Elementary Education. Local Participation in State-Wide Revision of the Elementary School Curriculum. Bulletin 233-A, 1946. Department of Public Instruction, State of Pennsylvania. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

1948 ◽  
Vol 32 (5) ◽  
pp. 379-379
2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (9) ◽  
pp. 111
Author(s):  
Meira Chaves Pereira

Neste trabalho se discute o ensino fundamental de nove anos e a organização escolar para os anos iniciais do ensino fundamental no Brasil. Trata-se de uma reflexão crítica por meio de literatura especializada organizada em três seções. A primeira considera a idade que integra o ensino fundamental a partir da legislação brasileira. Na segunda, analisamos a criança de seis anos no ensino fundamental e a necessária sensibilidade no desenvolvimento de seus saberes e fazeres e, em seguida construímos algumas considerações sobre a organização do currículo para o ensino fundamental de nove anos. O estudo aponta que quanto mais cedo se faz a incursão da criança nos anos iniciais do ensino fundamental, não se pode perder de vista a especificidade da infância em seus tempos, espaços e possibilidades.Palavras-chave: ensino fundamental de nove anos, organização curricular, anos iniciais. THE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL NINE YEARS AND ORGANIZATION CURRICULUM FOR EARLY YEARS IN MATO GROSSO DO SUL AbstractThis paper discusses the fundamental education of nine years and school organization for the early years of elementary school in Brazil. It is a reflexive critical reflection by means of specialized literature organized into three sections. The first considers the age which integrates elementary school from the Brazilian legislation. In the second, we analyze the child of six years in the elementary school and the necessary sensitivity to develop their knowledge and practices and then build some considerations about the Organization of the curriculum for elementary education of nine years. The study brought to light that, the sooner you make the incursion of the child in the early years of elementary school, one cannot lose sight of the specificity of childhood in their times, spaces and possibilities.Key-words: nine-year elementary school, curriculum organization, the initial years.


1986 ◽  
Vol 33 (9) ◽  
pp. 39-41
Author(s):  
Charles E. Mitchell

In 1895, the Report of the Committee of Fifteen on Elementary Education cited two reasons for including arithmetic in the elementary school curriculum. The first. most often associated with this period, focused on the value of arithmetic as a mental discipline. This reason was soon to fall from favor.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 174
Author(s):  
Meida Rachmawati ◽  
Suzana Widjajanti ◽  
Ahmad Ahmad ◽  
Aslan Aslan

This article aimed to promote English in elementary school students through a fun learning method, called the Fun English Camp. Several studies had been conducted to encounter the best solution to handle this issue. The researchers used PRISMA Protocol as an instrument to collect the data that has been widely used in the process of selecting relevant articles. The researchers reviewed twenty five scientific publications, related to Fun English Camp that has become an English learning approach for beginner students. Through a review of twenty five scientific publications, for instance book and journal, the researchers got scientific evidence that introduction of a learning method with the term Fun English camp has an impact on promoting language learning for elementary school children in Indonesia. Thus, the fun English camp method can be an interesting method to be applied by elementary school curriculum design in Indonesia. Keywords: English Camps, Learning Method, Fun English Learning


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 80
Author(s):  
Susanne Kjällander ◽  
Linda Mannila ◽  
Anna Åkerfeldt ◽  
Fredrik Heintz

Digital competence and programming are actively highlighted areas in education worldwide. They are becoming part of curricula all over the world, including the Swedish elementary school curriculum, Children are expected to develop computational thinking through programming activities, mainly in mathematics—which are supposed to be based on both proven experience and scientific grounds. Both are lacking in the lower grades of elementary school. This article gives unique insight into pupils’ learning during the first programming lessons based on a group of Swedish pupils’ experiences when entering school. The goal of the article is to inform education policy and practice. The large interdisciplinary, longitudinal research project studies approximately 1500 students aged 6–16 and their teachers over three years, using video documentation, questionnaires, and focus group interviews. This article reports on empirical data collected during the first year in one class with 30 pupils aged 6–7 years. The social semiotic, multimodal theoretical framework “Design for Learning” is used to investigate potential signs of learning in pupils’ multimodal representations when they, for example, use block programming in the primary and secondary transformation unit. We show that young pupils have positive attitudes to programming and high self-efficacy, and that pupils’ signs of learning in programming are multimodal and often visible in social interactions.


Author(s):  
Lydia Laninga-Wijnen ◽  
Yvonne H. M. van den Berg ◽  
Tim Mainhard ◽  
Antonius H. N. Cillessen

AbstractAlthough prior research has indicated that peer norms for aggression enhance the spread of aggression in classrooms, it is unclear to date how these norms relate to students’ classroom climate perceptions and school adjustment. Aggressive descriptive norms reflect the average aggression of all students in classrooms, whereas aggressive popularity norms represent the extent to which aggressive behavior relates to popularity among peers. This study examined the role of aggressive descriptive and popularity norms in the classroom climate perceptions (cooperation, conflict, cohesion, isolation) and school adjustment (feelings of belonging; social, academic, and general self-esteem) of popular, well-liked, and victimized children. Self-reported and peer-nominated data were obtained from 1511 children (Mage = 10.60 years, SD = 0.50; 47.2% girls) from 58 fifth-grade classrooms. The results indicated that aggressive descriptive and popularity norms both matter in elementary school, but in diverging ways. Specifically, aggressive descriptive norms—rather than popularity norms—contributed to negative classroom climate perceptions irrespective of students’ social position. In addition, whereas descriptive norms contributed to between-classroom variations in some aspects of school adjustment, aggressive popularity norms related to increased school maladjustment for popular and victimized children specifically. Thus, aggressive descriptive norms and popularity norms matter in complementary ways for children’s classroom climate perceptions and adjustment in elementary education.


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