Redesigning Teacher Pay

Redesigning Teacher Pay
Author: Susan Moore Johnson
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2009
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1932066403

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Redesigning Teaching

Redesigning Teaching
Author: William A. Firestone,Beth D. Bader
Publsiher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 1992-10-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781438402857

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Redesigning Teaching provides concrete case studies of school districts implementing teacher reforms. The cases describe the changes, give the history and dynamics of each project, examine how teachers respond to new policies and procedures, and tell how state policy affects local efforts to change teaching. The book also suggests that while short-term improvements can be accomplished through bureaucracy, serious reform requires professionalization. The authors identify challenges that state governments, school administrators, and teachers' associations must face if they really want to professionalize teaching.

Redesigning Teacher Education

Redesigning Teacher Education
Author: Alan R. Tom
Publsiher: SUNY Press
Total Pages: 308
Release: 1997-01-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0791434699

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Explores the shortcomings of teacher education and proposes design principles for rethinking teacher preparation. Establishes a reform agenda for teacher education faculties. "Alan Tom is among the best at relating important issues in teacher education and a critical reading of the literature with his own professional experience. This book is ambitious. It lives up to the claim of examining political and institutional problems along with conceptual and intellectual ones. This is something few teacher educators attempt and is a critical area to open up for sustained analysis. Drawing upon events from his career as a teacher educator, Alan R. Tom candidly analyzes the predominant criticisms of teacher education and rejects the common tendency to infer the teacher education curriculum from such ideas as metaphors for teaching or knowledge. He proposes eleven design principles to serve as a reform agenda including creating programs capable of self-renewal, having faculty model the desired image and skills of teaching, and rethinking the sequence of practice and theory. Each principle identifies a differing dimension for the conceptual and structural redesign of teacher preparation. Four specific change strategies are evaluated as well: task force, top-down, piloting, and family style. The low status of teacher educators and the excessive regulation of teacher education are also examined, as is the failure to give adequate attention to the administrative organization for teacher education.

Redesigning Teaching Leadership and Indigenous Education in the 21st Century

Redesigning Teaching  Leadership  and Indigenous Education in the 21st Century
Author: Roberts, Leesha Nicole
Publsiher: IGI Global
Total Pages: 350
Release: 2020-09-18
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781799855590

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Research in the area of teaching and learning within education is a dynamic area that continues to evolve because of new technologies, knowledge, models, and methods within formal and non-formal educational settings. It is essential to evaluate the changes that educational systems undergo as they adapt to the increasing use of the technology and the flattening of access to education from an international perspective. Redesigning Teaching, Leadership, and Indigenous Education in the 21st Century is a cutting-edge research publication that provides comprehensive research on the amalgamation of teaching and learning practices at each level of the education system. Highlighting a range of topics such as bibliometrics, indigenous studies, and professional development, this book is ideal for academicians, education professionals, administrators, curriculum developers, classroom designers, professionals, researchers, and students.

Handbook of Research on Redesigning Teaching Learning and Assessment in the Digital Era

Handbook of Research on Redesigning Teaching  Learning  and Assessment in the Digital Era
Author: Meletiadou, Eleni
Publsiher: IGI Global
Total Pages: 522
Release: 2023-05-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781668482933

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Recent evolutions, such as pervasive networking and other enabling technologies, have been increasingly changing human life, knowledge acquisition, and the way works are performed and students learn. In this societal change, educational institutions must maintain their leading role. They have therefore embraced digitally enhanced learning to provide increased flexibility and access for their students. The Handbook of Research on Redesigning Teaching, Learning, and Assessment in the Digital Era provides insights into the transformation of education in the digital era and responds to the needs of learners of any context and background through relevant studies that include sound pedagogical and content knowledge. Covering key topics such as hybrid learning, media, remote learning, and social media, this major reference work is ideal for administrators, policymakers, academicians, researchers, scholars, practitioners, librarians, instructors, and students.

Redesigning Special Education Teacher Preparation

Redesigning Special Education Teacher Preparation
Author: Jennifer L. Goeke,Katherine J. Mitchem,Kalie R. Kossar
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2017-08-22
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781315518435

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Redesigning Special Education Teacher Preparation describes both challenges and possible solutions to redesigning and restructuring high-incidence teacher preparation programs so graduates will meet the Highly Qualified Teacher requirements and be prepared to teach students with high-incidence disabilities. This powerful new text discusses many possible reforms, including field-based teacher preparation, a focus on evidence-based core practices and teacher moves, collaboration with K–12 school-based partners as teacher educators, interdisciplinary collaboration across university faculty, and a grounding in current expectations for high-stakes accountability and program evaluation.

Teacher Pay and Teacher Quality

Teacher Pay and Teacher Quality
Author: James H. Stronge,Christopher R. Gareis,Catherine A. Little
Publsiher: Corwin Press
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2006-04-05
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781506389424

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This review of existing teacher compensation models provides school administrators with a research-based approach for developing a compensation system that attracts and retains high-quality teachers.

Where Teachers Thrive

Where Teachers Thrive
Author: Susan Moore Johnson
Publsiher: Harvard Education Press
Total Pages: 406
Release: 2020-07-29
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781682533604

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2020 PROSE Award Winner, Education Theory Category 2019 Outstanding Academic Title, Choice In Where Teachers Thrive, Susan Moore Johnson outlines a powerful argument about the importance of the school as an organization in nurturing high‐quality teaching. Based on case studies conducted in fourteen high-poverty, urban schools, the book examines why some schools failed to make progress, while others achieved remarkable results. It explores the challenges that administrators and teachers faced and describes what worked, what didn’t work, and why. Johnson draws on vivid portraits of schools to highlight an array of school‐based systems and practices that support teachers’ professional growth and effectiveness. These include a rich and interactive hiring process; team‐based curriculum planning and assessment; and informative feedback and ongoing professional learning. Critical to all of these is the role of the principal as an essential agent in a school’s success. Although these elements may vary from school to school, Johnson argues that together these systems provide a comprehensive, mutually reinforcing set of well-orchestrated strategies that can help schools deliver results that exceed the sum of teachers’ individual efforts. Since 2000, policy makers and education officials have diligently sought to improve schools by improving the quality of individual teachers. However, even if those teachers are skilled and committed, the schools where they work are all too often disjointed, dysfunctional organizations that serve no one well. Where Teachers Thrive explains clearly how educators within a school can join together to adopt systems of practice that ensure growth and success by all teachers and their students.