Academic literature on the topic 'Teaching School Model'

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Journal articles on the topic "Teaching School Model"

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Gravett, Sarah, and Coert Loock. "Towards a governance and management model for teaching schools in South Africa." South African Journal of Childhood Education 4, no. 3 (December 30, 2014): 18. http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/sajce.v4i3.237.

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This article reports on a project that was aimed at establishing a model for the governance of teaching schools in South Africa within the framework of the current legal dispensation for the public and the independent schooling sector. The paper mainly addresses the powers and functions of public schools and school governing bodies as defined within the broader framework of The South African Schools Act 84 of 1996, The National Education Policy Act (Act 27 of 1996), and the Employment of Educators Act (Act 76 of 1998). The analysis of these statutes informed the proposal of four possible models for governance of teaching schools. The article recommends two models that fit the mandate of teaching schools as envisioned in the Integrated Strategic Planning Framework for Teacher Education and Development in South Africa, 2011–2025: 1) a model that provides for teaching schools as a school type at national (not provincial) level, and 2) the independent school model
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Ritonga, Tamin, Azwar Ananda, Dasman Lanin, and Helmi Hasan. "PRACTICE TO THEORY OF LEARNING: A LESSON LEARNED FROM ISLAMIC BOARDING SCHOOL IN SOUTH TAPANULI OF INDONESIA." Humanities & Social Sciences Reviews 7, no. 5 (November 13, 2019): 1304–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.18510/hssr.2019.75169.

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Purpose of the study: This research was aimed at constructing a new theory of learning from traditional practice which could give a significant contribution to the educational model. This research was conducted to seek the theory learning and model of teaching of Pondok Pesantren (Islamic Boarding School with Salafi system) in South Tapanuli of Indonesia. Methodology: A qualitative research design was applied to seek the data in the Islamic Boarding School for constructing a theory of learning. This research applied an observation and interview techniques to collect the data from Islamic boarding school Darussalam Parmeraan (PDP) of the Dolok District of South Tapanuli, North Sumatra Province of Indonesia. Main Findings: Data revealed that Sorongan and Halaqoh techniques (circling forum in group learning and discussion models), not like the formal school model in the classrooms, have been more effective in two terms; solidarity and control. Sorong and Halaqoh have been preferred to be practiced in that Islamic Boarding School for many years. This study recommends that theory. Applications of this study: The data obtained of teaching methods in Islamic Boarding School Darussalam Parmeraan (PDP) give the alternative teaching techniques such as Sorongan in which learners put into the circling forum which makes the learners are close to instructors and Halaqoh where the Islamic teachings motivate them to learn more intensively. Those two techniques could be applied to formal school, not only in the Pondok pesantren area. Novelty/Originality of this study: This study offered the system of Pondok pesantren traditional practice of teaching techniques of Sorongan and Hallaq of Pondok Pesantren which have been originally rooted in Islamic teachings in Southeast Asia for modern schools. Those techniques could be transferred to formal school; as learning practice that gives democratic education and contributes to training learners in formal schools.
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Koonlaboot, Maitree, Noppadon Kongsilp, Anan Malalat, and Parkpoom Rattanarojanakul. "A Study on Current Conditions and Soccer Teaching Model for Elementary School Students in Demonstration Schools." International Journal of Higher Education 7, no. 3 (May 6, 2018): 45. http://dx.doi.org/10.5430/ijhe.v7n3p45.

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The purpose of this study was to study current conditions and soccer teaching model for elementary school students in the demonstration schools. This study used a qualitative method. Data collection was conducted by interview. Twelve informants involved with soccer instruction were selected by using purposive sampling technique from the demonstration schools. The informants consisted of four instructors, four student guardians, and four elementary school students. The interview result has been described its contents based on interview topics and it clarified descriptive information in three aspects as the followings: 1) As for the current conditions of soccer teaching model for elementary school students in the demonstration schools, the informants had different opinions either it was appropriate or inappropriate, 2) Soccer teaching model for elementary school students in the demonstration schools comprises of four prime aspects: instructor, lesson management, facility, and learners, 3) There are recommendations for further implementations of soccer teaching model for elementary school students in the demonstration schools to apply in the future. The findings from this study are useful for soccer instructors at the elementary school level or for instructors in educational institutes at various levels, including those who are interested in using as a guideline to improve their soccer teaching model in case it is appropriate to their students.
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Nordin A Rahman, M., Jazurainifariza Jaafar, M. Fadzil A Kadir, Syadiah Nor Shamsuddin, and Syarilla Iryani A Saany. "Cloud Based Gamification Model Canvas for School Information Management." International Journal of Engineering & Technology 7, no. 2.14 (April 6, 2018): 28. http://dx.doi.org/10.14419/ijet.v7i2.14.11148.

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Information management especially related to teaching and learning materials is an important application in school in order to bring education system more effective and systematic. Modern education requires fundamental changes in current education system platform for ensuring teaching method becomes more efficient. The challenges of current school information management are non-integrated system, difficulty in configuration and deployment as well as complexity of storage provision. These issues reduce the motivation among teachers to participate in sharing teaching and learning materials in school information management system. This article proposes a gamification model canvas framework for school information management under cloud computing environment. The aim is to provide a method for encouraging the teachers to share their teaching materials. Motivation element provided in model canvas method such as dynamics, behavior, component and aesthetic are used in the proposed framework. With the proposed framework, a cloud based prototype will be developed and can be used by schools.
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Zhu, Yu Jin, Jian Hua Ren, and Hui Ding. "School Internationalized Operating Model and the Case Study." Advanced Materials Research 219-220 (March 2011): 1215–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.219-220.1215.

