ABSTRACT

Classroom-based Interventions Across Subject Areas explores cutting-edge educational research that has real potential to support the improvement of classroom practice. Written by expert researchers and practitioners, it provides empirically tested and theory-based approaches that practitioners can use to improve learning in classroom settings.

This edited volume provides examples of classroom-based interventions in English, mathematics, science, languages, history, and geography. Taking as its basis research which has been conducted in actual classrooms with close collaboration between researchers and practitioners, this text will help researchers and practitioners understand how and why interventions can be successful or not. The text further considers the broad theoretical and practical issues that derive from intervention studies, including the nature of collaboration between researchers and teachers and ways of adapting effective classroom-based interventions for use in different contexts. Offering insight into the methodology behind successful classroom-based interventions, this text will be essential reading for students of education, trainee teachers, and all those concerned with how educational research can impact on teaching and learning.

chapter 2|17 pages

Double stimulation for reluctant readers

A literature circle intervention in a secondary school English classroom

chapter 4|25 pages

Who is doing the questioning?

A classroom intervention in secondary science classrooms to promote student questioning

chapter 5|25 pages

Developing science explanations in the classroom

The role of the written narrative

chapter 8|25 pages

‘Mapping-out’ the inferential relations of the subject content of geography lessons

A planning intervention for pre-service teachers to inform teaching and learning

chapter 10|11 pages

Commentary

Classroom-based interventions in different subject areas: Sharing meaning across researchers and practitioners

chapter 11|10 pages

Commentary

Interventions in education: origins, theoretical perspectives and challenges