Well, testing season seems to have…
A Network Connecting School Leaders From Around The Globe
by Will Richardson
“Last night, George Couros Tweeted this:
“I think when we say things like ‘school is broken’ it really demeans the hard work of so many educators who make school awesome everyday.”
As I would have expected, it was retweeted and favorited widely. The sentiment is, of course,…
Added by Michael Keany on March 31, 2015 at 10:57am — No Comments
Teacher and principal evaluation season arrives with springtime. Evaluation season, unlike springtime, is rarely a time of excitement and color and new life. But, it is important to remember we can make a choice about how to approach the evaluation season. Perhaps, that choice may change the way the season is experienced, moving from a deficit model that focuses on what isn't, to one of what is and what can be.…
ContinueAdded by Jill Berkowicz & Ann Myers on March 31, 2015 at 6:25am — No Comments
Added by Michael Keany on March 30, 2015 at 3:06pm — No Comments
Added by Michael Keany on March 30, 2015 at 3:03pm — No Comments
How Can Successful School Improvement Ideas Be Taken to Scale?
In this article in Educational Researcher, Catherine Lewis (Mills College School of Education) asks why a number of good ideas for improving student achievement are not “scaling up” – that is, having an impact beyond a small number of successful classrooms and schools. Other fields (including health care and automobile manufacturing) have brought about major gains in quality by…
ContinueAdded by Michael Keany on March 30, 2015 at 9:59am — No Comments
How Schools Can Help Push Back the Age of Childbearing
In this article in Education Next, Michael Petrilli of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute asks what U.S. schools can do about the growing number of out-of-wedlock births and the well-documented travails of children raised in single-parent homes. “This may seem like a ridiculous question,” he concedes. How can schools possibly affect a problem with such deep roots? Shouldn’t schools limit…
ContinueAdded by Michael Keany on March 30, 2015 at 9:57am — No Comments
The Power of Reading Aloud
In this article in The Reading Teacher, Illinois teacher JeanaLe Ann Marshall describes how her fourth graders react when she wraps up her daily 10-minute readaloud: “Nooooo! Read more! Don’t stop! Why do you always do this to us?” Among their favorite books:
Added by Michael Keany on March 30, 2015 at 9:54am — No Comments
It was once clearly so and is so again. School leaders are increasingly responsible in the public eye to prepare students for lives beyond the school walls. This responsibility involves addressing the needs students bring today and creating learning environments which serve them well by developing knowledge and skills they will need for tomorrow. There are challenges to that responsibility.…
ContinueAdded by Jill Berkowicz & Ann Myers on March 29, 2015 at 7:14am — No Comments
Last week, I was looking at "Why Johnny can't read" (Rudolf Flesch, 1955) where Flesch quotes some professors's advice about what readers should do when encountering new words.
There is a list of a half-dozen items. The last one is phonics. The student is supposed to use phonics only as a last resort. This is quite nutty but it's the official doctrine of K-12 education for many decades.
At about the same time, I saw a video where a professor from Minnesota,…
ContinueAdded by Bruce Deitrick Price on March 28, 2015 at 6:19pm — No Comments
Added by Debbie Wooleyhand on March 27, 2015 at 7:35pm — No Comments
Added by Michael Keany on March 26, 2015 at 10:18am — No Comments
Steve Peha
Testing is the most misunderstood element of education reform.
Ignoring decades of research that shows that testing actually helps kids learn, we assume it doesn’t. Ignoring more recent…
ContinueAdded by Michael Keany on March 26, 2015 at 9:28am — No Comments
Today's leader understands that vision is a collaborative endeavor, with permeable boundaries and moving goalposts. These leaders can enable the conditions that support new types of relationships between teachers, teachers and students, teachers and leaders, and school and the broader community. Read…
ContinueAdded by Jill Berkowicz & Ann Myers on March 26, 2015 at 7:13am — No Comments
Can we fix elitist public high school admissions?
Only 5,000 kids are offered admission to the nine prestigious college-prep high schools in New York City, and they are predominantly male, and white or Asian, reports Alia Wong in The Atlantic. In 2013, just four percent of incoming freshman were black, and five percent Latino, to the three most prominent schools: Stuyvesant, Bronx School of Science, and Brooklyn Tech. Admission to a specialized school hinges…
ContinueAdded by Michael Keany on March 25, 2015 at 7:19pm — No Comments
The Common Core: great if you're affluent
Carol Burris, a principal in New York state, writes in a letter in The Hechinger Report to Jayne Ellspermann, a principal in Florida, that the problems she sees with the Common Core go beyond mechanical issues of implementation to the standards themselves. If every child in America grew up in a financially secure home with access to enriching activities and an excellent pre-school, the standards would be great. Since…
ContinueAdded by Michael Keany on March 25, 2015 at 7:17pm — No Comments
My sense of the world is that our Education Establishment is doing a crummy job on purpose, and even worse our local media stand silently by, and our local leaders remain relentlessly passive.
Every organization I look at – the media, elite groups like PEN, Ivy League universities, Chamber of Commerce, religious groups-- all…
ContinueAdded by Bruce Deitrick Price on March 25, 2015 at 5:19pm — No Comments
Posted by Bill Ferriter on Tuesday, 03/17/2015
One of the terms that I just can't come to grips with in education is "personalized learning." Maybe I'm being paranoid, but it literally frightens me.
In my worst nightmares, I see rows of…
Added by Michael Keany on March 25, 2015 at 10:31am — No Comments
Well, testing season seems to have…
Added by Michael Keany on March 25, 2015 at 10:18am — No Comments
From my perspective as an…
ContinueAdded by Michael Keany on March 25, 2015 at 10:15am — No Comments
Educators have effectively impressed upon students and parents the value of education by creating a “college for all” culture. School conversations, procedures and artifacts all showcase college as the “holy grail.” Anything less is failure! Schools provide extra support for students in their college applications and celebrate college acceptance. However, recent school…
ContinueAdded by Richard Jones on March 25, 2015 at 6:00am — No Comments
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