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School internationalized operating model acts as a kind of school operating model, with the main task of taking the operating approaches of integration, disposition, control and occupation to utilize teaching resources of foreign school into the teaching, education, and management to enhance the efficiency, quality and standards of teaching, education and management of our school. These resources are the curricula, faculty, teaching techniques, education and school management technology of foreign school. Studies have shown that there exist three basic operating models. They are single-campus internationalized operating model; double-campus internationalized operating model and abroad operating model. By implementing the model of internationalized operation and developing internationalized cooperation and communication, school could broaden its version, could promote its operating standard as well as enhance it.
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Siregar, Fajar Sidik, Arifin Siregar, and Daitin Tarigan. "PENGEMBANGAN MODEL TEACHING PERSONALITY AND SOSIAL RESPONBILITY (TPSR) MATA KULIAH PENDIDIKAN JASMANI SEKOLAH DASAR." SCHOOL EDUCATION JOURNAL PGSD FIP UNIMED 12, no. 3 (December 15, 2022): 195–203. http://dx.doi.org/10.24114/sejpgsd.v12i3.40754.

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Essential investigate targets are: To deliver a item Advancement Demonstrate Educating Identity And Social Duty (TPSR) within the Subject of Physical Instruction in Basic Schools that are substantial. The investigate method employments a 4-D show which is an expansion of Characterize, Plan, Advancement and Spread. The area of the research was carried out within the Essential School Educator Instruction Think about Program, FIP UNIMED. The populace of this investigate is all understudies of the Stambuk Rudimentary School Educator Instruction Consider Program 2020 totaling 225 individuals. The investigate test was arbitrarily doled out to classes, specifically lesson J Customary 2020 totaling 23 understudies. Information collection methods in this think about utilized interviews, surveys and documentation. The comes about of the advancement of the Educating Identity And Social Obligation (TPSR) Show Improvement were gotten (1) The comes about of the fabric master approval as a entire appeared that the Advancement of the Educating Identity And Social Obligation (TPSR) Demonstrate was expressed to be exceptionally substantial (96%) and the comes about of the media master approval as a entire were expressed to be exceptionally substantial (93.3%) (2) The comes about of the adequacy test have an normal esteem of 77,391 with the completeness criteria "Total". The conclusion of the investigate is that the Advancement of the Instructing Identity and Social Duty (TPSR) demonstrate is substantial and viable for utilize within the Physical Instruction Course for Basic School Instructors of Rudimentary School Instructor Instruction Staff of Instruction, State College of Medan.
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Havu-Nuutinen, Sari, Anttoni Kervinen, Anna Uitto, Aulikki Laine, Anniina Koliseva, Lassi Pyykkö, Pentti Impiö, and Tiina Aittola. "PRE-SERVICE AND IN-SERVICE TEACHERS’ EXPERIENCES OF INQUIRY-BASED PRIMARY SCIENCE TEACHING: A COLLABORATIVE TEAM TEACHING MODEL." Journal of Baltic Science Education 18, no. 4 (August 3, 2019): 583–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.33225/jbse/19.18.583.

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This research clarifies how a collaborative team teaching model (CTTM) can support both pre-service and in-service teachers’ professional development in using inquiry-based science teaching in primary schools. The data were collected via a questionnaire-based survey approach after inquiry projects implementation at public schools in four Finnish cities. In total, 98 pre-service teachers and 51 in-service class teachers were involved in the research. According to their experiences collaborative team teaching was seen as an adequate teaching approach in primary school science lessons. Both in-service and pre-service teachers experienced inquiry-based science teaching enthusiastically and received new ideas, knowledge and skills to carry out inquiries during the school projects. Also, they became more confident to use inquiry-based approach in their teaching. The findings indicate that the CTTM combines pre-service teachers’ professional development and in-service teachers’ expertise and the model successfully support the use of inquiry-based practices in primary school science education. Keywords: collaborative team teaching model, inquiry-based science teaching, survey research, teachers’ experiences.
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Lagun Siang, Jhoni, Moch Sukardjo, Beatrix J. M. Salenussa, Yayan Sudrajat, and Uswatun Khasanah. "Pengaruh Model Pembelajaran dan Kemampuan Berpikir Kreatif Terhadap Hasil Belajar IPA Siswa SMP." JTP - Jurnal Teknologi Pendidikan 22, no. 1 (April 30, 2020): 40–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.21009/jtp.v22i1.15329.

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This study aims to determine the influence of learning models (Contextual Teaching and Learning and Quantum Learning) and the ability to think creatively about the learning outcomes of science education in junior high school students in SMPN 226 Jakarta. This research uses treatment design by level with sample number of 48 students at State Junior Secondary School (SMPN) 226 Jakarta. The data analysis was done by Analysis of Variance (ANAVA) two lane. The results showed that (1) Contextual Teaching and Learning model (CTL) was more effective in improving learning outcomes of IPA SMP Inclusion than Quantum Learning model (QL); (2) there was interaction effect between learning model and student's creative thinking ability toward science learning outcomes 3) for junior high school students in inclusion schools with high creative thinking skills more appropriately using Contextual Teaching and Learning models (CTL), (4) and for students with low creative thinking skills more appropriately using Quantum Learning models (QL).
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Zhao, Lu, Fei Yu, and Lanhui Jiang. "The current situation of English teaching in primary schools of China and application research of SPOC-based teaching model." SHS Web of Conferences 153 (2023): 01030. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/202315301030.

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With modern information technology widely applied to school teaching in all aspects, blended teaching based on SPOC is increasingly popular with colleges and universities. However, it’s still rare to see the applied research into it for English teaching in primary schools. In order to explore the application of SPOC in English teaching of primary schools, this paper analyzed the current situation of English teaching in primary schools in China in detail, and then proposed a blended teaching model based on the SPOC platforms of Cloud Class and 17zuoye.com. We also conducted an experiment that lasts about one year by tracking and recording the performance of two groups of classes in Zhongwu Primary School with an experimental class and a control class in each group. After analyzing the experimental data, we found that the SPOC-based teaching model proposed in this paper can achieve good practical results, and can be applied and promoted for future teaching in other schools.
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Reyes Rodríguez, Ana Carolina, José Angel Vera Noriega, and Angel Alberto Valdés Cuervo. "Teaching Practices, School Support and Bullying." World Journal of Education 7, no. 4 (August 14, 2017): 50. http://dx.doi.org/10.5430/wje.v7n4p50.

