. 14 good teachers’ classrooms and 20 general teachers’ classrooms were recommended. The subjects were fifth grade of 979 student in their classrooms. Date of this survey were analyzed by Frequencies, t-test, MANOVA, Correlation Analysis and Multiple Regression. The major findings were: 1.In “the classroom management strategies in the first week”,”the classroom management strategies in the whole semester” and “classroom climate”, good teachers performed better than general teachers. 2.”The strategies of recognition”, “handling deviated behavior” and the climate of “teacher support”, “innovation” were the most significant differences between good and general teachers. 3.The “teacher support” and “innovation” were best indicators of the classroom climate. 4.General teachers performed higher “teacher control” than good teachers. 5.The better “the classroom management strategies in the first week” performed, the better “the classroom management strategies in the whole semester” and “classroom climate”. 6.”The classroom management strategies in the first week” were better predictors for classroom climate among good teachers than general teachers. 7.”The demographic variables” were better predictors for classroom climate among general teachers than good teachers. 8.”The teaching rules strategies in the first week” were more opposite predictors for classroom climate among good teachers than general teachers. This paper made some concrete suggestions based on the results of this study for practical and further study. Keywords:Elementary school, Classroom management strategies, Classroom climate, Good teachers, General teachers.
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Books on the topic "Teachers Strategies GOLD"

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Heroman, Cate. Coaching to fidelity: The creative curriculum for preschool and teaching strategies GOLD. Bethesda, MD: Teaching Strategies, LLC, 2013.

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1943-, McCallum Bet, and Hargreaves Eleanore 1961-, eds. What makes a good primary school teacher?: Expert classroom strategies. London: RoutledgeFalmer, 2001.

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King, Alan J. C. The good school: Strategies for making secondary schools effective. Toronto: Educational Services Committee (Research), Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation, 1990.

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Marchese, Dana D., Kimberly D. Becker, Jennifer P. Keperling, Celene E. Domitrovich, Wendy M. Reinke, Dennis D. Embry, and Nicholas S. Ialongo. A Step-By-Step Guide for Coaching Classroom Teachers in Evidence-Based Interventions. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780190609573.001.0001.

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A Step-By-Step Guide for Coaching Classroom Teachers in Evidence-Based Interventions highlights the consultation strategies used by the coaches on the PATHS to PAX Project with the Johns Hopkins Center for Prevention and Early Intervention working with classroom teachers in Baltimore City public schools. The PATHS to PAX Project is the integration of two of the most widely disseminated, evidence-based, universal school-based preventive interventions: the PATHS curriculum and the PAX Good Behavior Game, or PAX GBG. This book reviews the Universal Coaching Model and the Indicated Coaching Model for supporting teacher implementation, including establishing positive coach–teacher relationships as well as coaching strategies that reflect core principles of behavior change, such as modeling, reinforcement, and performance feedback. Also presented are lessons learned and real-life case examples from coaches working with classroom teachers, and strategies for addressing coaching challenges and barriers. The selection, training, and supervision of coaches are discussed, and more than 30 handouts are included in the Appendix for coaches to adapt and use in their work with classroom teachers.
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Gipps, Caroline. What Makes a Good Primary School Teacher?: Expert Classroom Strategies. RoutledgeFalmer, 2000.

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What Makes a Good Primary School Teacher?: Expert Classroom Strategies. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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Gipps, Caroline, Bet McCallum, and Eleanore Hargreaves. What Makes a Good Primary School Teacher?: Expert Classroom Strategies. Taylor & Francis Group, 2015.

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Gipps, Caroline, Bet McCallum, and Eleanore Hargreaves. What Makes a Good Primary School Teacher?: Expert Classroom Strategies. Taylor & Francis Group, 2015.

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Arroyo, Alan A., Clark Herman D. Jr, Linda D. Grooms, Grooms Arroyo Selig, and Glenn L. Koonce. Enhancing Teacher Performance: A Toolbox of Strategies to Facilitate Moving Behavior from Problematic to Good and from Good to Great. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated, 2016.

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Selig, W. George, Alan A. Arroyo, Herman D. Jr Clark, Linda D. Grooms, and Michael D. Kelly. Enhancing Teacher Performance: A Toolbox of Strategies to Facilitate Moving Behavior from Problematic to Good and from Good to Great. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated, 2016.

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Book chapters on the topic "Teachers Strategies GOLD"

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Boyd, Taylor. "Education Reform in Ontario: Building Capacity Through Collaboration." In Implementing Deeper Learning and 21st Education Reforms, 39–58. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-57039-2_2.

