Education Expert Reveals How to Create Highly Effective Teachers
Salt Lake City (PRWEB) June 26, 2014 -- School Improvement Network, the leader in educator effectiveness resources, today released a new video showing how to create highly effective teachers with education expert Jim Mahoney, executive director of Battelle for Kids. Mahoney’s presentation comes from his keynote at the 2013 School Improvement Innovation Summit.
“It is vital that we do all we can to help create highly effective teachers so they can help 100 percent of students become college and career ready,” said Chet Linton, CEO and president of School Improvement Network. “In his keynote, Jim Mahoney provides valuable insight into teacher effectiveness and how to help all teachers from different teaching styles become more effective.”
In the new video, Mahoney shows an analogy to represent different teaching styles and how to help teachers integrate four different teaching styles to become highly effective teachers.
Click here to see the keynote about how to create highly effective teachers.
Click here to see other keynotes from the 2013 School Improvement Innovation Summit.
About School Improvement Network
Founded in 1991 by teachers, School Improvement Network has spent decades researching and documenting the best practices in education. From this research, School Improvement Network has developed the Educator Effectiveness System. This system delivers a process to improve teacher practice and gives educators a set of powerful tools to drive the process. Research shows that districts and schools that use the tools in the Educator Effectiveness System produce better teachers and, as a result, experience dramatic increases in student achievement, driving up student proficiency by an average of 18 percent in a single year. School Improvement Network works with thousands of schools and districts in every state and around the world and has visited over 3,500 classrooms to document best practices in action. Learn more at http://www.schoolimprovement.com/.
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Abigail Shaha, School Improvement Network, +1 (801) 572-1153, [email protected]
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