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    This module is included inLens: National Council of Professors of Educational Administration
    By: National Council of Professors of Educational AdministrationAs a part of collection: "Guidelines for Interns, Mentors, and Home School Principals, 2009-2011"

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Table of Contents

Module by: David Parks. E-mail the author

Summary: This Collection is authored by David Parks from Virginia Tech and edited by Theodore Creighton, Laura Farmer, and Corrine Sackett.

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Note:

This module has been peer-reviewed, accepted, and sanctioned by the National Council of Professors of Educational Administration (NCPEA) as a scholarly contribution to the knowledge base in education administration. In addition to publication in the Connexions Content Commons, this module is part of a larger published Collection entitled Guidelines for Interns, Mentors, and Home School Principals, 2009-2011, and is also published in the International Journal of Educational Leadership Preparation.

Guidelines for Interns, Mentors, and Home School Principals, 2009-2011

  1. Standards to Guide Your Internship
  2. Nature of the Internship
  3. Guidelines for the Internship
  4. Internship Agreement
  5. Objectives for Interns
  6. Guide for Developing a "Quick" Profile
  7. Intern Log Instructions
  8. Interim Report for the Internship
  9. Requirements for Maintaining Logs
  10. Frequently Asked Questions
  11. Finding Time for the Internship
  12. References
  13. NCATE Assessment 4
  14. NCATE/ELCC Internship Assessment
  15. NCATE/ELCC Internship Assessment Rubric

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Definition of a lens

Lenses

A lens is a custom view of the content in the repository. You can think of it as a fancy kind of list that will let you see content through the eyes of organizations and people you trust.

What is in a lens?

Lens makers point to materials (modules and collections), creating a guide that includes their own comments and descriptive tags about the content.

Who can create a lens?

Any individual member, a community, or a respected organization.

What are tags? tag icon

Tags are descriptors added by lens makers to help label content, attaching a vocabulary that is meaningful in the context of the lens.

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