English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

6 answers

critical thinking skills
ability to reflect on one own's work
ability to see patterns and connect to previous experiences
internal motivation to do as best as one can
personal management skills - organization of work (whatever works for the person), time management (to complete assignments on time)

2007-03-23 17:09:01 · answer #1 · answered by harleighzoe 2 · 1 0

Participation. It shows the students understand the topic.

Test scores, studying - They're both part of one thing since you have to study to get a good test score. The test scores show just how much the students are reviewing what they learned in school.

Good Conduct/Behaviour - A good behavior lets the teacher know the student cares about the subject.

Be prepare for class - If a student is unprepare for class almost all of the time, then it shows that the student is irresponsible and couldn't possibly be bothered with school, as my french teacher would put it.

Homework - Seeing as students get assigned homework everyday, it's either very important, or just plain old torture. I'll go with the second one. But homework helps the students get a better grasp on what the teacher is teaching about.

2007-03-23 12:43:53 · answer #2 · answered by zzz_snoozer_zzz 2 · 0 0

Parental involvement and support is probably the biggest; a child whose parents believe in the value of education and are willing to support the school's efforts by showing up, working with the school, occasionally baking cookies, knowing who the child's teachers are, and helping out with homework, is more likely to do well in school, even if the child does not have the goods to be a stellar student, a parent's concern makes the difference between a d student and a b student.
Proper nutrition and sleep contributes to the students ability to learn and retain information, so I would say that is also essential. It takes at least 8 hours to move infor from short term to long-term memory, insufficient sleep interferes with the process.

2007-03-23 05:17:59 · answer #3 · answered by mliz55 6 · 0 0

1. Parent involvment - when kids see that their parents care, they care. This also leads to an understanding of the value of education.

2. Responsiblity - students that are responsible for their own learning, work completion, etc., possess the traits for academic success.

3. Asking questions - students with the confidence to ask questions when they don't understand will always be successful.

4. Organization - students who develop of system for organizing work and tasks goes a long way to helping with #2 above.

5. Goals - students who have goals, even at an early age, who can successfully set smaller goals and meet them to build self-esteem and also know where they are going.

2007-03-23 06:29:42 · answer #4 · answered by tchrnmommy 4 · 0 0

1.Whether they really want to learn or not-interest
2.Paying attention during class and follow directions-attentativeness
3.Always doing personal best and put 100% in it-effort
4.Respect-treating peers , teachers , books , etc. well
5.Being ready for class on time and homework , etc. complete-promptness/prepared

2007-03-23 05:30:52 · answer #5 · answered by ReaderOfTheClassics 4 · 0 0

promptness- being on time
studying- helps to pass the test
take notes- helps with studying
follower of the rules (not sure of the word to use)
dedication

2007-03-23 05:14:43 · answer #6 · answered by 6cowgirl11 1 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers