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  2. Google Classroom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Classroom

    Google Classroom is a free blended learning platform developed by Google for educational institutions that aims to simplify creating, distributing, and grading assignments. The primary purpose of Google Classroom is to streamline the process of sharing files between teachers and students. [3] As of 2021, approximately 150 million users use ...

  3. Classroom management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classroom_management

    Classroom management. Establishing procedures, like having children raise their hands when they want to speak, is a type of classroom management technique. Classroom management is the process teachers use to ensure that classroom lessons run smoothly without disruptive behavior from students compromising the delivery of instruction.

  4. Homeroom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeroom

    Homeroom. A homeroom, tutor group, form class, or form is a brief administrative period that occurs in a classroom assigned to a student in primary school and in secondary school. Within a homeroom period or classroom, administrative documents are distributed, attendance is marked, announcements are made, and students are given the opportunity ...

  5. The Student Room - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Student_Room

    The Student Room Group (often referred to as TSR) is a UK-based privately held student community company. It owns four major student-facing websites: TheStudentRoom.co.uk, TheUniGuide.co.uk, GetRevising.co.uk and MarkedByTeachers.com and two commercial facing websites: tsrmatters.com and tsrinsight.com.

  6. SCALE-UP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SCALE-UP

    SCALE-UP, Student-Centered Active Learning Environment with Upside-Down Pedagogies, is a classroom specifically created to facilitate active, collaborative learning in a classroom. [1] The spaces are carefully designed to facilitate interactions between teams of students who work on short, interesting tasks revolving around specific content.

  7. Open classroom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_classroom

    Theory. The idea of the open classroom was that a large group of students of varying skill levels would be in a single, large classroom with several teachers overseeing them. It is ultimately derived from the one-room schoolhouse, but sometimes expanded to include more than two hundred students in a single multi-age and multi-grade classroom.

  8. OpenClassrooms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenClassrooms

    OpenClassrooms is a France-based online education platform for vocational training, providing courses in IT, technology, entrepreneurship, and digital skills. [1] Courses are conducted fully online, through a mix of video resources, online reading, real-life projects and individual mentoring sessions. Founded in 2013 by Pierre Dubuc and Mathieu ...

  9. One-room school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-room_school

    One-room schools, or schoolhouses, were commonplace throughout rural portions of various countries, including Prussia, Norway, Sweden, the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Spain. In most rural and small town schools, all of the students met in a single room. There, a single teacher taught academic ...