Preface |
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xi | |
Using This Book |
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xv | |
About the Authors |
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xix | |
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The Teacher As a Reflective Decision Maker |
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1 | (19) |
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Notes |
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18 | (1) |
Additional Resources |
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19 | (1) |
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20 | (35) |
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Objective 1 Given two concept maps depicting a prospective teacher's ``before and after'' perspectives of teacher planning, to compare these concept maps and determine what the teacher learned about instructional planning |
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21 | (5) |
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Objective 2 Given information from studies of the instructional planning of experienced teachers, to identify key characteristics of productive planning |
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26 | (15) |
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Objective 3 Given a description of teacher planning analogous to a dramatic production, to generate additional analogies that highlight important aspects of teacher planning |
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41 | (14) |
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53 | (1) |
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54 | (1) |
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55 | (24) |
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Objective 1 To recognize well-defined instructional objectives |
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57 | (8) |
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Objective 2 To write well-defined instructional objectives |
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65 | (5) |
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Objective 3 To use instructional objectives in instructional planning |
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70 | (3) |
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Objective 4 To use objectives in implementing instruction |
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73 | (6) |
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76 | (1) |
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77 | (2) |
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Involving Students in Learning |
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79 | (25) |
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Objective 1 To define a planned beginning (set), explain its purposes, and give examples of when it is used to involve students in learning |
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80 | (3) |
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Objective 2 To create original planned beginnings (sets) for involving students in learning |
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83 | (4) |
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Objective 3 To define planned discussion, explain its purposes, and give examples of when it is used to involve students in learning |
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87 | (2) |
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Objective 4 To identify student behaviors that reflect students' ability to engage in effective classroom discussion |
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89 | (3) |
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Objective 5 To create original planned discussions for use in a given learning situation |
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92 | (2) |
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Objective 6 To define a planned ending (closure), explain its purposes, and give examples of how it is used to involve students in learning |
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94 | (4) |
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Objective 7 To create original planned endings (closure) for use in a given learning situation |
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98 | (6) |
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102 | (1) |
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103 | (1) |
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104 | (47) |
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Objective 1 To explain the seven characteristics of effective classroom questions |
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106 | (9) |
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Objective 2 To classify questions according to Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: Cognitive Domain |
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115 | (12) |
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Objective 3 To construct classroom questions on all six levels of Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: Cognitive Domain |
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127 | (3) |
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Objective 4 To write examples of questioning strategies that enhance the quality of student participation |
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130 | (10) |
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Objective 5 To describe how the growing diversity and multicultural nature of America's students impact questioning strategies |
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140 | (11) |
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147 | (2) |
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149 | (2) |
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Differentiating Instruction for Academic Diversity |
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151 | (34) |
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Objective 1 To develop an informed, personal definition of differentiated instruction |
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152 | (2) |
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Objective 2 To construct an informed, personal rationale for teaching to address learner needs |
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154 | (3) |
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Objective 3 To depict ways in which learner, learning environment, and curriculum are integral to differentiated or academically responsive instruction |
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157 | (4) |
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Objective 4 To apply specific ways to differentiate content, activities, and products in response to student readiness, interest, and learning profile |
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161 | (11) |
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Objective 5 To analyze and understand general principles of effective differentiation |
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172 | (3) |
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Objective 6 To propose personal first steps in becoming a responsive teacher |
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175 | (10) |
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182 | (1) |
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183 | (2) |
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Technology for Teaching and Learning with Understanding |
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185 | (50) |
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Objective 1 To examine assumptions about learning and technology |
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187 | (2) |
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Objective 2 To examine the principles of learning with understanding and how technology can support them |
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189 | (8) |
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Objective 3 To understand principled uses of technology to support learning with understanding |
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197 | (22) |
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Objective 4 To understand how to make hardware and software work for you and your students |
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219 | (16) |
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229 | (3) |
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232 | (3) |
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235 | (51) |
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Objective 1 To describe the four stages of the analytic-pluralistic classroom management process |
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237 | (2) |
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Objective 2 To describe the nature and dynamics of the authoritarian, intimidation, permissive, cookbook, instructional, behavior-modification, socioemotional-climate, and group-process approaches to classroom management |
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239 | (36) |
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Objective 3 To analyze a given classroom situation and to describe and justify the managerial strategy or strategies most likely to be effective in facilitating and maintaining those student behaviors deemed desirable |
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275 | (11) |
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283 | (1) |
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283 | (3) |
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286 | (44) |
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Objective 1 To review the functions of teachers, students, and content in effective lessons |
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289 | (2) |
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Objective 2 To describe the attributes of cooperative learning that contribute to student achievement in social and academic arenas and to discriminate academically productive cooperative learning strategies from less structured group activities that may not improve achievement |
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291 | (6) |
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Objective 3 To integrate simple cooperative learning structures into more complex or extended lessons |
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297 | (6) |
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Objective 4 To implement complex cooperative learning strategies, including Student Teams Achievement Divisions (STAD), Jigsaw, and Academic Controversy |
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303 | (11) |
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Objective 5 To describe some of the process skills students use in cooperative learning and explore some ways of teaching those skills |
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314 | (4) |
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Objective 6 To examine how the physical, organizational, and instructional environments support effective use of cooperative learning strategies |
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318 | (4) |
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Objective 7 To explore some of the schoolwide dimensions of classroom use of cooperative learning |
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322 | (8) |
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327 | (1) |
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328 | (2) |
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330 | (45) |
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Objective 1 To define evaluation and to describe each of the four stages in the assessment process |
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331 | (3) |
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Objective 2 To select appropriate information-gathering strategies when seeking to make classroom assessments |
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334 | (5) |
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Objective 3 To write effective test items for assessing achievement |
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339 | (8) |
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Objective 4 To develop rubrics (including checklists and rating scales) for evaluating student products and performances |
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347 | (6) |
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Objective 5 To use portfolios to assess ongoing performance and progress |
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353 | (3) |
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Objective 6 To describe how to use information to evaluate; that is, to grade, to judge student progress, and to judge changes in student attitudes |
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356 | (10) |
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Objective 7 To describe how to use assessment data to help students learn more effectively |
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366 | (2) |
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Objective 8 To select and use standardized instruments |
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368 | (4) |
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Objective 9 To describe the role of technology in classroom assessment |
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372 | (3) |
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373 | (1) |
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373 | (2) |
Answer Keys |
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375 | (25) |
INTASC Model Standards for Beginning Teacher Licensing and Development |
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400 | (6) |
Glossary |
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406 | (5) |
Index |
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411 | |