788 resultados para School for returning students
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Este recurso centra su atención en la ayuda que puede darse en el aula a estudiantes disléxicos. Los profesores serán capaces de identificar a los niños con problemas específicos de aprendizaje y conocer mejor la forma de ayudarlos en sus tareas escolares. Los ejemplos se basan en el currículo y se utilizan para mostrar cómo aconsejar a los estudiantes en la redacción de ensayos, toma de apuntes, memorizar el vocabulario y la lectura para recordar. Contiene diagramas, mapas mentales, hojas de trabajo, así como muchas ideas para los profesores. Los métodos presentados como esenciales para estudiantes con dislexia, al centrarse en la manera en que se aprende, también ayudan a elevar el nivel académico de todos los alumnos en la escuela secundaria.
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Resumen tomado de la publicación. Con el apoyo económico del departamento MIDE de la UNED. Contiene anexo de preguntas
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Resumen basado en el de la publicación
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Resumen tomado de la publicación
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Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n
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Resumen en espa??ol, portugu??s y franc??s
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Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n
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This paper provides resources to help hearing impaired students in primary and elementary grades with personal and social competency training.
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This study looks at public school counselors who work with hearing impaired students and the counselor’s awareness of specific issues of problems of these students.
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This paper contains curriculum for teaching of world geography.
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As part of its National Science and Engineering Week activities in 2009 and 2010, the University of Reading organised two open days for 60 local key stage 4 pupils. The theme of both open days was ‘How do we predict weather and climate?’ Making use of the students’ familiarity with weather and climate, several concepts of relevance to secondary science were investigated. The open days also provided an opportunity for more than 30 research staff from the university to interact with the students. Feedback from students and teachers was extremely positive. This article shows how meteorological science can be used to illustrate elements of the secondary science and mathematics curricula.
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A number of previous studies have shown that there is a widespread view among young people that science and religion are opposed. In this paper, we suggest that it requires a significant level of what can be termed ‘epistemic insight’ to access the idea that some people see science and religion as compatible while others do not. To explore this further, we draw on previous work to devise a methodology to discover students’ thinking about apparent contradictions between scientific and religious explanations of the origins of the universe. In our discussion of the findings, we highlight that students’ epistemic insight in this context does seem in many cases to be limited and we outline some of the issues emerging from the study that seem to boost or limit students’ progress in this area.
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This article reports about the development and validation of a measurement instrument assessing elementary school students' achievement emotions (Achievement Emotions Questionnaire-Elementary School, AEQ-ES). Specifically, the instrument assesses students' enjoyment, anxiety, and boredom pertaining to three types of academic settings (i.e., attending class, doing homework, and taking tests and exams). Scale construction was based on Pekrun's (2006) control-value theory of achievement emotions. The instrument was tested using samples from German and American elementary school classrooms. The results of Study 1 (German sample) corroborate the reliability and structural validity of the new emotion measure. Moreover, they show that students' achievement emotions were linked with their control and value appraisals as well as their academic performance, thus supporting the external validity of the measure as well as propositions of Pekrun's (2006) control-value theory of achievement emotions. Study 2 (American sample) corroborated the cross-cultural equivalence of the measure and the generalizability of findings across the German and American samples. Implications for research on achievement emotions and educational practice are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved)(journal abstract)