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  2. Public Schools Accountability Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Schools...

    The Public Schools Accountability Act (PSAA) was passed in California in 1999 as the first step in developing a comprehensive system to hold students, schools, and districts accountable for improving student performance. The system establishes a code of conduct for all teachers stating that their overall objective for the student is to achieve ...

  3. Adequate Yearly Progress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adequate_Yearly_Progress

    A state must make annual decisions about the achievement of all public schools and local education agencies. All public schools and local education agencies will be held accountable for the achievement of all individual subgroups. A state's definition of AYP must be based primarily on the state's academic assessments.

  4. Cooperative learning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperative_learning

    The third element is individual and group accountability. Each student must demonstrate mastery of the content being studied and each student is accountable for their learning and work, therefore eliminating social loafing. The fourth element is social skills, which must be taught in order for successful cooperative learning to occur.

  5. Student-directed teaching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Student-directed_teaching

    Student-directed teaching is a teaching technology that aims to give the student greater control, ownership, and accountability over his or her own education. Developed to counter institutionalized, mass, schooling, student-directed teaching allows students to make their own choices while they learn in order to make education much more meaningful, relevant, and effective.

  6. Accountability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accountability

    As defined by National Council on Measurement in Education (NCME), accountability is "[a] program, often legislated, that attributes the responsibility for student learning to teachers, school administrators, or students. Test results typically are used to judge accountability, and often consequences are imposed for shortcomings." [79]

  7. Team-based learning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Team-based_learning

    Finally, students work in teams to solve application problems that allow them to apply and expand on the knowledge they have just learned and tested. They must arrive at collective response to the application question and display their answer choice in an e-gallery walk in the classroom.

  8. Education Quality and Accountability Office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_Quality_and...

    Educational accountability is important to three key stakeholders: taxpayers, elected officials, and teachers. [4] By providing yearly standardized tests, the Ministry of Education hopes to increase the quality of education in Ontario, while also using the tests to make plans for future improvement. [5]

  9. Every Student Succeeds Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Every_Student_Succeeds_Act

    The Department of Education does not define disabled, rather, each state decides its own definition in order to determine which students will be allowed to take the alternate assessment. This could prove to be more challenging, though, when it comes to comparing students to one another because not all states will define disabled the same way. [19]