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Abstract The education system of the province of Ontario, Canada ranks among the best in the world and has been touted as a model of excellence for other countries seeking to improve their education system. In a system-wide reform, leaders used a political and professional perspective to improve student performance on basic academic skills. The school system rose to renown after this reform which moved Ontario from a “good” system in 2000 to a “great” one between 2003 and 2010 (Mourshed M, Chijioke C, Barber M. How the world’s most improved school systems keep getting better, a report McKinsey & Company. Retrieved from https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/social-sector/our-insights/how-the-worlds-most-improved-school-systems-keep-getting-better, (2010)). Premier Dalton McGuinty arrived in office in 2003 with education as his priority and was dubbed the “Education Premier” because of this mandate. His plan for reform had two primary goals: to improve student literacy and numeracy, and to increase secondary school graduation rates. McGuinty also wanted to rebuild public trust that had been damaged under the previous administration. The essential element of Ontario’s approach to education reform was allowing educators to develop their own plans for improvement. Giving responsibility and freedom to educators was critical in improving professional norms and accountability among teachers (Mourshed M, Chijioke C, Barber M. How the world’s most improved school systems keep getting better, a report McKinsey & Company. Retrieved from https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/social-sector/our-insights/how-the-worlds-most-improved-school-systems-keep-getting-better, (2010)) and the sustained political leadership throughout the entire reform concluding in 2013 provided an extended trajectory for implementing and adjusting learning initiatives. The Ministry of Education’s Student Achievement Division, which was responsible for designing and implementing strategies for student success, took a flexible “learning as we go” attitude in which the reform strategy adapted and improved over time (Directions Evidence and Policy Research Group. The Ontario student achievement division student success strategy evidence of improvement study. Retrieved from http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/research/EvidenceOfImprovementStudy.pdf, (2014)). This chapter will discuss influences on the reform design and key components of strategies to support student and teacher development and build a relationship of accountability and trust among teachers, the government and the public. The successes and shortcomings of this reform will be discussed in the context of their role in creating a foundation for the province’s next steps towards fostering twenty-first century competencies in classrooms.
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Psaltou-Joycey, Angeliki. "Language Learning Strategies and Good Language Teachers." In Lessons from Good Language Teachers, 175–86. Cambridge University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108774390.017.

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Gipps, Caroline, Bet McCallum, and Eleanore Hargreaves. "Teaching strategies." In What Makes a Good Primary School Teacher?, 33–66. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003070894-3.

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Gipps, Caroline, Bet McCallum, and Eleanore Hargreaves. "Teaching strategies." In What Makes a Good Primary School Teacher?, 33–66. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003070894-3.

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"Teaching strategies." In What Makes a Good Primary School Teacher?, 39–72. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203134252-5.

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Bennett, Peggy D. "Persevere." In Teaching with Vitality. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190673987.003.0080.

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Being a teacher can be hard. • We invest ourselves wholeheartedly, yet sometimes our efforts fall short. • We know our subject matter, but students may seem uninterested. • We search for more and better ways to teach, but the results can be disappointing. As educators, we will fail. We will be hurt. We will be disap­pointed. We will be discouraged. Yet key to our recovery from these slumps is what we tell ourselves about those failures. What do we need to do? “Just get up.” “Just get up!” With this statement, Olympic gold medal fig­ure skater Scott Hamilton reminds us that the challenges of a skater involve many falls and frequent pain. It is impossible to be a skater and not fall down. All skaters fall. All skaters fail. They know they will fall. They know they will fail. They know both will hurt. Hamilton says: “Just get up!” Too many “falls” without strategies to recover can cause teachers to “crust up.” We generate layers of crust to protect us as we cling to our anger, refuse assistance, and numb our bod­ies, minds, and spirits. But crusting insulates us from feeling and caring, so we miss out on the vitality of our lives. Then “we forget to be glad for all the things that go right” When we know how to “get up,” when we accept that the fall will come again, we can persevere. We feel the strength of our knowing, and we use determination to pull ourselves out of the doldrums. Just get up. Just keep going. Just aspire to do better.
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Misra, Pradeep Kumar. "Equipping Teacher Educators for Digital Teaching and Learning." In Handbook of Research on Faculty Development for Digital Teaching and Learning, 119–39. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-8476-6.ch007.