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Research in recent years indicates that schools, and in particular teaching practices, play an essential role in preventing bullying. This study’s aim is to investigate the direct and indirect relationships between permissive and direct intervention teacher practices, school support and bullying. In a non-probabilistic way, 386 (58.1%) boys and 278 (41.9%) girls from 30 primary schools were selected in a city in the northwest of Mexico. The average age of students was 10.4 years (SD = 1.3 years). From the results of the calculation of a model of structural equations, it is inferred that permissive teaching practices are directly related positively to bullying, whereas direct intervention does it in a negatively. It is seen that both types of practices are indirectly related to bullying through its effects on school support. These findings confirm the role of the teacher in the prevention of bullying.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Teaching School Model"

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Factora, Miriam Beltran. "A model of sequential music teaching utilising Philippine vocal materials /." [St. Lucia, Qld.], 2005. http://www.library.uq.edu.au/pdfserve.php?image=thesisabs/absthe19166.pdf.

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Mukenge, Tshimpo C. "Suburban High School Teachers' Teaching Styles, Teaching Experiences, and Acceptance of Edmodo." ScholarWorks, 2019. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/7411.

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Southern U.S. teachers at suburban high schools can use Edmodo; however, teachers prefer traditional teacher-centered teaching methods. This quantitative correlative study explored teachers' technology acceptance in relation to teaching styles and experiences. Framing acceptance by Davis's technology acceptance model (TAM), research questions addressed the direct and moderating relationships between teaching style and the TAM variables related to using Edmodo and the direct and moderating relationships between teaching experiences and TAM variables. From 240 teachers at the high school, 45 completed an online survey (response rate of 18.75%). Descriptive statistics, ANOVA, and regression analyzed data. TAM could be verified for the entire sample; however, no significant direct relationship between teaching style and the TAM variables was found. Teaching style moderated the relationships within the TAM; these were stronger for teachers with a teacher-centered teaching style. No significant direct relationship existed between teaching experiences and TAM variables; a moderating effect on the relationships existed within the TAM. Among experienced teachers, ease of use was the strongest acceptance predictor, whereas perceived use was the strongest predictor among less experienced teachers. Results indicated teachers might develop a more student-centered teaching style, thus concentrating on technology's ease of use, rather than its potential utility. A policy recommendation could ensure teachers efficiently used technology to support student-centered learning. The application of the recommended policies might lead to teachers' more effective use of instructional technology, which might affect student learning and motivation.
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Chen, Yung Ching. "A drama project teaching model in English language teaching : an action research at a Taiwanese primary school." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.439863.

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Nazeer, Abdulla. "Teaching economics at secondary school level in the Maldives : a cooperative learning model /." The University of Waikato, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10289/2540.

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The dominant approach to the study of economics at secondary school level in the Maldives is teacher-centred methods based on behaviourist views of teaching and learning. Despite considerable research on the benefits of cooperative learning in economic education at the post-secondary level, very limited research has been conducted in secondary school classrooms in order to find ways of improving teaching and learning of economics. The purpose of this study was to enhance the teaching and learning of economics at secondary schools in the Maldives by trialing a cooperative learning model to enhance economics teachers' awareness of the impact that cooperative learning might have on student learning. This study explored a cooperative learning approach to teaching and learning economics in secondary schools and investigated teachers' and students' perceptions of cooperative learning. Some elements of both ethnographic and grounded theory methodologies were employed and specific data collection methods included workshops, classroom observations, interviews, video tapes and student questionnaires. Nine teachers and 232 students were involved in this study. The research was conducted in three stages (pre-intervention, workshops to train the participants, and post-intervention) over a period of three months in three selected schools in Male', the Maldives. Four research themes were derived from the analysis of both pre and post intervention data. These themes were teaching issues, learning issues, cooperative learning implementing issues, and students' and teachers' reactions to cooperative learning. In the pre-intervention phase, the teachers taught in a traditional manner, but after the intervention they incorporated elements of cooperative learning method to teach economics in their selected classes. The overall findings showed a considerable change in teachers' and students' attitudes and perceptions about traditional teacher-centred methods towards more student-centred methods of cooperative learning. It was evident that both teachers and students perceived cooperative learning to be an effective method of teaching. For example, the findings revealed that both teachers and students understood and could see the benefits that cooperative learning offered to the teaching and learning of economics. The students indicated that they liked working in groups and appreciated getting help from other students. In addition, the results revealed that students' interactions and involvement in classroom activities, as well as interest and motivation to learn economics, increased during the implementation of the cooperative learning model. Furthermore, this study found a mismatch between home and the traditional teacher-centred school culture in the Maldives. In contrast, the findings suggest that the principles of cooperative learning match well with the cultural values of Maldivian society. Consequently, a revised model of cooperative learning is presented that includes the aspects of culture. Jordan (1985) argued that educational practices must match with the children's culture (p. 110) and thus culturally responsive teaching can help to minimise confusion and promote an academic community of learners that enables students to be more successful learners (Gay, 2000). This study suggests that training teachers and students for cooperative learning is salient for effective implementation of cooperative learning for a positive influence on students' learning and teachers' pedagogy. However, further research should be conducted to examine other aspects of teaching and learning which may also enhance this relationship.
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Delaney, Alice. "Better Teaching Model? Middle School Science Classroom Using the 4MAT Instructional Strategy vs. Lessons Created Without this Model." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2002. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc3259/.

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The problem investigated was the need for effective and efficient learning for middle school science students to meet expectations set in Goals 2000. The use of the 4MAT Instructional Method was investigated as a possible method for attainment of current science standards. The study included one middle school science instructor's classes with 89 participating students. Measurements were taken and comparisons drawn using three assessment methods to determine if improved academic achievement and attitude scores resulted. Data analysis yielded no significant conclusion in either academic achievement or attitude improvement; however, observations of the researcher indicated potential usefulness of the 4MAT approach. The t-value calculated in the assessment methods was insufficient with a .05 probability of error present in the findings. The limitations of the study skewed the results and outweighed the possible observational insight.
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Quattrochi, David P. "How one school implements and experiences Ohio's value-added model a case study /." Morgantown, W. Va. : [West Virginia University Libraries], 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10450/10686.

