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Volume 30, Issue 2 Winter 2009 Table of Contents
Rural Research Brief:
*Funded by the following: An American Fellowship from the American Association University Women, Stanford Center on Adolescence Youth Purpose Research Award supported by the John Templeton Foundation and the Thrive Foundation for Youth, and the Sustainable Rural Communities Initiative at Oregon State University.
Creating Highly Qualified
Teachers:
ABSTRACT:
The “highly qualified teacher” requirement of No Child Left Behind has
put pressure on rural school districts to recruit and retain highly
qualified regular and special education teachers. If necessary, they may
utilize uncertified, rural teachers with provisional certification;
however, these teachers may find completing the necessary certification
difficult due to time, distance, and geographic barriers.
The University of Nebraska at Kearney has been able to address
this need by: (1) creating access to the university’s certification
program, (2) providing professional supports, (3) tailoring assignments,
projects, and field based practicum experiences and (4) building
capacity for rural teachers who have completed certification to mentor
others in their regions.
A Comparison of the Parent-Child Interactions ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to compare the parent/child interactions between Russian immigrant and non-immigrant families in a rural Missouri school setting. A questionnaire was administered to 30 American families and 30 Russian immigrant families. Data concerning developmental level upon kindergarten entry were gathered from kindergarten screening protocols. Findings revealed that there were significance differences between the two sets of parents for the twelve literacy activities. Also significant differences were found regarding developmental levels between children who received Head Start as compared to those who attended preschool. Implications for early childhood literacy programs and the development of preschool language immersion programs within rural settings are significant. Also implications regarding understanding other ethnicities and cultures by rural educators are important.
ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to determine whether there exists a relationship between student achievement in Texas, as measured by the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS) test, and the size of the high school at different socioeconomic levels. This study compared five size categories of Texas high schools to determine which size high school had the highest percentage of eleventh grade students passing all four sections (reading, writing, math, and science) of the TAKS test. Data were examined for statistical significance using an ANOVA and a post hoc Scheffé test. The findings indicate that smaller rural schools experience higher percentages of students passing all four parts of the eleventh grade TAKS test in Texas than the larger urban and suburban schools where 25 % or more of the students are living in low socioeconomic situations.
ABSTRACT:
The politics of rural educational leadership
are both intense and concentrated.
Rural educational leaders need to be savvy and politically
skilled if they are to inspire educational stakeholders and accomplish
organizational objectives.
The local school system is an organization with a political culture that
can be characterized as a competitive environment in which various
groups from both within and without are competing for power and limited
resources. Local school
systems are entrusted with both children and tax dollars, two precious
resources. Coupled with such
entrustment is political input from all points within the political
continuum. Schools and
politics are inseparable.
Helping Children with Emotional
Difficulties:
ABSTRACT:
This article describes a Response to Intervention (RTI) model of service
delivery implemented within a rural elementary school for students
in kindergarten through fifth grade experiencing significant
emotional and behavioral difficulties.
A multi-tiered model is presented that includes school wide
interventions in Tier 1, as well as a six separate interventions
applied within Tier 2 and Tier 3.
These included applied behavioral analysis, social skills
training, counseling, differentiated instruction, cognitive
behavioral interventions and parent involvement designed to assist
identified students with improving prosocial skills.
Nine children were treated within this program model over a
two year period, resulting in two students being placed in special
education under the category of emotional disturbance by the
project’s termination.
Positive and negative aspects of the project’s implementation are
reviewed, along with directions for future research.
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