Nongraded Elementary School (Revised Edition)

Nongraded Elementary School (Revised Edition)

Author: John I. Goodlad

Publisher: Teachers College Press

Published: 1987

Total Pages: 300

ISBN-13: 0807776408

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Since its first publication in 1959, The Nongraded Elementary School has become a classic in school reform literature. This reissue includes a retrospective introduction on what happened to nongraded alternatives in the aftermath of “Sputnik” educational reforms, what is occurring amid the current resurgence of school reform, and what the prospects are for the future. The value of this book lies in its still contemporary theoretical underpinnings for the nongraded school. The book’s treatment of the issue of promotion versus non-promotion is of particular interest in the current debate on school reform.


Nongradedness

Nongradedness

Author: Robert Henry Anderson

Publisher: R & L Education

Published: 1993

Total Pages: 276

ISBN-13:

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This best-selling guide to creating and maintaining nongraded schools offers innovative policies, actions and procedures as well as strong theoretical support in the theory, research, planning, practices, and management of nongraded education.


How to Change to a Nongraded School

How to Change to a Nongraded School

Author: Madeline Hunter

Publisher: ASCD

Published: 1992-06-15

Total Pages: 125

ISBN-13: 1416619836

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Madeline Hunter was a renowned authority on effective teaching. With more than 25 years' experience in leading a team-taught, nongraded school, the UCLA Laboratory School, she provided educators with practical ways to change a graded, K-6 elementary school into a nongraded one with multi-age classes at four levels: early childhood, lower elementary, middle elementary, and upper elementary. This book describes the critical attributes of a nongraded school: students' continuous progress toward clearly stated goals, team teaching, and multi-age grouping. In a nongraded school, teachers diagnose the intellectual, social, physical, and emotional needs of students; assess their levels of skills and knowledge; and determine which teaching style and peer grouping is most appropriate for each student. The instructional program of a nongraded school includes interdisciplinary education, team teaching, long-term developmental objectives for each student, independent study or creative projects, performance-based assessment, and cooperative learning. Essential to the change process is continuing staff development, planning time for teachers, and preparation and involvement of parents. The author discusses creative ways to find time, intrigue the parents, and challenge the teachers. One chapter describes the goal of a nongraded school (or any excellent school): teaching to achieve independent learners. The last chapter is a case study of the change process at work at the UCLA Laboratory School. Note: This product listing is for the reflowable (ePub) version of the book.


Schools for Talent Development

Schools for Talent Development

Author: Joseph S. Renzulli

Publisher: Prufrock Press

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 408

ISBN-13:

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The Schoolwide Enrichment Model is a blueprint for total school improvement that stresses flexibility and creativity and promotes challenging, enjoyable learning across all school types, levels, and demographics. The model combines organizational resources with three service-delivery components: the total-talent portfolio, curriculum-modification techniques, and enrichment learning and teaching.