945 resultados para School music.
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Monthly newsletter produced by Iowa Department of Education
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In the 2006 Iowa General Assembly, House File 2797 called for a study on the status of afterschool arts programs and appropriated $5,000 for the study. In accordance with the legislation, the Iowa Arts Council, who received the charge, contracted with the Iowa Afterschool Alliance to form a Resource Group of out-of-school arts providers and experts to develop and oversee the study, review its results, and make recommendations for the expansion of arts programs that operate outside the normal school day. As a part of its charge in HF 2797, the Iowa Arts Council also documented a sampling of out-of-school arts programs statewide. Five are featured in this report.
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El presente trabajo describe la investigación realizada con maestros de Primaria de la provincia de Barcelona, que asistieron a un Taller de Musicoterapia Autorrealizadora (MTA) para tratar el estrés docente y prevenir el burnout. El estudio se realizó con un grupo de maestros que recibieron el tratamiento. Paralelamente se constituyó un Grupo Control, que no recibió ningún tratamiento. El método usado fue la Musicoterapia Autorrealizadora, mi propio sistema de aplicar los beneficios terapéuticos de la música de manera activa y creativa, a través de la interpretación e improvisación musical. Los objetivos planteados fueron comprobarla eficacia de la MTA para disminuir la tensión física, mental y emocional, relajarse, centrarse en el momento presente y adquirir estrategias para disminuir el propio estrés.
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As reflection on the education in the Escola Elisava and of the design education in general, the intervention tries to treat the debates that for many years had existed tacitly between the different academic classes, showing the critical situation that it supposes - especially for the fragile design - that one any of these classes influences over the others. From middle of the 90s, the progressive adoption generalized in the higher education of the Anglo-Saxon model ¿with clear predominance of the institutional thing¿ has showed the indicative character of the critique that here is exhibited.
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Monthly newsletter produced by Iowa Department of Education
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Monthly newsletter produced by Iowa Department of Education
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Monthly newsletter produced by Iowa Department of Education
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Aims: We performed a randomised controlled trial in children of both gender and different pubertal stages to determine whether a school-based physical activity (PA) program during a full schoolyear influences bone mineral content (BMC) and whether there are differences in response for boys and girls before and during puberty. Methods: Twenty-eight 1st and 5th grade classes were cluster randomised to an intervention (INT, 16 classes, n=297) and control (CON; 12 classes, n=205) group. The intervention consisted of a multi-component PA intervention including daily physical education during a full school year. Each lesson was predetermined, included about ten minutes of jumping or strength training exercises of various intensity and was the same for all children. Measurements included anthropometry (height and weight), tanner stages (by self-assessment), PA (by accelerometry) and BMC for total body, femoral neck, total hip and lumbar spine using dualenergy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). Bone parameters were normalized for gender and tanner stage (pre- vs. puberty). Analyses were performed by a regression model adjusted for gender, baseline height, baseline weight, baseline PA, post-intervention tanner stage, baseline BMC, and cluster. Researchers were blinded to group allocation. Children in the control group did not know about the intervention arm. Results: 217 (57%) of 380 children who initially agreed to have DXA measurements had also post-intervention DXA and PA data. Mean age of prepubertal and pubertal children at baseline was 9.0±2.1 and 11.2±0.6 years, respectively. 47/114 girls and 68/103 boys were prepubertal at the end of the intervention. Compared to CON, children in INT showed statistically significant increases in BMC of total body (adjusted z-score differences: 0.123; 95%>CI 0.035 to 0.212), femoral neck (0.155; 95%>CI 0.007 to 0.302), and lumbar spine (0.127; 95%>CI 0.026 to 0.228). Importantly, there was no gender*group, but a tanner*group interaction consistently favoring prepubertal children. Conclusions: Our findings show that a general, but stringent school-based PA intervention can improve BMC in elementary school children. Pubertal stage, but not gender seems to determine bone sensitivity to physical activity loading.
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Monthly newsletter produced by Iowa Department of Education
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Audit report on Mid-Iowa School Improvement Consortium, Carlisle, Iowa for the year ended June 30, 2010
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Report on a special investigation of the Lake Mills Community School District for the period July 1, 2005 through December 31, 2010
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Report on the Iowa School for the Deaf, Council Bluffs, Iowa for the year ended June 30, 2010