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...time to work with colleagues during the school day. They plan by themselves and get a few hit-and-run workshops after school, with little opportunity to share knowledge or improve their practice. In a study of mathematics teaching and learning in Japan, Taiwan and the U.S., James Stigler and Harold Stevenson noted that "Asian class lessons are so well crafted [because] there is a very systematic effort to pass on the accumulated wisdom of teaching practice to each new generation of teachers and to keep perfecting that practice by providing teachers the opportunities to continually learn from each other...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How They Do It Abroad | 2/14/2008 | See Source »

...Thomas G. Stigler Milwaukee...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Talk Back: Was the War Worth It? | 3/23/2006 | See Source »

Many of this year's skaters have performed for EWC before. 1999 U.S. Silver Medalist Naomi Nari Nam, a rising American star, has skated for EWC for two years, and 1998 U.S. Junior Pairs Champions Tiffany and Johnnie Stigler have performed twice before...

Author: By Kristin L. Rakowski, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Former Champion Skaters Flock to 30th 'Evening' | 10/15/1999 | See Source »

Parents could benefit from a little perspective too. American students on the whole still work less, play more and perform worse than many of their counterparts around the world. As Harold Stevenson and James Stigler point out in their book The Learning Gap, Japanese and Chinese elementary school students spend significantly more time on homework than do children in the U.S. A first-grader in Taipei does seven times as much homework as a first-grader in Minneapolis--and scores higher on tests of knowledge and skills...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Homework Ate My Family | 1/25/1999 | See Source »

...only a brief and relatively innocuous reversal like the one in 1961 rather than the painful contraction of 1981-82, when the unemployment rate averaged 8.7%. The current slowdown "is not a good thing, but it's the cost of a good thing," says economist George Stigler, a Nobel laureate and professor at the University of Chicago. Americans can only hope that if they pay now, they can fly again later...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Special Report: The Big Slowdown: Adrift in the Doldrums | 7/31/1989 | See Source »

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