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Education reform is mainly about changing 'traditional' educational practices or policies, presumably for the better. This may include changing teaching methods, administration, textbooks, schedules, curriculum, and grouping and promotion practices, for example. As time goes on, new issues come and go, but all would be considered 'education reform.'
Because this is a sub-category of the "Issues" catalog, submissions to this category should be geared toward the news, politics, and policies of education reform. If your site deals only with a new curriculum idea, teacher training or development, or something of that nature, you may wish to submit to the Reference/Education category.
Block scheduling is the practice of having classes about twice as long as 'traditional' classes, meaning about 90 minutes instead of 45 to 50 minutes. This means that students meet with a teacher half as often as during a 'traditional' schedule, but they get about twice as much 'contact time.' This kind of schedule has about 3 variations and is increasingly being used throughout America. Some people like it, others hate it.
Sites dedicated to the issue of Government-operated, required schooling - whether it is necessary/beneficial, or whether it should be abolished.
Before submitting your site to this category be sure that it is not better fit for Reference/Education/K_through_12/Home_Schooling/Politics or Society/Issues/Education/Children''s_Opinions/
Education reform is mainly about changing 'traditional' educational practices or policies, presumably for the better. This may include changing teaching methods, administration, textbooks, schedules, curriculum, and grouping and promotion practices, for example. As time goes on, new issues come and go, but all would be considered 'education reform.' This category focuses on proposed reform to the curriculum used in public schools.
Because this is a sub-category of the "Issues" catalog, submissions to this category should be geared toward the news, politics, and policies of curriculum reform. If your site deals only with a new curriculum program separate from the ''reform'' concept, teacher training or development, or something of that nature, you may wish to submit to the Reference/Education category.
The "Higher Education Reform" category is for websites devoted to questioning and changing established educational practices in colleges and universities. They may recommend, for example, changes in teaching methods, admissions, or administrative practices; improvements to textbooks, schedules, or curricula; reforms of campus life; and so on.
Education reform is mainly about changing 'traditional' educational practices or policies, presumably for the better. This may include changing teaching methods, administration, textbooks, schedules, curriculum, and grouping and promotion practices, for example. As time goes on, new issues come and go, but all would be considered 'education reform.' This category lists reports and research that evaluate the effects of various reform methods. You will also find data about traditional methods used to form the basis of reform proposals.
Evidence strongly suggests that students who "ease off" during their senior year in high school cause themselves great problems. This category is for sites that either describe the problem of "senioritis" or discuss changes in the senior year to avoid senioritis while improving the educational experience of the senior year.
Social promotion is the 'passing' a student onto the next grade based on age considerations, not academic prowess.
Education reform is mainly about changing 'traditional' educational practices or policies, presumably for the better. This category lists sites that deal with the movement to increase minimum standards of learning, and to hold schools and school districts accountable for performance.
Sites submitted to this category should deal with some facet of the standards and accountability movement.
Education reform is mainly about changing 'traditional' educational practices or policies, presumably for the better. This may include changing teaching methods, administration, textbooks, schedules, curriculum, and grouping and promotion practices, for example. As time goes on, new issues come and go, but all would be considered 'education reform.' This category focuses on reform efforts in urban schools.
Because this is a sub-category of the "Issues" catalog, submissions to this category should be geared toward the news, politics, and policies of education reform. If your site deals only with a new curriculum idea, teacher training or development, or something of that nature, you may wish to submit to the Reference/Education category.
As opposed to a traditional, agrarian schedule with school from September to June, this schedule basically has students in classes 3 months, off one, then repeat. Year round schooling has been proposed as a solution for many problems, from slipping academic performance to unsupervised children during the "summer vacation" months.