Author: svb802

  • Putting the Genie Back in the Bottle

    “Australia is actually doing this. As of December 10th, no one under 16 will be allowed to have an account on TikTok, Snapchat, YouTube, Instagram, or basically any other platform an average teen might care about.” That was the lead in an article appearing in December 4th online issue of The Atlantic. Called the Online…

  • The Danger of Assumptions

    A beginning teacher was sitting at her desk one day when her principal came into the room. The principal handed her a class roster. Beside the student names were numbers – beginning with the number 120. The teacher was ecstatic since she had inherited such a smart class, as the numbers beside the student names…

  • Embracing Followership

    Not everyone can be a leader. We need good followers, people who know how to support and act. I listened with interest to Shane Battier, a retired NBA champion basketball player, talk about the importance of being a top teammate. Here are some excerpts from his December, 2024 TED talk: “What if I could tell…

  • Friday News Roundup

    Here’s your Friday News Roundup! Vermont Property Taxes Could Soar an “Unacceptable” 12% Next Year (Burlington Free Press) Governor Greg Abbott Has a Sweeping Plan to Abolish Texas’ School Property Taxes. Would It Work? (The Texas Tribune) This Vermont headline could include almost every other state in the country. The cost of traditional public schools…

  • Anywhere Learning: The Lake Champlain Maritime Museum

    As I wander around this world, I often think about all of the places I visit that could make outstanding learning spots for kids – space that could, if they wanted to, take the place of under-performing schools that are injuring young learners, especially black, brown, and poor learners, on a daily basis. One such…

  • Again, A Failed Model

    Twenty years ago, our K-12 system talked a lot about preparing students to be “college and career ready.” The thought back then was kids needed to have strong reading, writing, and problem-solving abilities no matter what path they were pursuing – college or a trade. The sad news today is that our traditional public education…

  • The Folly of Scientific Reading

    Mike Miles is not well liked in certain circles in Houston, Texas. Miles is the state-appointed school superintendent that seems to be hanging around the Houston Independent School District (HISD) for too long, some say. ABPTL covered a story awhile back about Miles and his central office cronies mandating Houston classrooms to cease reading chapter…

  • A Failing Model

    If you pay attention, there are signs all over the place that our current K-12 educational system is failing. Although it’s no fault of most teachers, administrators, and students, the fact remains that too many of our kids are not becoming smarter and stronger after spending time in our public schools. Witness a story appearing…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday. Time for the News Roundup. Why Parents Aren’t Reading to Kids, and What It Means for Young Students (The 74) Maybe there are other reasons our kids aren’t reading as much these days, other than social media. Houston Chronicle’s Lisa Falkenberg has written about Houston Independent School District leaders frowning on kids reading…

  • Learning as a Civil Right

    Mary Maker is a South Sudanese refugee, a United Nations High Commission for Refugees activist, and founder of Elimisha Kakuma, a non-profit committed to helping Sudanese refugees to become smarter and stronger. In 2018, Maker gave an impassioned TED Talk at TedxKakumaCamp titled “Why I Fight for the Education of Refugee Girls.” Here are excerpts…