Creative Teaching

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A01=Audrey Nicholls
A01=S. Howard Nicholls
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Author_Audrey Nicholls
Author_S. Howard Nicholls
Breakdown
Category=JN
Category=JNA
Category=JNU
Concerted Efforts
courses
curriculum
curriculum development theory
Curriculum Planning
custom curriculum planning for teachers
development
educational assessment methods
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Feedback
Follow
formative evaluation techniques
group learning dynamics
head
Head Teacher's Role
Head Teacher’s Role
Hold
in-service
instructional design strategies
Judgement
Junior
learners
Ledge
Nursery
Objectives Approach
P Rep
plan
Pr Ic
Psychological Considerations
school
School's Aims
School’s Aims
slow
social factors in education
T Ra
Tape
teacher
Team Teaching
Va Ri
Vertical Grouping
Viewpoint
Work Sheets
Worthwhile

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815368939
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In their highly successful practical guide, Developing a Curriculum, Howard and Audrey Nicholls provided a basic guide to curriculum planning for both practising and prospective teachers. In this second volume, originally published in 1975, some of the ideas outlined there at an elementary level are developed, with the aim of encouraging and guiding the development of ‘custom built’ curricula.

Grasping the fundamental ideas and concepts of curriculum development is one problem for teachers, translating them into practice is another, and this book will go a long way to solving both problems. The development of justifiable and purposeful curricula for the particular pupils he is teaching is a primary task for any teacher, as is the modification of these curricula as circumstances and ideas change and the teacher forms his assessment of pupils’ needs and progress. The theoretical background to be taken into account when arriving at general curricular decisions is considered throughout, and groups, aids, organisation, records and assessment are all treated as essential items for the curriculum planner. Nor is the final problem, which the theorists often neglect, forgotten, namely that of implementing modifications or innovations once the curriculum has been created.

S. Howard Nicholls, Audrey Nicholls

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