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Thesis (Ed. D.)--West Virginia University, 2009.
Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains ix, 138 p. : ill. (some col.). Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 127-133).
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Merritt, Llian. "Embedding research as core practice for teachers a model for whole school teacher learning /." University of Sydney. Policy and Practice, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/659.

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This is a study of teacher professional development at the school level using teacher research as a strategy for both teacher professional learning and school change. A qualitative study was conducted to determine the conditions that would develop and sustain teachers researching their own practice in a culture of inquiry. Participant observation in one school over a two year period was used to investigate the issue of how to embed teacher research as a central feature of teachers� work. As a result of working with teachers as they researched their practice I have developed a model to explain and understand the complexities of schools and their cultures. Teachers researching their practice provided the driving force in the interplay of the elements of the model and had the potential to change school culture. Relationships, structures and processes are central to this model. Social and professional relationships between the teachers and the university partner developed and were supported by structures and processes. As the research continued these relationships changed and evolved. These relationships help develop a culture of inquiry in schools. The school/university partnership in this study evolved from an initial symbiotic�cooperative partnership (in which I shared my expertise and supported the work of teachers) into a later organic�collaborative partnership (one based on mutual and shared goals and benefits). The existing team of four teachers and the allocation of time for them to meet provided the essential structures for the teachers to research their practice. The collective leadership style instigated by the school Principal provided important human and financial support for the development of inquiry cultures. Collaboration and collegiality as forms of association enabled teachers to conduct research which challenged their individual and collective beliefs and assumptions about students� learning and their classroom practice. The content and form of teacher culture mediated the effects of teachers researching their practice. There are critical and transformational effects when teachers research their practice as part of their core work. Introducing these teachers to research was not without its difficulties. There were events and factors in the school relating to relationships, structures and processes which hindered the development of teacher research in a culture of inquiry. Because of the time frame of this study there is no evidence that school culture change is permanent. This could be the subject of future research.
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Weise, Martin. "A model for teaching informatics to German secondary school students in English-language bilingual education." Universität Potsdam, 2013. http://opus.kobv.de/ubp/volltexte/2013/6456/.

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Informatics as a school subject has been virtually absent from bilingual education programs in German secondary schools. Most bilingual programs in German secondary education started out by focusing on subjects from the field of social sciences. Teachers and bilingual curriculum experts alike have been regarding those as the most suitable subjects for bilingual instruction – largely due to the intercultural perspective that a bilingual approach provides. And though one cannot deny the gain that ensues from an intercultural perspective on subjects such as history or geography, this benefit is certainly not limited to social science subjects. In consequence, bilingual curriculum designers have already begun to include other subjects such as physics or chemistry in bilingual school programs. It only seems a small step to extend this to informatics. This paper will start out by addressing potential benefits of adding informatics to the range of subjects taught as part of English-language bilingual programs in German secondary education. In a second step it will sketch out a methodological (= didactical) model for teaching informatics to German learners through English. It will then provide two items of hands-on and tested teaching material in accordance with this model. The discussion will conclude with a brief outlook on the chances and prerequisites of firmly establishing informatics as part of bilingual school curricula in Germany.
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Hay, Roe Denise A. "Best Practice Model for School Nurses Teaching Human Sexuality Education to High School Students for the Prevention of Unintended Pregnancy." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/311757.

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Maphini, Nwabisa Vivian. "Implementing an intentional teaching model to investigate grade 9 learners’ ways of working with rational algebraic fractions." University of the Western Cape, 2019. http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6943.

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Magister Educationis - MEd
In South Africa it is widely known that most learners struggle with mathematics. The results for mathematics are poor. The department of basic education offers a number of intervention programmes to assist learners in mathematics but the problem still persists. Algebra is the most basic and important topic in mathematics as it becomes an element in almost all the other topics in mathematics curriculum. Algebraic fractions in particular are a challenge for most leaners. Research shows that learners commit a number of errors when they work with algebraic fractions. The study investigated the implementation of an intentional teaching model into grade 9 mathematics learners’ ways of working with rational algebraic fractions. An intentional teaching model is a teaching strategy which emphasizes teaching intentions or teaching objectives are brought to the fore during a lesson, the model emphasizes the use of spiral revision and assessment for learning. Ways of working in this study refers to the way in which learners deal with algebraic fractions when they simplify them including the errors they commit from the misconceptions they have about aspects of working with fractions. The study was conducted in a group of grade 9 mathematics learners at Gugulethu High school, which is located in Guguletu, a township in the Western Cape Province of South Africa. The study is premised on a qualitative research paradigm which focuses on studying situations in their natural settings and applying an interpretive perspective. Data was collected by means of observation and video recording of lessons while learners were engaged in working with algebraic fractions. Learners’ written work was analysed as part of the data collection. The results of the study show that leaners commit a number of errors when they manipulate algebraic fractions. Among other errors are: (i) Cancellation errors which had the highest frequency of occurrence (ii) Defractionalisation (iii) No recognition of the common factor and (iv)Exponential laws error. It was found that the learners’ ways of working with algebraic fractions are mostly characterised by their misunderstanding of exponential laws and difficulty in working with fractions needing the use of factorisation to simplify and find the lowest or highest common denominator during addition or subtraction. The results of the study also reveal that learners struggle to articulate extensively or in detail what they are actually doing as they simplify rational algebraic fraction.
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Books on the topic "Teaching School Model"

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Gallagher, Arlene F. Passing the torch: A model school-community project. [Chicago, Ill.?]: American Bar Association Special Committee on Youth Education for Citizenship, 1994.

