Teachers can use these questions to draw students out and get worthwhile formative assessment responses to guide instruction.
Teachers can support inquiry-based learning by using direct instruction to provide students with the tools they need to ...
Play is a brain-friendly strategy—even for teens. These games get students up, moving, and learning as they review for exams.
Amid pandemic, efforts to promote and support a formative experience for students persevered—and flourished, survey shows The coronavirus shut down most aspects of normal life this past spring, but ...
Julia Kagan is a financial/consumer journalist and former senior editor, personal finance, of Investopedia. Lea Uradu, J.D., is a Maryland state registered tax preparer, state-certified notary public, ...
The Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP), established in 1999, is a comprehensive and in-depth assessment of a country’s financial sector. FSAPs in advanced economies are conducted by the IMF ...
Demonstrate to clients the alignment between their risk tolerance and their investment portfolio with the clear and transparent risk profiling and scoring tools available within Direct Advisory Suite.
Teachers hear these frustrating words often, and while we may have been tempted in recent years to blame technology use and increasingly short attention spans, these familiar complaints usually signal ...
Before students can appreciate that a heart valve is a masterpiece of engineering or notice what isn’t narrated in The Great Gatsby, they need sustained focus. Unfortunately, sustained attention is ...
Imagine having to wall off a part of your identity whenever you enter a room. For many of our multilingual students, this is the reality they face every morning when they step into school. Because so ...
Instead of passively receiving information, engaged students actively process, apply, and reflect. They think, talk, question, explain their thinking, justify their reasoning, and collaborate with ...
An elementary student’s first foray into anatomy is often a catchy tune composed mainly of four words: “heads, shoulders, knees, and toes.” As they progress through the shortlist, children put their ...