Posted: August 18th, 2010 | Author: Jennifer Patton | Filed under: Teachers | Tags: childhood, cognitive research, early childhood, kindergarten, salary, teacher education, Teachers, teaching method, Waldorf education | No Comments »
A few weeks old, but I just caught wind of this article in the New York Times business section. It presents research based on adult outcomes rather than test scores about how an excellent Kindergarten teacher can have an excellent long-term effect for education.
Early this year, Mr. Chetty and five other researchers … examined the life paths of almost 12,000 children who had been part of a well-known education experiment in Tennessee in the 1980s. The children are now about 30, well started on their adult lives.
On Tuesday, Mr. Chetty presented the findings — not yet peer-reviewed — at an academic conference in Cambridge, Mass. They’re fairly explosive.
This is right in line with our thinking as we develop el Rio – one of our main core values being teacher support, empowerment, and professional development.
I don’t know about $320,000 salaries – we’ll have to sell a LOT of birds.
Posted: July 1st, 2009 | Author: Joan Jaeckel | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: at-risk, childcare, childhood, cognitive research, early childhood, homeschooling, learning difficulties, pre-school, public school, resources, teacher education | No Comments »
“Waldorf education” means an approach to parenting and education that produces a climate which is respectful and accepting of childhood and supportive of whatever level the individual child is capable achieving. In the U.S., Waldorf education is an initiative to move change in the mainstream educational system and an interconnected learning organization of independent and public schools, homeschooling initiatives, teacher education colleges, teacher education for at-risk students, enrichment for public school teachers, school leadership and adminstration courses, childcare centers, early childhood centers and early childhood and pre-school education, parentingsupport and resources, Waldorf researchers and cognitive researchers, “extra lesson” (special education) practitioners, curative education communities, play specialists, and research on learning difficulties. Waldorf education is also a worldwide movement.