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Clark, Barbara. Optimizing learning: The integrative education model in the classroom. Columbus: Merrill, 1986.

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1957-, Bogner Drew, and Buli-Holmberg Jorun 1951-, eds. Teaching and learning: A model for academic and social cognition. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Education, 2011.

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Munson-Lenz, Michael. Model teaching unit: Language arts : middle school level for Sweetgrass Basket. Helena, Mont: Montana Office of Public Instruction, 2010.

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Munson-Lenz, Michael. Model teaching unit: Language arts : middle school level for Sweetgrass Basket. Helena, Mont: Montana Office of Public Instruction, 2010.

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Connecting brain research with effective teaching: The Brain-Targeted Teaching Model. Lanham, Md: Scarecrow Press, 2003.

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Teaching without disruption: A multilevel model for managing behaviour in the secondary schools. London: RoutledgeFalmer, 2003.

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Tham, Diana. Expository eureka: Model expository essays for today's secondary school students. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Editions, 2013.

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1941-, Peterson Jean Sunde, ed. Portrait and model of a school counselor. Boston: Lahaska Press, 2005.

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Chaplain, Roland. Teaching without disruption: A multilevel model for managing pupil behaviour in the primary schools. London: RoutledgeFalmer, 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "Teaching School Model"

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Hoffer, Adam, and Andrew Beckstrom. "University and High School Economics Educators Partnership: A Model from La Crosse, Wisconsin." In Teaching Economics, 89–96. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-20696-3_8.

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Mousoulides, Nicholas G., and Lyn D. English. "Engineering Model Eliciting Activities for Elementary School Students." In International Perspectives on the Teaching and Learning of Mathematical Modelling, 221–30. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0910-2_23.

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He, Ke Kang, and Mark Shiu Kee Shum. "The Study of Psychological Model and Teaching Approaches: Primary School Composition." In Studies in Writing, 109–30. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/0-387-26915-0_7.

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Douglas, Alaster Scott. "Developing Expert Learners of Teaching and Learning: A Model for Researching and Developing Learning Opportunities in School Settings." In Student Teachers in School Practice, 181–97. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137268686_11.

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Röhl, Sebastian, Hannah Bijlsma, and Wolfram Rollett. "The Process Model of Student Feedback on Teaching (SFT): A Theoretical Framework and Introductory Remarks." In Student Feedback on Teaching in Schools, 1–11. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-75150-0_1.

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AbstractStudent feedback on teaching in schools, conceptualized as information on student perceptions of teaching, is described by many scholars as an effective instrument for the developmental use of teachers and teaching. Beyond that, various studies show that the productive use of this method is a very complex process in which a variety of aspects must be considered. As an introduction to this volume, this chapter presents a model based on findings from different research areas of feedback and school research, called Process Model of Student Feedback on Teaching (SFT). This model follows the steps of the student feedback process, starting with student perceptions of teaching, which must be professionally collected or measured. Subsequently, the teacher perceives and interprets this feedback information, which is linked to cognitive and affective reactions and processes. This can lead to an enhancement of teachers’ knowledge about their own teaching and to the initiation of improvement-oriented actions, finally resulting in improved teaching and development of the teachers’ professional competence. Thereby, characteristics of the organization, the students, and classes as well as the teachers need to be considered. This model serves as a framework for the subsequent overview of the contributions in this volume.
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He, Kekang. "The Study of Psychological Model and Teaching Approaches in Primary School Composition." In New Theory of Children’s Thinking Development: Application in Language Teaching, 95–137. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-287-837-3_5.

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Zhao, Meijing, Wancheng Ni, Haidong Zhang, Ziqi Lin, and Yiping Yang. "A Knowledge-Based Teaching Resources Recommend Model for Primary and Secondary School Oriented Distance-Education Teaching Platform." In Lecture Notes in Electrical Engineering, 511–21. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7618-0_50.

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Suranto, Wafrotur Rohmah, Ita Nuryana, Sutama, Sabar Narimo, and Bunga Amanda. "Using Teaching Factory Model for Improving Student Employability Skills in Vocational High School." In Proceedings of the 7th Progressive and Fun Education International Conference (PROFUNEDU 2022), 103–11. Paris: Atlantis Press SARL, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/978-2-494069-71-8_13.

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van der Lans, Rikkert. "A Probabilistic Model for Feedback on Teachers’ Instructional Effectiveness: Its Potential and the Challenge of Combining Multiple Perspectives." In Student Feedback on Teaching in Schools, 73–90. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-75150-0_5.

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AbstractThis chapter describes research into the validity of a teacher evaluation framework that was applied between 2012 and 2016 to provide feedback to Dutch secondary school teachers concerning their instructional effectiveness. In this research project, the acquisition of instructional effectiveness was conceptualized as unfolding along a continuum ranging from ineffective novice to effective expert instructor. Using advanced statistical models, teachers’ current position on the continuum was estimated. This information was used to tailor feedback for professional development. Two instruments were applied to find teachers’ current position on the continuum, namely the International Comparative Assessment of Learning and Teaching (ICALT) observation instrument and the My Teacher–student questionnaire (MTQ). This chapter highlights background theory and central concepts behind the project and it introduces the logic behind the statistical methods that were used to operationalize the continuum of instructional effectiveness. Specific attention is given to differences between students and observers in how they experience teachers’ instructional effectiveness and the resulting disagreement in how they position teachers on the continuum. It is explained how this disagreement made feedback reports less actionable. The chapter then discusses evidence of two empirical studies that examined the disagreement from two methodological perspectives. Finally, it makes some tentative conclusions concerning the practical implications of the evidence.
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Nortvedt, G. A., K. B. Bratting, O. Kovpanets, A. Pettersen, and A. Rohatgi. "Improving Equity Through National-Level Assessment Initiatives." In Equity, Equality and Diversity in the Nordic Model of Education, 225–48. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61648-9_9.

