Search

Showing total 692 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Topic curriculum Remove constraint Topic: curriculum Region england Remove constraint Region: england
692 results

Search Results

151. Collaborative learning for collaborative working? Initial findings from a longitudinal study of health and social care students.

152. Making the most out of school-based prevention: lessons from the social and emotional aspects of learning (SEAL) programme.

153. Teachers' perspectives on curriculum making in Primary Geography in England.

154. Celebrating 30 years of nursing at the University of Southampton.

155. Children's nurse education-what is important to the service user?

156. The ‘nature of science’ in the school curriculum: the great survivor.

157. The practice competency gap: challenges that impede the introduction of national core competencies.

158. Towards an Area-Based Curriculum? Creating space for the city in schools

159. Fertility, the reproductive lifespan and the formal curriculum in England: a case for reassessment.

160. Orthodontic undergraduate education: assessment in a modern curriculum.

161. Child health and obstetrics-gynaecology in a problem-based learning curriculum: accepting the limits of integration and the need for differentiation.

162. Implementing the Opening Minds curriculum in a secondary school in England: an alternative to the one-size-fits-all National Curriculum?

163. Critical citizenship education in England and France: a comparative analysis.

164. Engagement with empires: Irish Catholic female religious teachers in colonial South Australia 1868–1901.

165. Creating expansive learning opportunities in schools: the role of school leaders in initial teacher education partnerships.

166. The development and evaluation of a programme to teach cultural diversity to medical undergraduate students.

167. English teaching and imagination: a case for revisiting the value of imagination in teaching writing.

168. Outside the green box: embedding education for sustainable development through cooperative inquiry.

169. Improving the disaster-related component of secondary school geography education in England.

170. Is higher education ready for the information revolution?

171. Models of Micro-Organisms: Children's knowledge and understanding of micro-organisms from 7 to 14 years old.

172. Reply to Will Kymlicka: ‘Multicultural citizenship within multination states’.

173. Embracing diversity in the history curriculum: a study of the challenges facing trainee teachers.

174. The potential role of schools and teachers in the character development of young people in England: perspectives from pupils and teachers.

175. Using intervention mapping to develop a family-based childhood weight management programme.

176. WIDENING AND INCREASING POST-16 MATHEMATICS PARTICIPATION: PATHWAYS, PEDAGOGIES AND POLITICS.

177. The Masters in Teaching and Learning: a revolution in teacher education or a bright light quickly extinguished?

178. Developing Learners' Intercultural Understanding through a CLIL Approach.

179. Setting by ability - or is it? A quantitative study of determinants of set placement in English secondary schools.

180. Inadequate and inappropriate?: The assessment of young disabled people and pupils with special educational needs in National Curriculum Physical Education.

181. A Freirean critique of the competence model of teacher education, focusing on the standards for qualified teacher status in England.

182. Parents' and teachers' constructions of the purposes of Chinese complementary schooling: 'culture', identity and power.

183. Critical perspectives on cultural diversity in early childhood: building an inclusive curriculum and provision.

184. The social structure of the 14-16 curriculum in England.

185. Attitudes of a sample of English, Maltese and German teachers towards media education.

186. Choosing in schools: locating the benefits of specialisation.

187. Limitations, frustrations and opportunities: a follow-up study of nursing graduates from the University of Birmingham, England.

188. Using a virtual learning environment to develop academic writing with first year dance students: facing the challenge of writing through digital images.

189. Literacy practices in the learning careers of childcare students.

190. Most People Hate Physical Education and Most Drop Out of Physical Activity: In Search of Credible Curriculum Alternatives.

191. Teaching and learning with ICT within the subject culture of secondary school science.

192. Teaching London: A Two-Day Conference jointly organised by The Centre for Metropolitan History, Institute of Historical Research and The University of Westminster London Studies Programme, 3–4 November 2006.

193. Changing geographies of access to medical education in London

194. “Busting with blood and gore and full of passion”: the impact of an oral retelling of the Iliad in the primary classroom.

195. Supporting children’s thinking in the foundation stage: practitioners’ views on the role of initial training and continuing professional development.

196. Putting literature at the heart of the literacy curriculum.

197. McSchools for McWorld? Mediating global pressures with a McDonaldizing education policy response.

198. To Bring into Play: Miss Mary Richmond's Utilization of Kindred Networks in the Diffusion of Kindergarten Ideals into Practice.

199. Developing a European identity: a case study of the European School at Culham 1.

200. Examining England's National Curriculum assessments: an analysis of the KS2 reading test questions, 1993–2004.