Your first year of teaching : guidelines for success
著者
書誌事項
Your first year of teaching : guidelines for success
(Student enrichment series)
Pearson/Merrill Prentice Hall, c2008
4th ed
大学図書館所蔵 件 / 全1件
-
該当する所蔵館はありません
- すべての絞り込み条件を解除する
注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 95-99) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Your First Year of Teaching: Guidelines for Success is a collection of strategies on how to succeed and thrive during your first year of teaching. This brief, practical text presents guidelines on how to manage your first day, differentiate instruction, cope with high-stakes testing, deal with parents and colleagues, set a homework policy, manage disruptive behavior, and other challenges. This is a book you should keep close at hand for a year that promises to be both challenging and exhilarating.
As a part of the Student Enrichment Series, this guide can be packaged for free with a core Education text (with each additional SES guide added at a cost of $2 net to the bookstore) and can also be purchased individually.
目次
Prologue.
Accommodating Student Differences: Recognizing and Working with Specific Learners
Attaining Credibility with Students: Teacher Attitude and Modeling Behaviors.
Beyond Teaching: A Teacher Is Interesting Because the Teacher Has a Life Outside of School.
Colleagues, Administrators, and Support Staff: Your Professional Network.
Curriculum Matters and Concerns.
Decision-Making and Locus of Control: No One Knowledgeable Ever Said That Good Teaching Is Easy, But It Is Fun and Intrinsically Rewarding.
Differentiating the Instruction: Ensuring that No Child Is Left Behind.
Discipline: Fear of Losing Classroom Control Is a Major Concern of Many Beginning Teachers.
Equality in the Classroom: Ensuring a Psychologically Safe and Supportive Learning Environment.
Field Trip: Planning for Success
First Day: Your One Opportunity to Make An Initial Impression.
Guest Speaker: Making It a Successful Learning Experience.
High Energy Days and the Disruption of Routine: Kids Are Human, Too.
High Stakes Testing: Checking That No Student is Left Behind.
Internet: Valuable Resource for Enhancing Teaching and Student Learning.
Job Satisfaction: A Two-Way Street.
Makeup Work: Be Firm But Understanding.
Media: If Anything Can Go Wrong, It Probably Will!
Memorizing: Sometimes It's Necessary.
Motivational Ideas: Build Your Repertoire.
PaperWork: How to Avoid Becoming Buried Under Mounds of It.
Parent and Guardian Contacts and Involvement: Leaving No Parent/Guardian Behind
Politics at School: Best to Avoid.
Professional Organizations: Join One.
Protecting Students and Yourself: Liability, Safety, and Security Matters.
Records: Organization is Important to Success
Reliability: A Good Teacher Is a Dependable Person.
Salary: Not Great But Regular.
Sense of Humor, an Intelligent Behavior: Please Smile and Do So Long Before Christmas.
Student Achievement: The Extremely Important and Time-Intensive Responsibilities of Assessing, Grading, and Reporting.
Student Learning: When Children Do Not Learn the Way We Teach Them, Then We Must Teach Them the Way They Learn.
Subject Knowledge: Fountainhead of Information or an Educational Broker?
Supplies and Textbooks: Seldom Ideal, Sometimes Inadequate.
Teachable Moments: Be Ready to Recognize, to Catch and to Run with Them
Teacher's Lounge: Enter with Caution.
Total School: Enter with Enthusiasm.
Transitions During Lessons: A Difficult Skill to Master.
Your Place of Work: Please Show Pride in It.
Your First Observation by the Principal.
Your Professional Portfolio and Personal Records of Your Work.
Epilogue.
References and Recommended Readings
Glossary.
Name and Subject Index.
「Nielsen BookData」 より