See the Program for Educator Effectiveness at the 2013 Washington Association of College Administrators and Association of Washington College Principals Conference


Salt Lake City (PRWEB) June 20, 2013

School Improvement Network, the leader in educator effectiveness resources, these days announced an exhibit of the Educator Effectiveness Method at the 2013 Washington Association of College Administrators (WASA) and Association of Washington College Principals (AWSP) Summer season Conference, June 23-25 in Spokane, Wash. The Educator Effectiveness Technique is a holistic solution for growing educator effectiveness and student achievement employed by thousands of schools across North America currently use the Educator Effectiveness Method.

&#13

We have created the Educator Effectiveness Method following more than 21 years of researching and documenting the best practices in education, stated Chet Linton, College Improvement Network CEO and president. At the 2013 WASA/AWSP Summer Conference, educators will see how the Educator Effectiveness Systems holistic help offers educators the resources they need to be successful, along with the Educator Effectiveness Systems network of practically a single million educators nationwide to collaborate about educator effectiveness in true time. In the result in of preparing one hundred % of students for college and career, a holistic program like the Educator Effectiveness System is essential.

&#13

The 2013 WASA/AWSP Summer season Conference exhibit will also show independent investigation confirming the good impact of the tools in the Educator Effectiveness System on educator effectiveness and student achievement.

&#13

As displayed at the 2013 WASA/AWSP Summer season Conference, The Educator Effectiveness Program delivers a approach to improve teacher practice, and gives educators a set of effective tools to drive the approach. Investigation shows that districts and schools that use the tools in the Educator Effectiveness Program produce better teachers and, as a outcome, knowledge dramatic increases in student achievement, driving up student test scores by as considerably as 30 % in a single year.

&#13