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AbstractThis chapter investigates how a national-level assessment initiative may improve equity in early years numeracy education, taking the Norwegian mapping tests for primary grades 1–3 as an example. Three assessments, one test for each grade level, were launched in the 2013–2014 school year and have been used every year since. In accordance with Nordic model principles, the test content is available to teachers to ensure familiarity with the test content and the formative use of the assessment outcomes to improve teaching and learning for students identified as at risk of lagging behind. Analysis of student data reveals that, 6 years after the first implementation, no inflation can be seen in test scores. Thus, an exposed assessment may remain robust within an educational system that aspires to transparency, such as the Norwegian one. However, analyses of interview data and achievement data reveal that teachers often struggle to use the assessment outcomes to improve teaching. These results suggest that the initiative to improve equity in primary school numeracy education depends on teachers’ assessment literacy. In accordance with Nordic model principles, schools have significant autonomy and are responsible for identifying professional development needs for their teachers. This research confirms the dilemmas in the Nordic model between national-level and local initiatives and responsibilities.
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Conference papers on the topic "Teaching School Model"

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Wang, Ye. "Application on Situational Teaching Model in Primary School Chinese Teaching." In 2017 2nd International Conference on Education, Sports, Arts and Management Engineering (ICESAME 2017). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icesame-17.2017.400.

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Wu, Jianfeng, and Yanqin Yan. "Study of Humanity Teaching Model in Higher Vocational School Chinese Teaching." In 4th International Conference on Management Science, Education Technology, Arts, Social Science and Economics 2016. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/msetasse-16.2016.417.

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Bellova, Enis, and Eleonora Mileva. "PHYSICAL EDUCATION ONLINE TEACHING MODEL IN SCHOOL EDUCATION SETTINGS." In INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONGRESS “APPLIED SPORTS SCIENCES”. Scientific Publishing House NSA Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37393/icass2022/107.

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ABSTRACT Blending learning is a teaching method due to a combination of tradition teaching method combine will information technology communication. The COVID-19 pandemic gave us the possibility to increase the use of this new method to deliver physical education lessons. The purpose of this literature review is to gather information on the advantages or disadvantages of using physical education online teaching model. The collection of literature studies was carried out using a database search tool using keywords such as: COVID-19 pandemic, physical education lesson, teacher perception, blending learning disadvantages. From the research conducted, 45 research articles were identified. In the second phase of the research, the key words were added: motivation and perception. At this final search a total of 10 scientific articles were identified, where it was used in this literature review. Results from this literature review show that physical education online teaching method has a lot of benefits in managing PE classes. The results from this review show that there is no a unique consensus about the percentage of advantage or disadvantages using this PE online teaching method. This method although has a lot of benefits more research finding are needed about the level of self-motivation as from teacher and from students.
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Makar, Katie. "A model of learning to teach statistical inquiry." In Joint ICMI/IASE Study: Teaching Statistics in School Mathematics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.08506.

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Although the inquiry process is a foundational practice in statistics, it is rarely taught in school. This paper introduces a tentative model to describe primary teachers’ evolving experiences in learning to teach statistical inquiry.
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Senmay, Ketut, Gede Wira Bayu, and Made Sumantri. "Effectiveness Quantum Teaching Model in Elementary School Students’ Civics Learning." In 2nd International Conference on Technology and Educational Science (ICTES 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.210407.262.

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Wang, Lijun, Sisi Wang, and Yongqiang Zhuo. "Marine Practice Teaching based on School-Enterprise Cooperative Education Model." In International Conference on Management, Computer and Education Informatization. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/mcei-15.2015.19.

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Uibu, Krista, and Age Salo. "THE DUAL ROLE OF SCHOOL MENTORS: HOW TO ESTABLISH TEACHING AND SUPERVISION GOALS?" In International Conference on Education and New Developments. inScience Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36315/2022v1end027.

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"In several countries, the schools’ responsibilities in preparing student teachers for their future work have increased over the last decade (Sandvik et al., 2019). In cooperation with the universities, school mentors are expected to set an example of how to teach pupils and use appropriate teaching practices in lessons. School mentors are expected to be capable of choosing teaching practices that achieve several educational goals and to connect student teachers’ theoretical concepts with practical training. However, not all school mentors are sufficiently prepared to supervise students and many do not appreciate the importance of their role in training future teachers. The purpose of the present study was to investigate Estonian school mentors’ teaching and supervising goals when they teach pupils and supervise student teachers as well as to identify how teachers in the role of mentors understand university expectations. The sample included 16 teachers, all of them had supervision experience with student teachers and they all taught various subjects at university teacher training schools (in grades 1 to 6). Observations and stimulated recall interviews were used to collect the data. Thematic analysis indicated that teachers have difficulty establishing goals for themselves as teachers and mentors. The results demonstrated that Estonian school mentors have the challenge of combining two responsibilities: how to maintain balance between their teaching and supervising. It also appeared that mentors did not perceive clearly what universities expected from them as supervisors and, therefore, relied rather on their personal perception and experience than a clear knowledge of their supervision goals. Mentors’ main goal in model lessons for student teachers was to establish good teaching experience. To conclude, it is necessary to encourage cooperation between teachers and universities and support mentors’ professional development."
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Wu, Minhua, and Weili Peng. "A qualitative study in middle school on imformation technology teaching model." In Education (ICCSE 2011). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccse.2011.6028870.

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Rahayu, Meika. "Model of Online-Teaching Platform Use in Higher Education Business School." In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Economics, Management, Accounting and Business, ICEMAB 2018, 8-9 October 2018, Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia. EAI, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.8-10-2018.2289209.

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Zhubi, Arjana. "TEACHERS’ ATTITUDES IN APPLICATION OF TECHNOLOGY AND EFFECTIVE TEACHING PLANNING IN PRIMARY SCHOOL." In International Conference on Education and New Developments. inScience Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36315/2021end061.

