The EAA is
building a coherent system and a performance - based culture.
The idea, as foreshadowed in the leadership of states, is to
build a coherent system of supports to facilitate the implementation of instruction aligned to the content standards: student achievement tests, performance standards, accountability, align curriculum materials, aligned teacher education and professional development.
In the book, Tucker concludes, «high - performing states and nations are focused on
building coherent systems of teaching and learning, focused on meaningful goals and supported with universally available, strategic resources.»
Not exact matches
10 If we interpret the
system ideal in this way, we will find ourselves, per necessitatem,
building up from the parts in the effort to construct larger and larger
coherent theories and sets of theories, in a manner reminiscent of Nicholas Rescher's «coherence machinery.
«When you've never had that in your background and it's all about
building this
coherent, consistent
system where you actually love your understanding of faith.
The task of thought is to
build up a
system of hypotheses that is consistent and
coherent and that meets the tests of adequacy and applicability.
It engages school districts and school sites in the team
building and consensus
building required to produce a
coherent system of discipline management.
I observed that the frenzied, pin - wheeling search for the next exciting recipe can make it that much harder for schools or
systems to
build coherent cultures.
School leaders had been so eviscerated by a compliance culture, that the skills to facilitate a
coherent instructional mission and
build the related structures and
systems didn't exist.
Dr. Robert Marzano worked closely with consultants at Learning Sciences Marzano Center to develop the model, which is designed to integrate and
build upon the Marzano Teacher Evaluation Model for a
coherent and aligned
system.
The pockets of what Green, citing David Cohen, refers to as «
coherent» teacher preparation initiatives are small and scattered, serving a small fraction of U.S. schools and teachers, and operating largely outside of the traditional public schooling
system built to serve the urban poor and their suburban and rural neighbors.
Our aim is to focus on
building capacity, at all levels, in the development of balanced,
coherent, and efficient
systems of teaching and learning.
Thus, there was a push for a uniform set of standards and the development of aligned assessments to
build a more
coherent system for educational improvement.
As Doug Knecht from Bank Street explains,
systems should
build «a
coherent throughline from the central office and pedagogical supervisors to teacher teams and their students.»
That principle of
building coherent, cumulative content characterizes the most effective school
systems in the world, and for good reason: The systematic development of student knowledge in history, literature, science, and the arts is essential to high verbal ability — which in turn is the key to social mobility and college readiness.
There is a commitment in Nova Scotia to
build a
coherent, collaborative and coordinated approach to addressing all aspects of the justice
system, recognizing the constitutionally independent roles of many participants in the justice
system and that each part of that
system must work to improve those areas in which is has primary responsibility.