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         Raising Standards Teach:     more detail
  1. A License to Teach: Raising Standards for Teaching by Linda Darling-Hammond, Arthur E. Wise, et all 1999-03-26

21. VoteMatch: Teach Moral Standards In Public Schools
means you believe We need to teach values in are; there are currently no nationalstandards nor testing. Liberals favor raising teacher pay and oppose teacher
http://www.issues2000.org/VoteMatch/q4.asp
VoteMatch
Teach moral standards In Public Schools POSITIONS
  • Strongly Support means you believe: Judeo-Christian values are American values. Belief in God is what America was founded upon, so praying in school or other public places does not violate the separation of church and state.
  • Support means you believe: We need to teach values in our schools. The more our children are exposed to prayer, the Ten Commandments, and other traditional values, the better off they are.
  • Oppose means you believe: Prayer in schools in inappropriate because it fails to recognize American pluralism and religious diversity.
  • Strongly Oppose means you believe: Separation of church and state precludes allowing school prayer. It also precludes other aspects of religion in schools, such as posting the Ten Commandments in public places. We should not violate the Constitutional principle in this case.
This question is looking for you views on how religion should play a part in public institutions. However you answer the above question would be similar to your response to these statements:
  • Post the Ten Commandments in public schools
  • "Separation of church and state" does not mean "keep religion out of schools"

22. Sector1 For The Best Public Sector Jobs
Come and teach in Hartlepool, David Miliband, Minister for School standards, commented The 3 and effective education service aimed at raising the expectations
http://www.sector1.net/jobsearch/jobview.asp?jobid=73385&stats=6&catid=&keyword=

23. Reading Reform Foundation
these conflicting issues in raising standards. He will also look at it in more depthin his own field of publishing, the use of phonics to teach reading and
http://www.rrf.org.uk/51 Raising Standards.htm
Reading Reform Foundation - Article Home Up Introduction Newsletters ... Links
No. 51 - Spring Term 2004
Raising standards The opportunities and difficulties Keynote speech by Christopher Jolly, Managing Director of Jolly Learning Ltd British Council conference, Brunei Thursday 9 th October 2003 Abstract Raising standards is what everyone wants, is it not? In practice it is not so simple. Experts have different views about what ‘raising standards’ means. Creativity and expression may be thought to conflict with learning skills and facts. There is a need to balance the limitations of time, and more especially of money. We need to ask who should drive the raising of standards? Should it be government through a specified curriculum, or to what extent should teachers be informed and given the decision making – and then be evaluated on their results? What role for private education and the market place? Chris Jolly will explore these conflicting issues in raising standards. He will also look at it in more depth in his own field of publishing, the use of phonics to teach reading and writing, where differences of view have long been played out.

24. CBS News | Raising The Bar For Teachers | June 11, 2002 12:49:12
and how well colleges and universities are preparing teachers to teach in a standardsbasedsystem How do you balance that with raising the standards at
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/06/11/national/main511844.shtml
Home U.S. Iraq World ... FREE CBS News Video June 11, 2002 12:49:12 The Early Show CBS Evening News 48 Hours 60 Minutes ...
Section Front

E-mail This Story Printable Version
Raising The Bar For Teachers
WASHINGTON, June 11, 2002
(Photo: CBS/AP)
“As long as you let any old person who can fog a mirror teach, as they can in many places, you're not going to get kids to the standards you set in your state.”
Kati Haycock, Education Trust Director
(AP) Complaining that many states have unusually low standards for teacher certification, Education Secretary Rod Paige said states should pay teachers more but also should expect them to master the subjects they teach.
Paige, who released a report on teacher certification Tuesday, said states also should remove licensing barriers that keep “good people from coming into the teaching profession.” He urged states to support alternative licensing programs such as Troops to Teachers and Teach for America.
“We're asking to raise academic standards, to require prospective teachers to pass rigorous exams in their subject matter ... and to lower the barrier so good people who have these high standards can get into the teaching profession,” Paige said in an interview. He supports higher salaries but said they should be tied to better performance “so that we're paying those highly qualified teachers more.”

