All Blog Posts (6,961)

Value Added — Scrutinizing The Most Widely Cited Study by Gary Rubinstein

Value Added — Scrutinizing The Most Widely Cited Study

by Gary Rubinstein

It was the best of teachers. It was the worst of teachers.



But how much better are the best teachers than the worst teachers? Well THAT’S a tough one, but one that is very important to answer. The corporate reformers believe that the gap is great so a feasible solution is to fire those bad teachers.



Now, nobody who ever had more than two teachers in their lives would argue that there is no… Continue

Added by Michael Keany on August 11, 2011 at 3:38pm — No Comments

Lego Block

In my basement, we have an old dresser.  If you were to open any one of the six drawers of this dresser you would have to tug a little because each drawer is filled to the brim and overflowing with Lego.  But that’s not the only place you’ll find Lego in my house.  Bins of Lego can be found tucked behind chairs and stacked neatly (and not-so-neatly) on bookshelves in every room.  And of course, if you look in the heaters and other small crevices of my home, you will find errant pieces and…

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Added by Kim Yaris on August 11, 2011 at 3:32pm — No Comments

Ten Tips for New Leaders by Chris Canter

Ten Tips for New Leaders

Canter-c120x148

Formerly a teacher, now an administrator-in-training, Chris Canter blogs about his yearlong assistant principal internship at Fulton County Public Schools in Atlanta, Ga. Canter was a 2010 …

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Added by Michael Keany on August 11, 2011 at 1:34pm — No Comments

Just Get Out There By Andrew Marcinek

Just Get Out There



By Andrew Marcinek

Edutopia



Yesterday I was wavering on whether or not to go for a run outside. I hadn't run in awhile and for some reason I was concerned that I would not be able to eclipse the two mile mark. The temperature was a balmy 31 degrees and there was still a thin layer of snow covering the ground. All of the variables in play suggested I stay home. As I continued to devise excuses not to run, someone very special in my life simply said,… Continue

Added by Michael Keany on August 10, 2011 at 7:19pm — No Comments

Why Do You Teach?: What Sustains Us in Our Work By Elena Aguilar

Why Do You Teach?: What Sustains Us in Our Work



By Elena Aguilar

Edutopia



In my previous post [2], I discussed how important it is for me to connect with my students, and how one way I do so is by eliciting their stories.



I also need to make connections with other teachers. So I ask, why do you teach? Most teachers get a dreamy look on their faces when I ask them this question. Most haven't thought about it in a while.



Recalling the reasons why… Continue

Added by Michael Keany on August 10, 2011 at 7:17pm — No Comments

Outstanding in Your Field: What It Takes to Be a Great Teacher By Ben Johnson

Outstanding in Your Field: What It Takes to Be a Great Teacher

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Added by Michael Keany on August 10, 2011 at 7:13pm — No Comments

Exciting New Ways to Engage Learners

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 2011
Hello!
When I was in school, the teacher spoke, the children listened, and that was that.  As we grew, not much changed . . . the teacher spoke, perhaps used an overhead projector, an occasional film, the children listened, we learned to take notes, and then that was that.
Today, we live in a whole new world.  It's called the age of technology!  Frequently, education is slow to integrate what the rest of the world has been at full…
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Added by Linda J. Tillinghast on August 10, 2011 at 5:56pm — No Comments

A Smoothie at the Zoo

In Steven Johnson’s book Where Good Ideas Come From The Natural History of Innovation, he tells the story of a nineteenth century French obstetrician, Stephane Tarnier, who noticed a chicken incubator on a visit to the Paris Zoo.  As he watched the chickens toddle around in the warmth of the device, he thought about the number of babies he delivered that had died.  Those babies had been born too soon and as he watched, he wondered if an incubator was the answer to this problem.  With…

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Added by Kim Yaris on August 10, 2011 at 8:30am — No Comments