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Considering that teachers are central to good education and teacher educators are central to good teacher education, it is logical that due care must be taken to equip teacher educators for digital teaching and learning. In fact, continuing professional development of teacher educators in terms of digital teaching and learning is a necessity of our times. Extending these arguments, the chapter, that is mainly based on the review and analysis of policy documents and practices as well as other available literature and statistics related to teacher educators, begins with discussions on role and importance of teacher educators, details the need and promises of preparing teacher educators for digital teaching and learning, delves upon practices of and challenges before teacher educators to master digital teaching and learning, and ends with presenting innovative strategies to empower teacher educators for the world of digital teaching and learning.
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Marchese, Dana D., Kimberly D. Becker, Jennifer P. Keperling, Celene E. Domitrovich, Wendy M. Reinke, Dennis D. Embry, and Nicholas S. Ialongo. "Universal Coaching Model." In A Step-By-Step Guide for Coaching Classroom Teachers in Evidence-Based Interventions, 18–68. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780190609573.003.0003.

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Chapter 3 discusses the Universal Coaching Model, a collaborative approach that includes specific activities and strategies used with every teacher implementing the program. Coaching activities are grouped into three phases: (a) connect, (b) cultivate, and (c) consolidate. Strategies for establishing the coach–teacher team, visiting the classroom, engaging students as active participants, and starting the PATHS Curriculum and the PAX Good Behavior Game are discussed. The importance of timelines, pacing guides, and data collection are reviewed, as is the process of being a collaborative coach. Also described are tips for how to provide support and structure to coaching sessions while providing performance feedback, setting goals, and using positive reinforcement with teachers. Common early implementation challenges, coaching pitfalls, and strategies to enhance student engagement are also discussed.
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Guida, Maria. "Active Learning of Science in the European Dimension." In Handbook of Research on Didactic Strategies and Technologies for Education, 821–29. IGI Global, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-2122-0.ch072.

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This chapter talks about the author’s experience as a teacher in the panel of SPICE (Science pedagogy innovation centre for Europe), a partnership between fifteen European countries for the renewal of science education in a two-year project carried out by European Schoolnet and funded under the European Commission’s Lifelong Learning Programme. The aim of this project is to identify and validate a number of good practices (GPs) of teaching in the field of MST (Mathematics, Science, Technology) which will be available for all European teachers on a special portal in order to use them with their students. GP criteria will become guidelines for new projects to ensure innovation and quality. SPICE was a great occasion for the participants’ professional development due to the international collaboration, the opportunity of a deep reflection on their teaching methodology, and the chance of a scientific observation of their students’ learning during different kinds of activity.
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Martinelli, Victor, Mario Cutajar, Martina Debattista, and Amira Mangion. "TEACHERS' AWARENESS OF SOCIAL, EMOTIONAL AND BEHAVIOURAL DIFFICULTIES IN STATE PRIMARY SCHOOLS IN MALTA: A CASE STUDY." In Advances in Psychology and Psychological Trends, 300–315. inScience Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.36315/2021pad27.

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This study explores teachers' awareness of social, emotional and behavioural difficulties (SEBD) in primary schools. Data was collected through questionnaires, and semi-structured interviews carried out with teachers teaching Years 2, 3, and 4. This study revealed that teachers who supported students with SEBD were more aware of strategies to be used in the classroom than those who never supported such students. However, the strategies adopted were largely self-devised. These included establishing a good relationship with the student and keeping daily routines consistent. All respondents expressed the desire to be provided with further training opportunities. Training would help teachers gain a deeper understanding of SEBD and develop strategies to manage such challenges more effectively.
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Conference papers on the topic "Teachers Strategies GOLD"

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Mangwegape, Bridget. "TEACHING SETSWANA PROVERBS AT THE INSTITUTION OF HIGHER LEARNING IN SOUTH AFRICA." In International Conference on Education and New Developments. inScience Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36315/2021end118.

