Evaluation of Aiming High


Book Description







Aiming High


Book Description

This publication is a guide for districts and schools moving toward a standards-based educational system. The information is based on a model developed in California. Chapter 1 explores the concepts and research underlying standards-based education. Chapter 2 guides the reader through standards, tests, and accountability measures. Developing a school-community culture to support the standards movement is the focus of chapter 3. Chapter 4 directly addresses the issue of classroom implementation. Strategies for creating a context for instruction and assessment are outlined in chapter 5. Chapter 6 presents an array of academic supports that high schools can implement to ensure students' opportunity to learn, institutionalize equity, and maximize student achievement. Chapter 7 presents ways to increase the bonds between students and the school. Chapter 8 presents the components of a family and community support system that helps all students master the standards. Chapter 9 focuses on the special needs of English language learners. Chapter 10 reviews the types of data schools can collect, the need for data disaggregation, approaches to data analysis, and strategies for using findings to continually improve schools. An appendix contains a reflection tool to determine a school's progress in implanting a standards-based system. A glossary as well as an extensive list of selected references are also included. (WFA).




First Generation Entry Into Higher Education


Book Description

Drawing on international comparative research, this book explores the access and success of under-represented groups in tertiary education through the lens of 'first generation entrants'. It considers the participation and success of targeted equity groups in higher education internationally.




How to Add 1000 Productive Hours A Year to Your Life


Book Description

Sanjay Kumar Agarwal, popularly known as ‘Time and Goal Guru’ conducts workshops on ‘Time Management’, ‘Goal Setting’, to bring a positive change in the mindset of present and future generations. He has worked for more than 25 years for Government of India in Ministry of Finance. Working at C.S.I. Airport, Mumbai and as Senior Intelligence Officer in the Directorate General of Central Excise Intelligence gave him wide exposure to meet people from different walks of life and study their aspirations and problems in life. He felt that it is high time to work on the mindset of future generation, i.e. students. His website tripleyourchances.in/tyc His blog timeandgoalguru.wordpress.com His Facebook page www.facebook.com/timeandgoalguru and his Youtube Channel provide rich material on the techniques of effective time management and goal setting. How to Add 1000 Productive Hours A Year to Your Life : Sanjay Kumar Agarwal known as ‘Time and Goal Guru’ by Sanjay Kumar Agarwal: Unlock the secrets of time management and productivity with "How to Add 1000 Productive Hours A Year to Your Life" by Sanjay Kumar Agarwal, renowned as the 'Time and Goal Guru.' This book provides practical strategies to help you make the most of your time and achieve your goals. Key Aspects of the Book "How to Add 1000 Productive Hours A Year to Your Life": Time Management: Sanjay Kumar Agarwal offers valuable insights and techniques to effectively manage your time and increase productivity. Goal Achievement: The book emphasizes the importance of setting and achieving goals and provides actionable steps to reach them. Productivity Hacks: "How to Add 1000 Productive Hours A Year to Your Life" is a practical guide filled with productivity hacks and strategies to optimize your daily routine. As the 'Time and Goal Guru,' Sanjay Kumar Agarwal shares his expertise in time management and goal setting through this book, helping readers transform their lives by maximizing productivity.




A Practical Guide to Outcome Evaluation


Book Description

This practical handbook on how to evaluate outcomes in people-orientated projects will support decision making and lead to achieving goals.




Challenging the Qualitative-Quantitative Divide


Book Description

This book challenges the divide between qualitative and quantitative approaches that is now institutionalized within social science. Rather than suggesting the 'mixing' of methods, Challenging the Qualitative-Quantitative Divide provides a thorough interrogation of the arguments and practices characteristic of both sides of the divide, focusing on how well they address the common problems that all social research faces, particularly as regards causal analysis. The authors identify some fundamental weaknesses in both quantitative and qualitative approaches, and explore whether case-focused analysis - for instance, in the form of Qualitative Comparative Analysis, Analytic Induction, Grounded Theorising, or Cluster Analysis - can bridge the gap between the two sides.