25. Re(3): Raising Standards By Karen Michalowicz
reply to this message post a message on a new topic Back to mathteach Subject Re(3)raising standards Author Karen Michalowicz kmichalowicz@langley.edu.net
http://mathforum.org/epigone/math-teach/pimpgehchor
Re(3): Raising Standards by Karen Michalowicz
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Subject: Re(3): Raising Standards Author: kmichalowicz@langley.edu.net Date: The Math Forum

26. Re(2): Raising Standards By Karen Michalowicz
reply to this message post a message on a new topic Back to mathteach Subject Re(2)raising standards Author Karen Michalowicz kmichalowicz@langley.edu.net
http://mathforum.org/epigone/math-teach/croosnulerd
Re(2): Raising Standards by Karen Michalowicz
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Subject: Re(2): Raising Standards Author: kmichalowicz@langley.edu.net Date: The Math Forum

27. The Key Stage 3 Literacy Strategy
hour, the strategy is not statutory but all schools will be expected to teach it. Ofstedsays KS3 strategy raising standards but failing to help low achievers.
http://www.literacytrust.org.uk/database/secondary/NLSsec.html
Secondary
Email Newsletter
Building a literate nation NLT Home Secondary The literacy strand of the Key Stage 3 Strategy Update Implementation of the strategy Features on strategy Evaluation Key stage 3 strategy

28. Literacy Today - Weighing The Pig Or Raising Achievement?
How much is assessment used to inform planning to help raise standards? is so easyto use which helps to plan what it is necessary to teach.” Some schools
http://www.literacytrust.org.uk/Pubs/pigs.html
Literacy Today
Email Newsletter
Building a literate nation NLT Home Literacy Today This article first appeared in the June 1998 issue of Literacy Today (issue no. 16).
Weighing the pig or raising achievement?
Liz Slater, project director, Essex Reading Project, Essex LEA
Assessment measures children’s achievement but can also inform planning to help raise standards.

Assessment is in the ascendant in the current climate. But the focus is largely on measuring achievement at the end of stages of education or units of work – have performance indicators been met? has measurable progress been made? Is the school on target for the year 2002 literacy targets? As Liz Slater, project director of the Essex Reading Project, points out, “While this is useful to indicate and compare achievements over time, it does not address the way in which achievement can effectively be raised. Measurements do not, in themselves, raise standards, though they may be a catalyst to do so.” How much is assessment used to inform planning to help raise standards? For example, how much are Key Stage 1 assessments used to inform grouping for some teaching for year 3 pupils? Assessment of pupils’ needs should underpin both the planning of what is taught and the groupings for teaching it. This is particularly important when planning for the Literacy Hour.

29. SC Praised For Improving Teacher Quality, Raising Standards On
of a B+ for its efforts to raise standards and accountability the state’s newlyapproved certification standards, educators who teach fifth through
http://www.myscschools.com/news/2001/quality.htm
S.C. praised for improving teacher quality,
raising standards on national education report card
Wednesday, January 10, 2001 Quality Counts 2001 , published by the respected national magazine Education Week , is the fifth annual report card on the state of school reform across the United States. "It’s always gratifying when our state’s focus on educational reform is recognized nationally," said State Superintendent of Education Inez Tenenbaum. "This is yet another piece of evidence that the overall plan we have put in place has put us on the right path." Quality Counts th -best mark last year. Maryland had the highest score in this category this year with a 98. teacher quality improvements earned an 82, the fourth-best overall ranking and only six points below the highest score of 88 for North Carolina. Tenenbaum added that South Carolina did not receive credit for new middle grade certification standards that were approved last month by the State Board of Education, which would likely have increased the B- mark. Quality Counts "

30. Press Release - 29 April 2004
in DfES Circular 4/99, Physical and mental fitness to teach of teachers Its purposeis to contribute to raising standards in schools in England by attracting
http://www.tta.gov.uk/php/read.php?sectionid=170&articleid=1805

