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School and Achievement. Schools Achievement Careers, Work, and Retirement. Schools. Contemporary Approaches to Student Learning and Assessment. Constructivist Approach: (Piaget) Emphasizes child’s active construction of knowledge and understanding
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School and Achievement Schools Achievement Careers, Work, and Retirement
Schools Contemporary Approaches to Student Learning and Assessment • Constructivist Approach: (Piaget) • Emphasizes child’s active construction of knowledge and understanding • Teacher provides support for students exploring their world and developing knowledge. • Social constructivist approaches: (Vygotsky) • Focuses on collaboration with others to produce knowledge and understanding. • Direct Instruction Approach: • Teacher-centered approach characterized by direction and control, mastery of academic material, maximum time spend on learning tasks, and high expectations of progress.
Schools Accountability in Schools No Child Left Behind: • Single score being used as sole predictor • Teaching to test; use of memorization • Tests don’t measure important skills like creativity and social skills
Schools Schools and Developmental Status • The child-centered kindergarten: • Emphasizes the whole child, physical, cognitive, socioemotionaldevelopment • Needs, interests, and learning style • Emphasizes learning process • Montessori approach: • Teacher is facilitator • Children encouraged to be early decision makers • Fosters independence and cognitive development skills • De-emphasizes verbal interactions
Schools High School • Concerns about education and students: • Graduate with inadequate skills • Enter college needing remediation classes
40 35 30 25 Percent of 16- to 24-year-olds who havedropped out of school 20 15 10 5 0 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 Year Schools Trends in High School Dropout Rates
Schools Educating Children with Disabilities • Approximately 10 percent of children in the U.S. receive special education or related services • More than 40% have a learning disability
Schools Learning Disabilities • Learning disabilitycharacteristics: • A minimum IQ level • A significant difficulty in a school-related area • No other conditions, such as- • severe emotional disorders • second-language background • sensory disabilities • specific neurological deficits
Schools Learning Disabilities • Dyslexia • Severe impairment in ability to read and spell. • Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder • Inattention, hyperactivity, impulsivity • Definitive causes unknown • Higher risk if a sibling already diagnosed • Medications are most common treatment • Other treatment recommendations vary
Schools SES and Ethnicity in Schools • Low-income, ethnic minority children face more difficulties in school • School inequalities- • Schools in poor areas • underfunded • young inexperienced teachers • largely segregated • Inadequate opportunities for effective learning
Careers, Work, and Retirement Work in Adolescence • U.S. high school students- • 90% receive high school diplomas • 75% work part-time and attend school • Most work 16-20 hours per week • Most work in service jobs
Careers, Work, and Retirement Changing Percentages of Traditional & Dual-Career Couples