The Curriculum Bridge
From Standards to Actual Classroom Practice
Third Edition
Edited by:
- Pearl G. Solomon - St. Thomas Aquinas College
Other Titles in:
Teaching Methods & Learning Styles
Teaching Methods & Learning Styles
March 2009 | 248 pages | Corwin
Thisáthird edition of the author's award-winning book about curriculum, content standards, teaching, and testing keeps a solid focus on today's critical issues of accountability and best classroom practices for teaching and learning. Topics covered include written curriculum and hidden curriculum; juggling stakeholder needs; educational planning and public policy; the impact of new technologies; what we now know about how learning takes place; classroom discourse and management; traditional, alternative, and high-stakes assessments; and how best to plan and implement professional development and action research to ensure that today's reflective teachers succeed in meeting students' educational needs. The third edition provides an up-to-date picture of the education sub-culture in the context of its interactions with the greater cultures in whicháeducators and studentsáreside. This edition also examines the rapidly expanding body of findings of research in the areas of curriculum and learning, assessment, education-related neuroscience, and professional development.
Preface to the Third Edition
Acknowledgments
About the Author
1. Why Standards and Tests Are on the Front Page
2. Who Chooses the Curriculum? Are Standards and Tests Necessary?
3. About How Learning Happens
4. Choosing Standards and ?Designing Them Down?
5. Constructing Creative Classrooms
6. How Are We Doing? Measuring Success
7. Where Do We Go From Here?
References
Index
"This book provides good, practical suggestions and ideas, and shows their connections to educational research."
Monona Grove School District, WI
"Comprehensive in scope, this book thoroughly lays out what a classroom teacher or curriculum developer needs to do to create an effective curriculum that can then be adapted into actual classroom instruction."
Sunnyside Elementary School, Kellogg, ID
Contents of book did not clearly align with curriculum leadership course. The text is well written, but would be better suited for master level course.
Secondary Leadership Educ Dept, Stephen F Austin State University
May 11, 2013