YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :The Classroom and Cross Cultural Competency
Essays 811 - 840
repeat this process in order to provide a basis through which the concepts can be internalized. Testing, then, occurs after an ad...
not have video games, CD players, cell phones or other electronic devices, but not all school systems have been willing to take st...
stage (Berk, 2001). The anal stage is at one to three years and the phallic stage is from three to six years; latency is from si...
sufficient evidence that direct instruction teaching would result in flexibility that is needed for students in order to target st...
what should be done. Wollstonecraft argued persuasively in favor of co-educational classrooms, yet some proponents of equality in...
Within six years the name was changed again and is now well know by the acronym ADHD (1997). While the names have changed, that d...
black women, from their perspective, was racism, not sexism. Hooks relates that her students often asked her such questions as "Ha...
and encouraging writing (Lacina and Austin, 2003). They also provide other sources for more knowledge, such as Web sites (Lacina a...
Numerous studies have reported findings that link visual and auditory learning with considerable development in reading. The basi...
may inevitably have to use. The Problem Statement Increasingly, the use of microcomputers in the classroom setting has bee...
is fair to accommodate golfers who have disabilities because they gain an unfair advantage. However, such beliefs can be detriment...
Starr offers numerous suggestions for managing technology in the classroom (2004). Some of these suggestions are: * Always practic...
lead to a "healthy psychological balance" (Tassell, 2004; St Olivers Community College. 2004). People make choices in what they do...
standardized testing. However, Buell and Crawford (2001) note that the test does not ask students to justify their choice, "Yet kn...
category was first formulated in 1977. The phrase, "All student will learn to read by third grade" has become a rallying point in ...
takes place approximately halfway through the year, and as stated, the purpose is to review the employees progress on those items ...
online" (MacGregor, 2001, p. 77). Although distance education encompasses all of the venues identified above and more, in todays ...
think or "tell" people what to do where women are more likely to suggest something. Tannen does recognize, however, that in our...
with high expectations and are more likely to exert a significant effort in learning the English language, once those individuals ...
1998). They even question what schools and teachers are actually supposed to do to meet the needs of disabled children (Stout, 200...
models that have been shown to decrease the incidence of behavior problems in the classroom? Cooperative learning, for example, ha...
matter and issues of gender stereotyping and identity, arguing that sex roles and identification determine variations in the motiv...
read aloud with other children in age/reading skill level groups. Reading aloud, then, provides a means of assessing learner prog...
She offers as an example a booklet used in schools entitled, "All About Me," which consists of a series of dittoed pages where the...
that emphasized low-level thinking instead of challenges (Shorey et al, 2004). Differentiated instruction takes into consideration...
in coping with such "discipline problems" at the university or college level, the Anti-Coercion Discipline Model of William Glasse...
instructor more accessible than they were only a few years ago. In the highly interconnected world of the new communications era,...
greater I.Q.s than those with smaller brains but size is not all that matters ("Big," 2004). The question that should be asked: "I...
of the effects of domestic violence for battered women and their career-related experiences. SCCT is an application created by Al...
class bias" and goes on to explain that children are labeled LD when it is a surprise that they are poor performers. One can imagi...