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Teaching
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Teaching sits at the heart of educational studies, drawing attention from disciplines ranging from curriculum theory and cognitive psychology to professional development and policy. It is academically interesting because it operates at the intersection of theory and practice — how knowledge is transmitted, how learners process it, and what conditions make that exchange effective. Students write about teaching across courses in education foundations, instructional design, literacy, and professional training, examining both the craft of instruction and its broader social functions, including what is sometimes called the hidden curriculum, the unspoken values and norms schools transmit alongside formal content.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a theoretical angle, analyzing learning theories or frameworks such as those associated with Deming and Bloom to evaluate instructional effectiveness. Others focus on specific contexts — teaching reading, teaching adults, or language teaching and learning methods — grounding their analysis in particular populations or subject areas. Professional and reflective writing also appears, including teaching experience papers and explorations of teaching as a career, alongside policy-adjacent work examining how educators like school librarians influence student achievement.

A strong essay on teaching begins with a clearly scoped thesis that connects a specific instructional method, challenge, or context to measurable or observable outcomes for students. Evidence drawn from classroom research, established learning frameworks, or documented professional practice tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating teaching as a generic activity — strong essays resist vague generalization and instead anchor their argument in a defined level, subject area, learner population, or pedagogical approach.

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Paper Doctorate
Adolescent learner characteristics and development
This paper briefly discusses the unique nature and learning needs of the adolescent. The theories of Erik Erikson, Albert Bandura and Jean Piaget are reviewed on how they fill these learning needs. These needs are listed and explained. The paper ends with a discussion of ways to engage the adolescent learner in acquiring knowledge and skills in the classroom and outside.
Research Paper Doctorate
Buddhist art and its cultural significance
¶ … Buddhist Art and further, to explore the characteristics of Art in Buddhism as well as naming two Buddhist artists and their works from this period.
Paper Undergraduate
Religious Teacher Why Do I
ONE: Why do I want to become a teacher in a Catholic School Board? Anyone that takes the effort and has the moral, spiritual and social motivation to become a teacher in a Christian / Roman Catholic environment is to be praised. There is so much for all of us to learn, and in particular so many young people are there in front of us, asking in their own adolescent way to receive knowledge of the spiritual life. We must be there for them. We must inspire them. In a world where the young people are being distracted by text messages – and some are clearly addicted to this digital technology – and by smart phone capabilities, and by the Internet's lure, by violent video games, and movies, cars, Facebook, drugs, alcohol, provocative magazines and more, the need to share Christian values with them has never been more urgent.
Thesis High School
Dropout Rates of Latinos in U.S. and Their Effect on Gang Violence or Vice Versa
Hispanic gang violence and high school drop-out rates
Research Paper Undergraduate
Effects of music on heart rate
Today's busy life styles become hectic for many people. Tensions and anxieties haunt each one of us in our daily lives. This busy life style and its various problems put a lot of physical, psychological and even…
Paper Undergraduate
The Catholic Tradition
¶ … creation accounts of Genesis as a basis for your explanation, what specific dangers/problems can arise when viewing the Bible within a fundamentalist framework? How would you advocate solving or addressing these…
Paper Undergraduate
What Teachers Think About Unions, Merit Pay, and Tenure
Stand by me: What teachers really think about unions, merit pay and other professional matters: Review of Public Agenda's 2003 report
Paper Doctorate
James Moffett's enduring contributions to education
Moffett emphasizes that writing is connected to thinking, and that it is a peculiar type of inner speech. His ideas were based on the 1996 Dartmouth conference. A critic of contemporary modes and teachings of writings,…
Essay Doctorate
State family dynamics and their effects on student performance
The objective of this study is to examine how family dynamics affect student performance. This work will examine the history of equal opportunity education and answer how it is that students receive opportunities they currently have in public education and what current issues are affecting equal opportunity education today. Finally, this study will answer as to how the obstacles to equal educational opportunities be addressed.
Paper Doctorate
Christianity's reintroduction into Kent and South Britain
Introduction A number of people would like to give credit for the reintroduction of Christianity to Gregory. It is said that one day the Catholic monk spotted two fair-haired, blue-eyed boys being auctioned in the Roman slave market. He quickly inquired who they were. "They are Angles" was the answer (since they came from Angleland later called England). Gregory alleged, Not Angles, but angels and they should be joint-heirs with the archangels in heaven. When Gregory became pope he recognized the boys he had seen in the slave market and in 596 AD he bespoke Augustine and forty monks to bring Roman Catholicism to Britain. Augustine and company came to Kent in 597 AD only a few months prior to Colum Cille died in Scotland. Before long, King Ethelbert gave them access to an old Romano-British church in Canterbury as a mission foundation. At the same time as Augustine did have significant influence in Britain, he was not the first to reintroduce Christianity into Britain (Bradley, 1999). Thitry-four years prior to Augustine came in Kent, England, Colum Cille or Saint Columba and company set up a college and church on a Scottiah island. It was this man and his friends, not Augustine, that were first successful in reintroducing Christianity to the Scots and Britons. Nevertheless, it is not possible to properly appreciate the person and work of Colum Cille unless you are familiar with a little something about a different person who laid the foundation for biblical Christianity in Ireland. That person was Maewyn Succat.