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Adam Gamoran

Researcher at University of Wisconsin-Madison

Publications -  116
Citations -  11924

Adam Gamoran is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Academic achievement & Tracking (education). The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 115 publications receiving 11495 citations. Previous affiliations of Adam Gamoran include National Academies & Wisconsin Center for Education Research.

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Opening dialogue : understanding the dynamics of language and learning in the English classroom

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that people learn not merely by being spoken (or written) to, but by participating in communicative exchanges between adolescents and their teachers in the English classroom.
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Discussion-Based Approaches to Developing Understanding: Classroom Instruction and Student Performance in Middle and High School English

TL;DR: This article examined the relationship between student literacy performance and discussion-based approaches to the development of understanding in 64 middle and high school English classrooms, and found that discussion based approaches were significantly related to spring performance, controlling for fall performance and other background variables.
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Secondary School Tracking and Educational Inequality: Compensation, Reinforcement, or Neutrality?

TL;DR: The authors examined the effects of academic tracking in secondary schools on educational stratification and considered how that tracking may affect levels and dispersions of academic achievement and high school graduation rates among social groups.
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Questions in Time: Investigating the Structure and Dynamics of Unfolding Classroom Discourse

TL;DR: The authors used event-history analysis to investigate discourse processes quantitatively, recasting understanding of discourse in terms of antecedents and consequences of discourse participant "moves" as they affect the inertia of the discourse and accordingly structure unfolding discourse processes.
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Authentic Pedagogy and Student Performance.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a vision of authentic academic achievement and specific standards for pedagogy and student performance that are consistent with active learning, or constructivist, perspectives but that establish standards of intellectual quality rather than teaching techniques or processes as the central target of instruction.