Responsibilities of the Teacher‚ Professional Boundaries and the Learning Cycle Responsibilities of the Teacher The responsibilities of the Teacher will include: • Completing attendance records • Maintaining records of student progress eg: interview‚ tutorials‚ assessments etc • Having a duty of care for your students • Inducting students to the organisation and course • Carrying out one-to-one tutorials and reviews with students • Following professional values and ethics • Acting and
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References: www.wikepedia.com‚ www.org.in‚ www.ifad.org‚ www.pwc.com‚ www.sawlog.ug. Acknowledgement I am greatfully indebted to my teacher Mrs. Rupa Basu for her wise suggestion and painstaking effort for the preparation and completion of our project reports on Plantation Programme.
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On Friday‚ April 1st‚ I interviewed Sarah McWhorter‚ who is a staff interpreter at LUNA Language services. I asked her questions referring to what she enjoys and doesn’t enjoy about her career. I also asked about the qualities of a good interpreter‚ things to avoid while interpreting‚ and advice to give an interpreting student. Sarah has done quite a few jobs in her career so far. These consist mostly of medical appointments‚ college classes‚ and meetings. Less commonly‚ she goes on interpreting
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Elish-Piper‚ L.‚ & Bean‚ R. M. (2010). What Matters for Elementary Literacy Coaching? Guiding Principles for Instructional Improvement and Student Achievement. Reading Teacher‚ 63(7)‚ 544-554. Shanaban‚ T.‚ & Shanaban‚ C.‚ (2012). What is Disciplinary Literacy and Why Does it Matter? Top Lang Disorders‚ 32‚ 7-18 Case Study Teacher # At Risk Students # Limited Proficiency # Proficient #Exceeding Proficiency Lilian 5 10 11 4 Duane 7 7
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and uncertainty as to ¡¥what is the curriculum?¡¦ As such‚ there is a distributing lack of consensus on an all-embracing definition of this comprehensive concept. This is‚ in part‚ due to the various interpretations‚ meanings‚ emphasis and approaches that the scholars of curriculum studies embark upon. This‚ in turn‚ leaves the education practitioners and the general public in the dark as to what constitutes that which should be considered as ¡¥good curriculum practice¡¦ in educational institutions
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poses a concern whether or not this aspect should be solved by integrating unpaid social work to high school programmes as a compulsory course. I am inclined to agree that it should be a good suggestion due to its advantages which will be discussed below. First of all‚ it is observable that unpaid community work made by students offers various benefits to the public‚ government and students themselves. When integrating social work into the school programmes‚ more public work will be implemented. For
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15th April‚ the National Curriculum Board was formed with a mandated to oversee the development of a rigorous‚ world-class national curriculum for all the Australian Students from kindergarten to 712‚ starting with the key learning areas of English‚ Mathematics‚ the Sciences and History. Pragmatism‚ the board was to draw the best performance from each State and territory into a single curriculum to ensure every child has access to the highest quality learning programmes to lift achievement and drive
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Module 3: Curriculum & Society What is Curriculum? “Noun (plural curricula /-lə/ or curriculums) – The subjects comprising a course of study in a school or college: course components of the school curriculum” (Oxford Online Dictionary‚ 2012) Who can define curriculum? When looking at a simple definition we find that curriculum is in fact a very broad term not dictating a single course of study. Kelly (2009:7) criticises the most basic and direct definitions when used within
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S. Austria Submitted by: Andadi‚ Glena Ray Ann Shermyn E. Chan‚ Jessica F. Kinomes‚ April Joy (7:30-11:45 Saturday) October 6‚ 2012 COMPARISON AND CONTRAST IN THE CURRICULUM OF THE UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS AND BENGUET STATE UNIVERSITY I.GRAPH II.OBSERVATION: | SUGGESTED CURRICULUM | UNIVERSITY OF THE CORDILLERAS | BENGUET STATE UNIVERSITY | GENERAL EDUCATION | 63 | 71 | 63 | PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION | 51 | 57 | 57 | FIELD OF SPECIALIZATION | 60 | 60 | 57
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