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The planning of teaching with technological tools in Kosovo schools has brought new and challenging experiences for teachers at all levels of education. The purpose of the research is to analyze the attitudes of teachers about the application of technology in effective planning of teaching and raising learning outcomes in primary school. Furthermore, the research determines the impact of age and level of teacher’s education on the application of technology according to curriculum areas. The TPACK model was used as the theoretical framework during the research, which helped us to clarify the notions: technological knowledge, pedagogical knowledge, and teaching contents in the effective planning of teaching by applying technology. The data were collected from a questionnaire with 25 teachers in an elementary school where technology finds higher applicability in teaching. To analyze the learning outcomes during the application of technology and applicability in other subjects, the Post Hock test, and the Correlation was used to measure the relationship between the two variables, respectively the correlation between the age and the level of education of teachers. The results of this research show that learning planning through technology affects the increase of focus and gain a higher understanding in each subject, acquiring knowledge of new concepts, raises the desire to learn independently, makes the learning process more innovative and more attractive to students. The research recommends for the local and central level to give priority to equipping primary schools with technological tools to improve teaching by having the opportunity to plan different practices.
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Reports on the topic "Teaching School Model"

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McElhaney, Kevin, Anthony Baker, Carly Chillmon, Zareen Kasad, Babe Liberman, and Jeremy Roschelle. An Initial Logic Model to Guide OpenSciEd Research: Updated Version. Digital Promise, March 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.51388/20.500.12265/152.

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This white paper supports an ongoing effort to define a research agenda and catalyze a research community around the OpenSciEd curriculum materials. Rigorous research on these materials is needed in order to answer questions about the equitable design of instructional materials, impacts on student learning, effective and equitable classroom teaching practices, teacher professional development approaches, and models for school adoption that address the diverse needs of historically marginalized students in STEM. Research findings have the potential to advance the knowledge, skills, and practices that will promote key student, teacher, and system outcomes. The research agenda stands to accelerate the research timeline and stimulate a broad range of research projects addressing these critical needs. To support the collaborative development and activation of the research agenda, we outline an initial logic model for OpenSciEd. The logic model can shape research efforts by clarifying intended relationships among (1) the principles, commitments, and key affordances of OpenSciEd; (2) the components of OpenSciEd and how they are implemented and supported in classrooms, schools, districts, and states; and (3) the desired outcomes of OpenSciEd.
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Jiménez-Parra, José Francisco, Sixto González-Víllora, and Alfonso Valero-Valenzuela. The evolution of the Teaching Personal and Social Responsibility from a contextual to a transcontextual model. A systematic review. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, April 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2022.4.0031.

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Review question / Objective: The aim of this research was to identify and analyze the advances produced during the last 6 years in intervention studies based on the Model of Personal and Social Responsibility (TPSR) both in the subject of physical education and in any other area of knowledge within the school context. To conduct this study, the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed (Moher et al., 2015) and the question was elaborated in the PICO format: (P) Participants or Problem (eg children, adolescents, Elementary, secondary, country), (I) Intervention (eg units, lessons, quantitative, qualitative or mixed research), (C) Comparators (“Teaching Personal and Social Responsibility”, “Education”), and (O) Outcomes (eg personal and social responsibility, motivation, prosocial behaviors, basic psychological needs, perception of students and teachers).
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Thomson, Sue, Nicole Wernert, Sima Rodrigues, and Elizabeth O'Grady. TIMSS 2019 Australia. Volume I: Student performance. Australian Council for Educational Research, December 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.37517/978-1-74286-614-7.

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The Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) is an international comparative study of student achievement directed by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA). TIMSS was first conducted in 1995 and the assessment conducted in 2019 formed the seventh cycle, providing 24 years of trends in mathematics and science achievement at Year 4 and Year 8. In Australia, TIMSS is managed by the Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER) and is jointly funded by the Australian Government and the state and territory governments. The goal of TIMSS is to provide comparative information about educational achievement across countries in order to improve teaching and learning in mathematics and science. TIMSS is based on a research model that uses the curriculum, within context, as its foundation. TIMSS is designed, broadly, to align with the mathematics and science curricula used in the participating education systems and countries, and focuses on assessment at Year 4 and Year 8. TIMSS also provides important data about students’ contexts for learning mathematics and science based on questionnaires completed by students and their parents, teachers and school principals. This report presents the results for Australia as a whole, for the Australian states and territories and for the other participants in TIMSS 2019, so that Australia’s results can be viewed in an international context, and student performance can be monitored over time. The results from TIMSS, as one of the assessments in the National Assessment Program, allow for nationally comparable reports of student outcomes against the Melbourne Declaration on Educational Goals for Young Australians. (Ministerial Council on Education, Employment, Training and Youth Affairs, 2008).
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NELYUBINA, E. G., and L. V. PANFILOVA. METHODOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF IMPLEMENTATION OF TECHNOLOGY “INVERTED LEARNING” IN CHEMISTRY LESSONS. Science and Innovation Center Publishing House, April 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.12731/2658-4034-2022-13-1-2-45-62.

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At the present time - the time of information technology and the rapid development of science and technology - a person has to constantly learn and retrain. The changes that have taken place in the education system in recent years have led to a rethinking of teaching methods and technologies. The technology of blended learning, one of the models of which is “inverted learning”, allows to succinctly include information and communication technologies in the educational process, while increasing the quality of education, creating a new level of personal responsibility for the student and by creating conditions for the development of metasubject competencies. Purpose - to develop methodological techniques for the implementation of the “flipped learning” technology in the framework of teaching chemistry in basic school, aimed at the formation of subject universal educational activities in chemistry. Method or methodology of the work: the main research methods were analysis, pedagogical experiment and interpretation of the results of the experiment. Results: solved at the theoretical and methodological level the problem of selection of methodological techniques aimed at the implementation of the technology “inverted learning” in the basic school.
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McGee, Steven, Randi McGee-Tekula, and Jennifer Duck. Does a Focus on Modeling and Explanation of Molecular Interactions Impact Student Learning and Identity? The Learning Partnership, April 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.51420/conf.2017.1.