31. State Raising Standards For 'on The Job' Training
State raising standards for on the job training. other elementary teacher once amonth to help each teacher with a new program to teach spelling, reading and
http://www.post-gazette.com/localnews/20030203develop0203p6.asp
Pittsburgh, PA
Friday
June 11, 2004 News Sports Lifestyle Classifieds ... About Us Take me to... Search Local News Nation/World Sports Obituaries Lifestyle Business Opinion Photo Journal Weather Classifieds PG Store PG Delivery Web Extras Contact Us About Us Help Corrections Site Map Local News Latest News Previous Articles Neighborhoods ... Local News State raising standards for 'on the job' training Monday, February 03, 2003 By Eleanor Chute, Post-Gazette Education Writer At first, Clairton teacher Joan Livingston found the idea intimidating. An outside "coach" would visit her classroom and that of every other elementary teacher once a month to help each teacher with a new program to teach spelling, reading and language arts. Former Pittsburgh school superintendent Helen Faison now directs the Pittsburgh Teachers Institute, a partnership of the city school district, Chatham College and Carnegie Mellon University. (Martha Rial, Post-Gazette) But after more than a year of such visits combined with workshops, monitoring and other training Livingston welcomes the coaches. Livingston, who has a dozen years of experience and came to Clairton last school year, said the coaches help to personalize what she needs to know to be a better teacher in the highly scripted program, called Direct Instruction.

32. Raising Standards Through Classroom Assessment - Case Studies
raising standards through classroom assessment. teachers used verbal feedbackwith the whole class to teach pupils explicitly how to improve their work.
http://www.gtce.org.uk/research/standcasestud.asp
Case studies
Raising standards through classroom assessment Inside the Black Box does not contain any case studies or classroom based examples and illustrations. Indeed this was a weakness of the studies reviewed, according to the report, and it is why the authors have recommended setting up teacher research projects. We have found some examples from our own searches to help teachers get a flavour of the types of classroom strategies that might be effective in developing their approaches to formative assessment. Click on the heading titles below or scroll down to read the case studies. Marking and feedback Debriefing: pupils’ learning and teacher planning The diagnostic value of self-assessment in Geography at Key Stage 4 Communication between students and their teachers about learning ... Formative assessment in mathematics: (3) The learner’s role
Marking and feedback
Michael Ronayne
TTA Publication Number 65/8-99
This case study has been selected to show the impact on pupils of different types of teacher feedback. This study investigated patterns of teachers’ feedback and children’s perceptions of that feedback, to discover what makes formative assessment an effective learning tool. Data from eight case studies, across the subject and age range, in an 11 to 18 comprehensive school, was gathered from scrutiny of feedback comments, lesson observations and interviews with pupils and teachers.

33. Managing Mathematics For Primary Co-ordinators KS 1 & 2
Can literature and research findings ever be useful in raising standards? Do countriesacross the world have anything to teach us about primary mathematics?
http://education.cant.ac.uk/Courses/CPDMathsAdvCert/
College Home Education Home text only
Introduction Teachers are always being asked to raise standards, but are not always given the time and help to decide how this can be done. This is a course for teachers who are interested in challenging their beliefs about maths, reflecting on their own teaching, and exploring teaching and learning styles. The course will consider the following points: - What is effective teaching and learning of mathematics?
- Can literature and research findings ever be useful in raising standards?
- Do countries across the world have anything to teach us about primary mathematics?
- Can all children learn mathematics?
- Do you have to use ICT to teach maths well?
- What do children’s mistakes tell us about their understanding? The course aims to build on the training of the National Numeracy Strategy, but takes a critical look at the strategy itself. The course is taught over a year and involves ten contact days: 5 weekdays and 5 Saturdays, and 2 twilight sessions. As reflection on your own classroom and school is an essential part of the course, there is a further day for you to spend in your own school undertaking observational activities. There is an assignment which falls into two parts, and asks you to reflect on the current teaching in your school, and how standards might be raised.

