a. Explain the difference between a curriculum-based measure and a criterion-referenced measure. Curriculum based measures (CBM) are used to constantly measure a student’s performance or progress in school. They will show a teach areas of weakness to target when teaching lessons. For example‚ a CBM may show a student is having difficulty subtracting 3 digit numbers. The means the teacher needs to focus on this topic. While criterion-referenced measures compare students scores to a specific
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1) Choose a project. Define scope. Project Name: Balanced Score Card inception. Introduction/ Overview of the Project: The management introduced various new HR policies to be implemented across the entire plant‚ corporate and Business offices. Balanced Score Card inception into the Performance Management System of the higher level employees‚ including AGM and above (Level E13- E18)‚ was one among such new renovated policies. A total of 195 employees were covered under the project. By redesigning
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What do companies like Rockwater‚ Apple Computer‚ and Advanced Micro Devices have in commonl They’re using the scorecard to measure performance and set strategy. Putting the Balanced Scorecard to Work by Robert S. Kaplan and David P. Norton Today’s managers recognize the impact that measures have on performance. But they rarely think of measurement as an essential part of their strategy. For example‚ executives may introduce new strategies and innovative operating processes intended to achieve hreakthrough
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EDU-230 05/25/2014 Amy DeSylvester Issues in Multicultural Education The state of city of Richmond‚ Virginia has one the highest levels of income inequality in the United States. RVA News (2014). The poorest fifth of the city’s households receives 2.4 percent of the city’s aggregate income; the richest fifth gets 57 percent. RVA News (2014). Because of inequalities students that attend school in Henrico‚ Chester field and surrounding counties are receiving a higher level of education than the
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Development of Curriculum. ‘Australia’s future depends upon each citizen having the necessary knowledge‚ understanding‚ skills and values for a productive and rewarding life in an educated‚ just and open society’ (Brady & Kennedy 2007) these skills‚ values and knowledge are gained throughout the early years of individual’s lives as they attend schools. The Australian Government ensures that all schools develop students in the appropriate manner by deriving a national curriculum by which all
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Curriculum Development: An Overview Read the following curriculum development overview. This one is long. You might find that if you print it in draft mode on your printer it is less straining on the eyes. Curriculum Development: An Overview INTRODUCTION Ever since the term curriculum was added to educators’ vocabularies‚ it has seemed to convey many things to many people. To some‚ curriculum has denoted a specific course‚ while to others it has meant the entire educational environment. Whereas
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Humanists are concerned with the development of the individual. The curriculum is seen as the instrument that helps the individual to attain self-actualization. The curriculum will liberate and develop the individual. Each individual has a self thus the curriculum should work to help the individual uncover his/her self. Social Reconstructionist stresses societal needs above individual needs‚ thus they believe the curriculum should provide for the needs of the society. They believe it should
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MODELS OF CURRICULUM Mrutyunjaya Mishra Lecturer‚ H.I 2. The Word: Curriculum • Latin: Running course • Scotland 1603: Carriage way‚ road • United States 1906: Course of study • United States‚ 1940: Plan for learning (study) 3. What is curriculum? Curriculum is a design PLAN for learning that requires the purposeful and proactive organization‚ sequencing‚ and management of the interactions among the teacher‚ the students‚ and the content knowledge we want students to acquire. 4
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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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Programme Design Overview of curriculum models Author: Geraldine O’Neill Email: Geraldine.m.oneill@ucd.ie Date: 13th January 2010 Overview of curriculum models Ornstein and Hunkins (2009‚ p15) contend that curriculum development encompasses how a ‘curriculum is planned‚ implemented and evaluated‚ as well as what people‚ processes and procedures are involved..’. Curriculum models help designers to systematically and transparently map out the rationale for the use of particular teaching‚ learning
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