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The Interactions curriculum and professional development program is designed to support high school teachers in their transition to the physical science Next Generation Science Standards. Through curriculum materials, an online portal for delivering the digital materials, interactive models of molecular phenomena, and educative teacher guide, teachers are able to support students in bridging the gap between macroscopic and sub-microscopic ideas in physical science by focusing on a modeling and explanation-oriented exploration of attractions and energy changes at the atomic level. During the fall semester of the 2015-16 school year, The Learning Partnership conducted a field test of Interactions with eleven teachers who implemented the curriculum across a diverse set of school districts. As part of the field test, The Learning Partnership examined the impact of teachers’ inquiry-based teaching practices on student learning and identification with the scientific enterprise. The results indicate that students had statistically significant growth in learning from the beginning to end of unit 2 and that the extent to which teachers engaged students in inquiry had a positive statistically significant influence on the growth rate and a statistically significant indirect impact on students’ identification with the scientific enterprise.
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Bano, Masooda, and Zeena Oberoi. Embedding Innovation in State Systems: Lessons from Pratham in India. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), December 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-wp_2020/058.

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The learning crisis in many developing countries has led to searches for innovative teaching models. Adoption of innovation, however, disrupts routine and breaks institutional inertia, requiring government employees to change their way of working. Introducing and embedding innovative methods for improving learning outcomes within state institutions is thus a major challenge. For NGO-led innovation to have largescale impact, we need to understand: (1) what factors facilitate its adoption by senior bureaucracy and political elites; and (2) how to incentivise district-level field staff and school principals and teachers, who have to change their ways of working, to implement the innovation? This paper presents an ethnographic study of Pratham, one of the most influential NGOs in the domain of education in India today, which has attracted growing attention for introducing an innovative teaching methodology— Teaching at the Right Level (TaRL) – with evidence of improved learning outcomes among primary-school students and adoption by a number of states in India. The case study suggests that while a combination of factors, including evidence of success, ease of method, the presence of a committed bureaucrat, and political opportunity are key to state adoption of an innovation, exposure to ground realities, hand holding and confidence building, informal interactions, provision of new teaching resources, and using existing lines of communication are core to ensuring the co-operation of those responsible for actual implementation. The Pratham case, however, also confirms existing concerns that even when NGO-led innovations are successfully implemented at a large scale, their replication across the state and their sustainability remain a challenge. Embedding good practice takes time; the political commitment leading to adoption of an innovation is often, however, tied to an immediate political opportunity being exploited by the political elites. Thus, when political opportunity rather than a genuine political will creates space for adoption of an innovation, state support for that innovation fades away before the new ways of working can replace the old habits. In contexts where states lack political will to improve learning outcomes, NGOs can only hope to make systematic change in state systems if, as in the case of Pratham, they operate as semi-social movements with large cadres of volunteers. The network of volunteers enables them to slow down and pick up again in response to changing political contexts, instead of quitting when state actors withdraw. Involving the community itself does not automatically lead to greater political accountability. Time-bound donor-funded NGO projects aiming to introduce innovation, however large in scale, simply cannot succeed in bringing about systematic change, because embedding change in state institutions lacking political will requires years of sustained engagement.
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Andrabi, Tahir, and Christina Brown. Subjective versus Objective Incentives and Teacher Productivity. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), March 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-wp_2022/092.

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A central challenge facing firms is how to incentivize employees. While objective, output-based incentives may be theoretically ideal, in practice they may lead employees to reduce effort on non-incentivized outcomes and may fail in settings where effort is weakly tied to output. We study the effect of subjective incentives (manager performance evaluation) and objective incentives (test score-based) relative to no incentives for teachers using an RCT in 230 Pakistani schools. First, we show that subjective and objective incentives both increase test scores and have similar magnitude effects. However, objective incentives decrease non-test score student outcomes relative to subjective incentives. Second, we show that teachers’ effort response is very different under each scheme, with attendance increasing under subjective and teaching quality decreasing under objective. Finally, we rationalize these effects through the lens of a moral hazard model with multi-tasking. We use within-treatment variation to isolate the causal effect of contract noise and distortion and show that these channels explain most of our reduced form effects.
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Kharadzhian, Natalia, Larysa Savchenko, Karyna Safian, Yuliia Kulinka, and Oksana Mykolaivna Kopylova. Future Professional Education Specialists’ Mastering of Project Methodology of Creating Pedagogical Situations in the Service Sector. [б. в.], August 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31812/123456789/4142.

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The article reveals the problems of mastering by future specialists of the project methodology of creating pedagogical situations in higher education institutions as a means of improving the quality of education. Objectives of the article: to determine the influence of the project method on the creation of pedagogical situations in the process of teaching students; the choice of logic and mechanism of design actions depends on the purpose and the initial conceptual position regarding the subject reincarnates; to study the influence of pedagogical situations on the quality of education in the higher pedagogical school; to diagnose the implementation of the projects method and pedagogical situations in the process of education at the university. The project method provides the presence of a problem that requires integrated knowledge and research for its solution. The results of the planned activities should have practical, theoretical and cognitive significance. Modeling of pedagogical situations is the process of formation of situations-models which simulate the state and dynamics of the educational process and fix the contradiction between the achieved and desired in the personality development in a certain time interval. During the forming experiment, pedagogical situations were used to form the professional competence of the future specialist.
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Powerful Learning with Computational Thinking: Our Why, What, and How of Computational Thinking. Digital Promise, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51388/20.500.12265/115.

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The Powerful Learning with Computational Thinking report explains how the Digital Promise team works with districts, schools, and teachers to make computational thinking ideas more concrete to practitioners for teaching, design, and assessment. We describe three powerful ways of using computers that integrate well with academic subject matter and align to our goals for students: (1) collecting, analyzing, and communicating data; (2) automating procedures and processes; and (3) using models to understand systems. We also explore our four main commitments to computational thinking at Digital Promise: PreK-8 Integration; Commitment from District Leadership; Inclusive Participation of Students Historically Marginalized From Computing; and Participatory and Iterative Design.
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