Instruction that measures up : successful teaching in the age of accountability
(2009)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : ASCD, 2009
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781416616191 (electronic bk.) MWT12225395, 1416616195 (electronic bk.) 12225395
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

High-stakes testing. Mandated content standards and benchmarks. Public scrutiny of student and school performance. Accountability. Teachers today are challenged to provide instruction that will measure up: to the expectations of administrators, parents, and taxpayers; to their own professional standards; and, most essentially, to the needs of students. Policy debates rage in the press, and pedagogical pundits always have a new and better solution to offer, but inside the walls of the classroom, instruction boils down to teachers deciding what they want their students to learn, planning how to promote that learning, implementing those plans, and then determining if the plans worked. And the best instructional decisions are informed by empirical research, assessment evidence, and the sound judgment of the professional educator. In this book, W. James Popham calls on his half-century in the classroom to provide a practical, four-stage framework for guiding teachers through their most important instructional decisions: curriculum determination, instructional design, instructional monitoring, and instructional evaluation. Along the way, he emphasizes the critical ways in which assessment can and should influence instruction, advocates for a dash of curricular insurrection, and offers advice for maintaining both teaching excellence and teachers' sanity

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Additional Credits