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The paper sought to investigate how first year University student’s-teachers understand and instil appreciation of the beauty of Setswana language. Since the proverbs are carriers of cultural values, practices, rituals, and traditional poetry, they are rich in meaning, they can be used to teach moral values for the sake of teaching character building among the students and teaching Setswana at the same time. Proverbs contain values of wisdom, discipline, fairness, preparedness, destiny, happiness, and efforts. Proverbs are short sayings that contain some wisdom or observation about life and or role-play and to use a few of the proverbs to reinforce the meaning, using proverbs as a pedagogical strategy, the researcher has observed that student teachers find it difficult to learn and teach learners at school. Students-teacher’s think and feel about how they conceptualize proverbs, how they define their knowledge and use of Setswana proverbs. The lecturer observed how the nature of proverbs are linked to the culture embedded in the language. In Setswana language there is a proverb that says, “Ngwana sejo o a tlhakanelwa” (A child is a food around which we all gather) which implies that the upbringing of a child is a communal responsibility and not an individual responsibility. Put in simple terms, a child is a child to all parents or adults, since a child’s success is not a family’s success but the success of the community. In doing so, the paper will explore on how student-teachers could make use of proverbs to keep the class interested in learning Setswana proverbs. As a means of gathering qualitative data, a questionnaire was designed and administered to student-teachers and semi-structured interviews were conducted with student teachers. The findings revealed that despite those students-teachers’ positive attitudes towards proverb instruction, they did not view their knowledge of Setswana proverbs as well as the teaching of proverbs. The paper displays that proverbs constitute an important repository of valid materials that can provide student-teachers with new instructional ideas and strategies in teaching Setswana proverbs and to teach different content, which includes Ubuntu and vocabulary and good behaviour. Proverbs must be taught and used by teachers and learners in their daily communication in class and outside the classroom in order to improve their language proficiency.
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Stan, Maria Magdalena. "Self-Management Skills and Student Achievement – A Pilot Study." In ATEE 2020 - Winter Conference. Teacher Education for Promoting Well-Being in School. LUMEN Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18662/lumproc/atee2020/34.

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The adaptation pressure of youths to a labor market with a low predictability degree determines the necessity of developing certain competences which can be easily transferrable and which can ensure the personal and professional success. We have considered non cognitive abilities (attitudes, emotions, behaviours) which proved to be significant predictors of success and mental health (Heckman, 2008) and which contribute significantly to a rise in emotional strength and to a wide range of adaptative strategies imposed by contemporary society (Opre et al., 2018). The speciality literature confirms the importance of non-cognitive abilities in the students’ / pupils’ academic success (Heckman et al., 2006; Heckman, 2008; Deming, 2015; Balica et al., 2016). The predictability degree of diverse non cognitive abilities over academic success is different as most studies do not supply relevant data about abilities such as self-efficacy, growth mindset or social awareness (Claro & Loeb, 2019), while abilities like self-management defined as the ability to regulate one’s emotions, thoughts, and behaviors in different situations (Duckworth & Carlson, 2013) represents a good predictor of academic achievement (Blair & Raver, 2015; Riggs et al., 2016). We consider self-management as being that umbrella construct which refers to abilities such as self-control, self-regulation, self-discipline, will power and self-power (Duckworth & Kern, 2011). Under the circumstances in which students with major risk abandonment participate in specific activities to develop personal, socio-emotional and learning management abilities, our study proposes to examine the variation of self-management abilities of students who participated in these activities and of students who did not participate in the activities and who are not prone to risk abandonment. Also, we wish to investigate if there is a relation between students’ self-management abilities and student achievement.
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D’Sena, Peter. "Decolonising the curriculum. Contemplating academic culture(s), practice and strategies for change." In Learning Connections 2019: Spaces, People, Practice. University College Cork||National Forum for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.33178/lc2019.13.

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In 2015, students at the University of Cape Town called for the statue of Cecil Rhodes, the 19th century British coloniser, to be removed from their campus. Their clarion call, in this increasingly widespread #RhodesMustFall movement, was that for diversity, inclusion and social justice to become a lived reality in higher education (HE), the curriculum has to be ‘decolonised’. (Chantiluke, et al, 2018; Le Grange, 2016) This was to be done by challenging the longstanding, hegemonic Eurocentric production of knowledge and dominant values by accommodating alternative perspectives, epistemologies and content. Moreover, they also called for broader institutional changes: fees must fall, and the recruitment and retention of both students and staff should take better account of cultural diversity rather than working to socially reproduce ‘white privilege’ (Bhambra, et al, 2015) Concerns had long been voiced by both academics and students about curricula dominated by white, capitalist, heterosexual, western worldviews at the expense of the experiences and discourses of those not perceiving themselves as fitting into those mainstream categories (for an Afrocentric perspective, see inter alia, Asante, 1995; Hicks & Holden, 2007) The massification of HE across race and class lines in the past four decades has fuelled these debates; consequentially, the ‘fitness’ of curricula across disciplines are increasingly being questioned. Student representative bodies have also voiced the deeper concern that many pedagogic practices and assessment techniques in university systems serve to reproduce society’s broader inequalities. Certainly, in the UK, recent in-depth research has indicated that the outcomes of inequity are both multifaceted and tangible, with, for example, graduating students from Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) backgrounds only receiving half as many ‘good’ (first class and upper second) degree classifications as their white counterparts (RHS, 2018). As a consequence of such findings and reports, the momentum for discussing the issues around diversifying and decolonising the university has gathered pace. Importantly, however, as the case and arguments have been expressed not only through peer reviewed articles and reports published by learned societies, but also in the popular press, the core issues have become more accessible than most academic debates and more readily discussed by both teachers and learners (Arday and Mirza, 2018; RHS, 2018). Hence, more recently, findings about the attainment/awarding gap have been taken seriously and given prominence by both Universities UK and the National Union of Students, though their shared conclusion is that radical (though yet to be determined) steps are needed if any movements or campaigns, such as #closingthegap are to find any success. (Universities UK, 2019; NUS, 2016; Shay, 2016)
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Barak, Moshe. "Promoting Inventive Design and Problem-Solving Competencies." In ASME 2008 9th Biennial Conference on Engineering Systems Design and Analysis. ASMEDC, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/esda2008-59118.

