salaries) would straightforwardly produce better student outcomes. Between 1960 and 1983, current expendit... ity of direct measures of outcomes in the form of student test scores — and, building on (and methodologica... diture per pupil were not consistently related to student achievement; individual teachers and principals, ... , produced enormous and measurable differences in student learning; school attendance was a poor proxy for
s research group addresses the interconnection of student learning, teaching practice, and teacher professi... rounded and internationally validated measures of student learning in higher education. Unlike earlier lear... practice: it provides a vocabulary for describing student diversity that goes far beyond attainment levels ... demands made by a teacher's instruction match the student's existing learning pattern: the teacher who prov
thinking and previous professional experience in student affairs administration. Through her work, Dr. Kez... rganizational change tactics for the common good, student success, and educational justice.
Kezar also exp... n, the Delphi Project on the Changing Faculty and Student Success, and the Promoting At-Promise Student Success (PASS) Project. See more at https://ncwit.org/profil
, so the teacher does not create knowledge in the student but assists the student in activating and directing their own rational capacity. The physician intervenes ... t the understanding that results is genuinely the student's own, achieved through the student's own intellectual act. Aquinas uses this metaphor to navigate between
ching and learning, emphasizing the importance of student-centered education and the role of the teacher as... tion through his humanistic approach, emphasizing student-centered learning and the importance of creating ... ve and empowering educational environment.
==== Student-Centered Learning ====
Rogers advocated for a student-centered approach to education, where the focus is
ions =====
==== Teacher Value-Added and Long-Run Student Outcomes ====
One of Chetty's most influential s... timate the long-run effects of teacher quality on student outcomes measured well beyond standardised test s... e high-quality teacher could meaningfully alter a student's lifetime earnings trajectory gave empirical for... lity by virtue of their more economically diverse student bodies. The Mobility Report Cards transformed the
of schooling — the relationship between teacher, student, and content — and away from the macro-level poli... 0s through No Child Left Behind in 2001 and Every Student Succeeds Act, had consistently failed to produce ... tructional Core — the relationship among teacher, student, and content — provided educational leaders and r... t it is. He identified three levers for improving student learning within the Instructional Core: increasin
ulate what modern educators would call heuristic, student-centered pedagogy. In The Analects he declares, "... 不发). Learning, for Confucius, had to begin in the student's own effort; the teacher's task was to watch closely and intervene only when the student was straining toward understanding. He paired thi... moral rather than technical: to cultivate in each student the internal harmony of virtue and the external c
ary scholars identify as an early articulation of student-centred learning.
==== Dialogical Pedagogy and the Teacher-Student Co-learning Relationship ====
Kant's pedagogical... critical reasoning, moral character development, student-centred dialogue, and the distinction between sch... -stakes testing with reduced attention to teacher-student interactive learning risks producing students who
y Valentin Haüy in 1786. He proved an outstanding student and, by the age of fifteen, had developed a pract... novation comes from a source — a fifteen-year-old student — that adult authority structures are predisposed... l two years after Braille's death. The pattern of student adoption preceding and eventually compelling adul... forty-two having spent his entire adult life as a student, teacher, and researcher at the institution where
ructional strategies, and curriculum to meet each student's needs, driven by an unwavering conviction that ... ioural analysis: a systematic method of observing student behaviour, identifying its underlying causes, and... teacher according to the individual needs of each student, systematically taught, and structured to prevent... ourse of study manual, the functional analysis of student behaviour, and the classification system of disab
ucational objectives should be stated in terms of student behaviour — observable changes in what learners c... or subject-matter content. An objective like "the student will understand photosynthesis" is ambiguous, he ... ding; a better formulation would specify what the student should be able to do as evidence of understanding... ent Tests// (1934)
* //Appraising and Recording Student Progress// (1942, with Eugene Smith and others)
more.
* Hamre, B. K., & Pianta, R. C. (2006). Student-teacher relationships. In G. G. Bear & K. M. Mink... inherited routines with practices whose effect on student learning has been empirically demonstrated.
**2.... Press.
* Hamre, B. K., & Pianta, R. C. (2006). Student-teacher relationships. In G. G. Bear & K. M. Mink... J. E., & Good, T. L. (1986). Teacher behavior and student achievement. In M. C. Wittrock (Ed.), Handbook of
sult in additional material being provided to the student. The teaching machine aimed to break down educati... velop individualized behavioral outcomes for each student. The teaching machine's principles continue to in... be implemented on an individual basis, where each student earns tokens independently, or in a whole-class s
ievement gaps and holding schools accountable for student performance.
**Critique of NCLB**: While Finn su... ccountable while providing clear expectations for student achievement. His insights continue to influence p... rovide innovative educational options and improve student outcomes. He summarized the aspects of charter sc