How to Increase Student Learning and Success With Teacher-Student Conferencing
SALT LAKE CITY (PRWEB) July 29, 2014 -- School Improvement Network, the leader in educator effectiveness resources, today announced a new video segment showing how teacher-student conferencing can increase student learning and success by allowing students to show mastery or helping a teacher and student align objectives and communicate. The video is available to all educators as part of the weekly publication, “Strategy of the Week.”
“An effective teacher has unparalleled potential to impact a student’s life far beyond their classroom,” said Chet D. Linton, CEO and president of School Improvement Network. “Practices like teacher-student conferencing allow educators to stay closely aligned with the progress and goals of each student, helping them drive each one towards mastery of the skills they need to be ready for college or a career when they finish high school.”
In this video segment, educators will see ways to structure teacher-student conferences and how to use them to encourage student learning and success.
Click here to see the video segment on teacher-student conferencing.
Click here to see other teaching strategies in “Strategy of the Week.”
Click here to learn about more videos and teacher resources in Edivation.
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 Edivation, a personalized professional learning solution for educators. Research shows that districts and schools that use the tools in Edivation 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 when compared to neighboring schools. 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.
School Improvement Network and its logos are trademarks of School Improvement Network. All other trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Abigail Shaha, School Improvement Network, http://www.schoolimprovement.com/, +1 801-758-9556, [email protected]
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