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What can education do to foster students’ inventive design and problem-solving competencies? On the one hand, it is widely agreed that accomplishing this end is one of education’s main objectives today. On the other hand, many people regard creativity as a ‘God-given’ ability, something an individual either has or does not have but can hardly be learned or enhanced. Therefore, it is of no surprise that only little has been done to introduce the teaching of creative thinking into traditional schooling, either in K-12 education or in engineering education. In the current paper, however, I present a different viewpoint. The literature on design and problem-solving in engineering shows that while novices tend to follow a routine design approach or use the trial-and-error method, experts are likely to use domain-specific strategies, schemes and heuristics, move flexibly from one working method to another, combine given strategies in new ways, and solve problems by using shortcuts or rules-of-thumb rather than work according to a specific method. Therefore, it could be useful to teach students several heuristic methods for inventive design and problem-solving that have been used increasingly in engineering, for example, SCAMPER, TRIZ, Systematic Inventive Thinking (SIT) and the Eight-Dimensional method. This paper briefly reviews some of these methods and addresses the outcomes of several studies about teaching the methods to engineers and designers in industry, junior high school students, and science and technology teachers. The findings indicate that the participants often improved their achievements in suggesting original solutions to problems in comparison to a control group, and successfully utilized the method they had learned in their final project. The implications to engineering education are also discussed.
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A. Nkhoma, Clara, Mathews Nkhoma, Susan Thomas, and Nha Quoc Le. "The Role of Rubrics in Learning and Implementation of Authentic Assessment: A Literature Review." In InSITE 2020: Informing Science + IT Education Conferences: Online. Informing Science Institute, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/4606.

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Aim/Purpose: This study will review the existing literature on the advantages and challenges associated with rubric design and implementation. The role of rubric as an authentic assessment instrument will also be discussed. Background: This study provides an overall understanding of ‘rubric design, the benefits and challenges of using rubrics, which will be useful for both practitioners and researchers alike. Methodology: A comprehensive literature review was carried out on rubric, educational assessment, authentic assessment and other related topics. Contribution: Different types of rubrics and essential elements to create a complete rubric for classroom effectiveness are reviewed from literature to aid researchers, students and teachers who are new to using and designing rubrics. For experienced rubric designers and users, this will be an opportunity for them to get reassurance from the literature regarding good practices of rubric usage. This project will also be of use to researchers working on rubrics. Findings: A rubric is not only an assessment tool useful for students in high-stakes exam but also an educational instrument supporting learners to select appropriate learning approaches, assisting teachers to design effective instruction strategies, and improve reliability and validity of assessment. Novice learners should begin with generic rubrics due to their simplicity. Meanwhile, a task-specific rubric is more useful to improve reliability and validity of large-scale assessment. Holistic rubrics are appropriate for assessment of learning and analytic rubrics are almost indispensable in student-centred classroom and assessment for learning. Recommendations for Practitioners: A rubric as an authentic assessment instrument is useful to enhance the reliability of authentic assessment. Moreover, other empirical results indicate that rubrics play an importance role in authentic assessment regardless of levels or disciplines. Recommendations for Researchers: Those carrying out research on rubrics, rubric design and authentic assessment will find this paper useful as a point of reference to inform their research. Impact on Society: The findings apply to both learners and instructors in terms of analyzing best practices when using rubrics. The paper highlights that there are three main factors that determine the effectiveness of a rubric in improving students’ performance: namely, the users’ perception, the design, and the purpose of using rubrics. Rubric designing variables should also be optimized based on reliable data and information about the target educational context. Armed with this information, instructors will be in a better position to optimise the learning experience of their students. Future Research: Systemic literature reviews with data analysis from both qualitative and quantitative findings should be carried out in the future to identify current trends and the role of rubrics in learning.
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