|
U.S. Department of Education
Teacher-to-Teacher Workshops, Summer 2005
DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS: APRIL 11, 2005
The U.S. Department of Education's Teacher-to-Teacher Initiative is accepting applications from educators who would like to make a presentation on the use of research-based instructional practices at our 2005 summer workshops. The Department is looking for elementary and high school educators who work directly with students (or their teachers), who have evidence they are raising student achievement or are having a positive impact on teaching, and who are dynamic and engaging presenters able to clearly show participants what they are doing and why it is working. The Department wants to highlight educators, including special educators and related services providers and ESL educators, who believe that all children can achieve at high levels and have evidence that shows they know how to make that happen. This is part of the mission of No Child Left Behind (NCLB).
The U.S. Department of Education is seeking proposals for the Teacher-to-Teacher initiative from MUSIC and VISUAL ARTS teachers, as well as other subjects. Details are provided once you select the "Start an application" link.
In order to participate, presenters must meet three requirements:
(1) If you work directly with students, you must be "highly qualified" as defined by the state in which you teach and be prepared to submit proof of this
(2) your complete proposal, which includes your final presentation and handouts, MUST BE SUBMITTED BY APRIL 11, 2005
(3) you must commit to attending a two-day training session and all six workshops (the workshop schedule is posted on the Web site noted below). Presenters may be asked to present their session more than once during the workshops and will be compensated for their work and travel.
If you are interested in being a presenter, visit our Web Site and the Teacher To Teacher Presenter Application for detailed information on how to apply. Only registered users can write comments. Please login or register. Powered by AkoComment 2.0 |