34. National Education Technology Standards: Raising The Bar By Degrees
National Educational Technology standards raising the Bar by Degrees. Why have technologystandards for teachers Professors who teach our college students will
http://www.infotoday.com/MMSchools/may00/bennett.htm
National Educational Technology Standards: Raising the Bar by Degrees by Jerry Bennett MultiMedia Schools • May/June 2000 W hy have technology standards for teachers? There is a growing gap between the educational experience of a child who has access to various forms of technology with a tech-savvy teacher and children who have the gadgets and a teacher who doesn’t know how to use them or has no gadgets. Most teachers have had access to some form of technology for years, but still do not incorporate its use into instruction. This nation has spent millions of dollars on training, yet many computers, multimedia workstations, digital cameras, and other electronic devices sit unused or as bookshelves with the copying machine as the only modern device in constant operation. Why? I believe that our teachers are so overwhelmed with the day-to-day work of teaching that they are unwilling or unable to make the transition to new forms of instructional delivery. Teachers will not change until they are required and trained to do so. Professors who teach our college students will not change until they are required and trained to do so. We have two emerging crises in this country. One is the lack of teachers who can effectively teach our children what they need to know to survive in a technological/information age world. The other is a lack of teachers to fill our classrooms. Herein lies an inherent, paradoxical danger: NETS (National Education Technology Standards) can act as impetus to bring technologically illiterate teachers forward, but if it is used nationally as a requirement for teacher licensure, it may further restrict the number of licensed teachers.

35. Teaching To Academic Standards: Explanation
say to those who believe using standards just makes teachers teach to the This isoften used as an argument for standards or for raising existing standards
http://www.thirteen.org/edonline/concept2class/month3/index_sub4.html
What are academic standards?
What's different about academic standards?
What do standards have to do with my classroom?
How have standards developed since they began in the early 1990s?
Another Perspective
What are the benefits of academic standards?
How can standards help students to learn better?
What do critics of standards have to say?
Another Perspective Interview with Marc S. Tucker
In the following interview, Marc S. Tucker, an educational theorist and standards advocate, answers questions about standards. In some places, his opinion may differ from those expressed by Ruth Mitchell, the author of this workshop. We hope that these differences will stimulate creative and productive debate about these important issues.
Concept to Classroom: Why do you think (new) standards are needed in the United States? What got you started developing them?
Concept to Classroom: How are your "New Standards" different from other, previous standards? Why do you use Performance Standards rather than Content Standards? Concept to Classroom: What do you say to those who believe using standards just makes teachers "teach to the test," and doesn't allow students to learn creatively?

36. Department For Employment & Learning
teach basic reading and numeracy skills . Speaking at the launch at the Europa Hotel,Belfast today Mr Shannon said “Improving quality and raising standards
http://www.delni.gov.uk/mainPressDetails.cfm?NewsID=795&Archive=2003|9&location=

37. Raising Our Standards: Assessment And Equity
there are other schools that needed the ASAP to make them teach holistic. The EfficacyInstitute offers a rationale for the raising of standards, which has
http://tlc.ousd.k12.ca.us/~acody/ousdstandards.html
Text Links: Home Lesson Plans Humor Teacher Inquiry ... Links Feedback is invited: Email me!
Raising Our Standards:
Assessment and Equity in the Oakland Public Schools
Anthony Cody
August, 1997
I. Introduction
Lackluster educational outcomes have led to a renewed emphasis on standards and assessment nationally. Those concerned with the future of poor and minority students must take action in those instances where the schools are truly failing to educate. To demonstrate this failure requires data, and the main sources of such data continue to be standardized test results. However, traditional standardized tests have been roundly criticized for systematic bias against minorities, and for encouraging teachers to narrow their curricular aims to suit the demands of the tests. Performance-based tests are being developed to correct these problems, providing supposedly more reliable measures of student abilities, and modeling the type of instruction desired. It remains unclear, however, if these tests will help correct inequities, or merely continue to reflect them. The Oakland Unified School District (OUSD), where I have taught junior high school science for the past nine years, is attempting to develop a heightened sense of accountability on all levels. Educational leaders in Oakland currently rely on standardized tests for critical performance data, but they recognize the problematic nature of this, and are pursuing the development of alternatives. I will look at the systems Oakland has in place, the administration's plans for future measures of student performance, and briefly explore teachers' perspectives on the subject. In particular, I want to uncover how a renewed emphasis on standards and student outcomes fits with efforts to reform education in the district. How can this approach moves us ahead? What are the pitfalls, especially in district that is composed primarily of students who are non-white?