Transforming your "To Do" List into a "To LEARN" List

Transforming your "To Do" list into a "To Learn" list

"I'm always ready to learn, although I do not always like being taught"  


Quotations by Winston Churchill
Winston Churchill…
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Added by Bill Burkhead on August 9, 2011 at 5:30am — 5 Comments

An Open Letter to Principals: Five Leadership Strategies for the New Year By Eric Sheninger

An Open Letter to Principals: Five Leadership Strategies for the New Year

By Eric Sheninger

8/8/11





Eric Sheninger is principal of New Milford High School and the subject of a recent article in USAToday on social media in the classroom. He is the author of Communicating & Connecting With Social Media. You can also follow him on Twitter at NMHS_Prinicipal.



As the calendar turns to August, school leaders across the country are meticulously planning for the… Continue

Added by Michael Keany on August 8, 2011 at 9:38pm — 1 Comment

Before we let them power up in class... By Nancy Flynn

Before we let them power up in class...

When one of our science teachers came to me last spring and told me we didn't have enough headphones to do the online…

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Added by Michael Keany on August 8, 2011 at 7:15pm — No Comments

Education Needs a Digital-Age Upgrade By VIRGINIA HEFFERNAN

Education Needs a Digital-Age Upgrade

 NY Times

 

If you have a child entering grade school this fall,…

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Added by Michael Keany on August 8, 2011 at 10:33am — No Comments

Does Social Media Offer PD Or Something More?

#Edchat, as well as about 50 other educational twitterchats, Digital Personal Learning Networks, Online Discussion Groups, Twitter, LinkedIn and a number of other Web 2.0 social media applications are often attributed by educators for offering professional development, or PD. Social Media is also credited with helping the emergence of Edcamps and Teachmeets, as well as online conferences like #140edu Conference and the Reform Symposium Conference. These are all considered by many to be…

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Added by Tom Whitby on August 6, 2011 at 2:57pm — No Comments

New Ally in Teaching Composition By Walt Gardner

New Ally in Teaching Composition

By Walt Gardner

Every subject poses unique instructional challenges. Yet I can't think of one that is more daunting than teaching composition. That's because it's impossible to teach students how to write effectively unless they are given an authentic opportunity to do so. Multiple-choice and short-answer exercises are simply no substitute.



During the 28 years that I taught English in the same high school, I envied my colleagues in other… Continue

Added by Michael Keany on August 5, 2011 at 2:10pm — No Comments

How to Work With the No-Homework Kid By Holden Clemens

How to Work With the No-Homework Kid

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Added by Michael Keany on August 5, 2011 at 2:07pm — No Comments

Second-Career Teachers

 

I am interested in learning more about second-career teachers. Particularly, I am interested in examining school administrators' perceptions in hiring, supporting and retaining second-career teachers.  

Please feel free to share any experiences on this topic.  

 

For clarity, "second-career teacher" is defined as an individual that…

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Added by Joseph A. Coladonato, Ed.D on August 4, 2011 at 7:23pm — 1 Comment

RSVP: Regrets Only By Susan Graham

RSVP: Regrets Only

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Added by Michael Keany on August 4, 2011 at 9:40am — No Comments

'Serving All Kids, No Exceptions' By Nirvi Shah

'Serving All Kids, No Exceptions'

More than 30 years after passage of the Individuals With Disabilities…

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Added by Michael Keany on August 3, 2011 at 3:27pm — No Comments

How to Mold Public Opinion Against Public Schools By Walt Gardner

How to Mold Public Opinion Against Public Schools

Two of the most effective tools of propagandists are to tell a big lie so often that it is…

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Added by Michael Keany on August 3, 2011 at 2:40pm — No Comments

Teacher Pay By Michael Bromley

Teacher Pay

Note: Michael Bromley, a teacher in Washington, DC, is guest-posting this week.

My colleagues groan…

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Added by Michael Keany on August 3, 2011 at 2:39pm — No Comments

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