March 2013 Blog Posts (140)

Is Full Inclusion a Good Idea?

Is Full Inclusion a Good Idea?

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Added by Michael Keany on March 14, 2013 at 1:30pm — No Comments

Principal Sees Course Rigor as Basis for Common-Core Readiness by Carol Burris

Principal Sees Course Rigor as Basis for Common-Core Readiness

Sarah Kirby, 17, looks for textual evidence to support her interpretation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby during an International Baccalaureate English class at South Side High School in Rockville Centre, N.Y.
—Emile Wamsteker for Education Week…
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Added by Michael Keany on March 14, 2013 at 1:27pm — No Comments

Sucking the Life out of School Leadership

Look at the faces of those entrusted with the careful nurturing and guidance of our youth.  Pay close attention to their body language.   They wear the strain of leading and managing an agenda that is fraught with unnecessary elements, coupled with the real prospect of reimagining the schoolhouse in an age of disruption.  At a time when we desperately need a steady hand to steward the changes in society at-large, there are many distracters that mask themselves as “necessary changes” for the…

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Added by David A. Gamberg on March 14, 2013 at 12:27pm — 3 Comments

FBI Safe Online Surfing Program

This is a Free Internet safety and cyber citizenship program created by the FBI to help students learn about online safety.  This program addresses current Internet and safety threats in an interactive manner while maintaining age appropriateness pertaining to student's Internet usage and knowledge.

 

Great resource for Parents - See Scams &…

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Added by Joseph Innaco on March 14, 2013 at 10:07am — No Comments

The Political Future of the Teaching Profession By Arthur E. Wise & Michael D. Usdan

The Political Future of the Teaching Profession

Premium article access courtesy of Edweek.org.

Despite the unified Democratic Party and teachers' union support for the re-election of President Barack Obama, a philosophical divide over how to strengthen teaching quality in the United States…

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Added by Michael Keany on March 14, 2013 at 7:16am — No Comments

An Astrophysicist Sounds Off

An Astrophysicist Sounds Off

In this interview in American School Board Journal, editor Lawrence Hardy questions astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson (director of the Hayden Planetarium in New York City and former NOVA scienceNOW host) about the level of scientific literacy in the nation. “Now I don’t want a law saying someone has to be scientifically literate,” says Tyson. “I want people to want to be scientifically literate because they feel…

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Added by Michael Keany on March 13, 2013 at 2:09pm — No Comments

The Death of Logic in a College Classroom - “No, You Can’t Say Whatever You Want”

The Death of Logic in a College Classroom

In this troubling Chronicle of Higher Education article, Brooke Hildebrand Clubbs, a professor at Southern Missouri State University, describes a recent change in her classroom. For the last twelve years, her public-speaking course has provided a delightful (if exhausting) forum for ideas, provocative exchanges, clarification, and redirection. But in a discussion this semester about demagoguery and the…

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Added by Michael Keany on March 13, 2013 at 2:08pm — No Comments

How To Create A Classroom Without Walls by Joseph Fatheree

How To Create A Classroom Without Walls

 



Guest blogging this week…

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Added by Michael Keany on March 13, 2013 at 12:52pm — No Comments

School Discipline: American as Apple Pie By Ilana Garon

School Discipline: American as Apple Pie

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Added by Michael Keany on March 13, 2013 at 12:50pm — No Comments

Are Schools Prepared for Online State Assessments? By Peter DeWitt

Are Schools Prepared for Online State Assessments?

Ed…
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Added by Michael Keany on March 13, 2013 at 12:48pm — No Comments

Adaptive Learning in Higher Education: A Reality Check

Today, the higher education marketplace is thick with companies and organizations claiming to have “personalized learning” or “adaptive learning” capabilities.  Companies are using this language in their sales and marketing efforts, creating confusion for institutions as they grapple with determining an approach to personalized learning that matches their students’ and instructors’ needs.  But if one cuts through the clutter, adaptive learning may be one key capable of actually unshackling…

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Added by Rebecca H. on March 13, 2013 at 11:31am — No Comments

An Unprecedented Opportunity for Educational Equity by Dr. Judy Willis,MD

An Unprecedented Opportunity for Educational Equity

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Added by Michael Keany on March 12, 2013 at 3:28pm — No Comments

Helping Education Leaders Grow By Elizabeth Neale and Jonas S. Chartock

Helping Education Leaders Grow

Premium article access courtesy of Edweek.org.

It's time to dispel the perception that school principals have all the skills and capacity they need to be successful leaders as soon as they leave principal-preparation…

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Added by Michael Keany on March 12, 2013 at 2:59pm — No Comments

Filling in Thought Holes: An Invaluable Social and Emotional Learning Lesson by RENEE JAIN

Filling in Thought Holes: An Invaluable Social and Emotional Learning Lesson

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Added by Michael Keany on March 12, 2013 at 2:25pm — No Comments

Rigorous Young Adult Literature or "Dumbed Down" Classics? By Ariel Sacks

Rigorous Young Adult Literature or "Dumbed Down" Classics?

By Ariel Sacks

3/10/13

transformED…

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Added by Michael Keany on March 12, 2013 at 2:24pm — No Comments

A Defense of Standardized Testing by Kathleen Porter-Magee and Jennifer Borgioli

A Defense of Standardized Testing

In this Education Gadfly article, Kathleen Porter-Magee and Jennifer Borgioli list four “fundamental misunderstandings” in the arguments made by opponents of high-stakes testing:

Myth #1: Teachers’ instincts should guide instruction. Critics of test-driven accountability say we should just let teachers teach – that standardized testing wastes instructional time, distracts teachers…

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Added by Michael Keany on March 12, 2013 at 9:14am — No Comments

Busted, Chastened, and Enlightened by Julia Frank Hundman

Busted, Chastened, and Enlightened

In this Kappa Delta Pi Record article, retired Missouri educator Julia Frank Hundman recalls how her seventh-grade English teacher, Mrs. B., once asked students to write a poem of their own. “It seemed to me that love, angst, and all sorts of turmoil were requirements for good poetry,” says Hundman. “I was a happy-go-lucky, superficial kid and just not sure what to do with those emotions.” She ended up copying…

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Added by Michael Keany on March 12, 2013 at 9:12am — No Comments

Defining Bullying Down By EMILY BAZELON

The New York Times


March 11, 2013

Defining Bullying Down

NEW HAVEN

THE March 3 death of …

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Added by Michael Keany on March 12, 2013 at 8:52am — No Comments

Why America demonizes its teachers by Frank Breslin

Opinion: Why America demonizes its teachers

By Times of Trenton guest opinion column 

on March 11, 2013 …
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Added by Michael Keany on March 12, 2013 at 8:48am — No Comments

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