38. Quantity Is Not Quality
Why? It is simple raising standards will never work until we are willing to standardsare not held to, because every teacher who does not teach in the
http://members.cox.net/xocxoc/philosophy/school2.htm
2. Quantity is not Quality
"Schools out for summer, schools out forever, schools out completely!" - Alice Cooper ("Schools Out") "Raising Standards" may be the most ridiculous education reform mantra in a long time. If you want to get elected to a school board or state legislature all you have to chant is "Lets raise standards in education" and you are assured wide popularity. State after state has raised standards only to see little improvement. Why? It is simple: Raising standards will never work until we are willing to enforce the standards we already have! Some politicians are starting to realize this. In the pursuit of higher standards it is often discovered that there are no standards set at all. So some states and districts are having to set the standards themselves. Setting standards to begin with is a tough chore. Every 'expert' has their own ideas that conflict with every other expert. The result of which are standards that have no real long term structure. For example, 8th grade standards should be prerequisites of 9th grade standards, which should be prerequisites of 10th grade standards. This is rarely the case. Then there is the problem of enforcing standards. Why are standards not enforced? Because enforcing standards means holding back students and lowering the graduation rate. Enforcing learning standards has been tried, then quickly abandoned because doing so brings out in the open how bad our schools really are. Students in private schools and home schooling are consistently better on standardized tests than public school students, and while I do not believe public schools are entirely to blame for this fact (a topic for another essay), they do not want this proven on an annual basis. Schools do not like releasing student achievement information unless the news is good.

39. Solihull Council - Key Stage 3 In Solihull
By raising standards and expectations in Key Stage 3 schools can continue the goodwork All subject teachers now need to teach literacy through their subject.
http://www.solihull.gov.uk/about/parents/ks3.htm
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    Being a Parent
    Solihull secondary schools have been piloting strategies aimed to raise standards across the curriculum for all 11-14 year olds Contains information about raising standards in Key Stage 3
    Raising Standards in Key Stage 3 - Solihull Schools at the forefront of educational developments
    Since September 2000, Solihull secondary schools have been piloting strategies aimed to raise standards across the curriculum for all 11-14 year olds. The experiences of teachers and pupils in Solihull schools are being used by the Government to shape the strategy which will start in all schools nationally from this September. Already the national literacy and numeracy strategies in Key Stages 1 and 2 have had an impact on the achievement of pupils. By raising standards and expectations in Key Stage 3 schools can continue the good work done in primary schools and provide a strong basis for even higher achievement at GCSE level. The pilot programme began with an initial focus on English and mathematics. Since January a programme to review the teaching of science has started and this will broaden during the summer term to include teachers from the foundation subjects and Religious Education.

40. School Spending On Books
which they need to effectively teach and support Books Raise standards 90% of teachersconsider books to a highly effective way of raising standards in schools
http://www.booktrust.org.uk/schoolspending/report.htm
booktrust.org.uk School Spending On Books Research into school spending on books has been commissioned by Booktrust, funded by the British National Bibliography Research Fund. Schools and publishers across the UK were surveyed and close reference was made to other key pieces of recent national research. The report is available to download from this website for free in two formats: School Spending on Books (Microsoft Word document) School Spending on Books (.pdf Acrobat document) The report aims to help staff in schools to argue for realistic provision of the book-related resources which they need to effectively teach and support all pupils and to provide advice based on realistic assessments of need. Lack of funding means pupils share books, are prevented from using books for homework and teachers often improvise or simply do without the books they need. All too often parents become the source of books which discriminates against those with lesser economic means. Books Raise Standards
90% of teachers consider books to be a highly effective way of raising standards in schools. Yet the average spend on books for each primary school pupil in England is just 35% of the recommended figure, and the average spend on books for each secondary school pupil in England is just 26% of the recommended figure.

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