Aiming High


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DIGGING DEEP, AIMING HIGH : An Educator's Lifelong Quest to Put Kids First


Book Description

Digging Deep, Aiming High is a memoir of my career as a teacher and administrator in the New York City public schools. My experiences teaching in the middle school and my tenure working as an assistant principal and principal at the Manhattan Center High School for Science and Mathematics paint a contrasting picture. Both schools were dramatically different in terms of providing job satisfaction and student achievement. It is remarkable how two different schools could produce incredibly different results when teams of dedicated educators truly put kids first. Manhattan Center attracted trailblazers who made it their mission to defy the odds, to raise the bar, to reject mediocrity and encourage all children to succeed. As a team, we decided early on to evaluate all of our programs and academic results by digging deep and aiming high to work toward the highest level of educational achievement for our kids. Failure was never an option, yet we realized that the bureaucratic challenges of working in a large school system and in an impoverished inner-city neighborhood would pose numerous roadblocks in accomplishing our goals. The school was created in 1982 as a collaboration between the high school division and District 4 located in East Harlem. This project was an educational experiment, it being the first high school to accept students from anywhere in the city, as long as they were willing to make a commitment to the rigors of a college bound program and a longer school day. The campus was unique in that the school also housed an elementary school and junior high program in the same building. Working in this environment was especially gratifying for staff to be surrounded by kids of all ages and by students who were accepted regardless of their zip code. The parents and their children were especially grateful for the opportunity to attend a school of their choice, rather than be forced to accept their neighborhood school which, in many cases, had a poor academic rating. What makes this story so noteworthy is that we, the stakeholders in this one special school, recognized that we would need to seek out numerous public and private partnerships to assist us in the task of educating our youngsters. With the abundance of resources and the generosity of time provided by organizations such as General Electric, NBC, Mt. Sinai Hospital, local universities(NYU, COLUMBIA, HUNTER COLLEGE) and the Children's Aid Society, a community based organization, to name a few, we were able to create miracles for kids. With the help of hundreds of mentors and many volunteers, together with teachers and auxiliary personnel working 10-12 hour days and often on weekends, we created a top-notch academic program. Our entire school population was accepted into colleges with prestigious scholarships and financial aid packages, thanks to the dedication of a very talented teaching staff. Building the school from scratch in 1982 was far from easy. The growing pains of attracting competent staff willing to work collaboratively and dedicated leaders who were willing to work tirelessly to provide an environment for teachers to flourish were always a challenge. The explosive issues of funding for public education, desegregation, privatization of schools, the role of law enforcement and the involvement of the unions were very real then, and continue to be current problems facing educators today. Digging Deep, Aiming High will provide the reader with a thorough examination of the ways in which our team dealt with these controversies, as well as with the politicization of diversity, equity, and inclusion issues. It is my hope that our best practices in this one very unique high school will serve as a road map to the resolution of many of the obstacles facing our public schools nationwide today and tomorrow.




About The Boys


Book Description

At a time of unprecedented international immigration, seven Somali and African Caribbean boys are working their way through primary and secondary education. It is inner city Bristol and, like large cities across the UK, local communities and schools are receiving many thousands of Somali refugees on their doorstep. As new priorities are swiftly established in the staff room, a new pecking order develops in the playground. In an attempt to improve relations between rival groups, seven boys are referred into a Year 6 social skills group run by the author. Five years later she meets the boys again, and at home with their mothers, grandmothers and siblings, hears stories of exclusion and disappointment, success and ambition as they progress towards their GCSE examinations. Drawn from the author’s doctoral research, this engaging and emotionally honest book offers gripping stories from young people who live at the leading edge of demographic change; a critical discourse on the underachievement of Black and Somali children; a detailed account of the use of a performance narrative methodology; and an exploration of the author’s positioning as a White researcher working with Black participants. About the Boys is vital reading for those interested in the attainment of Black and Somali children and in schools and communities coping with demographic change. It is of particular relevance to students and researchers of narrative inquiry.