Author: svb802

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday. Time for the News Roundup. Post Childbirth Without Paid Leave, Teachers Leave Their Own Children to Teach Others’ (The 74) The 74 online reported this week that, “When elementary school teacher Kimberly Papa gave birth to her daughter, Margot, a little over a year ago, she wasn’t expecting much in the way of…

  • How to Motivate Learners

    Back in 2019, Work Life (an Atlassian online newsletter) asked Daniel Pink, author of “Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us,” five questions about motivation, and how motivation makes the difference when it comes to human performance – including learning. Here are excerpts from that interview: … Work Life: “Do you believe in the…

  • Columbine 25 Years After

    25 years ago, 12 students and one teacher were murdered in cold blood inside Columbine High School. I was finishing up five years as a middle school principal, getting ready to open a brand-new high school. Myself, my school, my community, my city, my state, and my nation were shocked at what happened at Columbine…

  • An AI Update

    Last week, I wrote an article that shared some of Julia Freedland Fisher’s thinking from her article titled “Beyond Bans: Schools’ Role in a Hard Reset on the ‘Phone-Based Childhood’.” In the article, Fisher writes: “There’s another article that should lend urgency to getting this [Artificial intelligence and other technology innovations] right. It’s a memo…

  • A Different Type of Public Schooling

    My wife is critical of my vision for a new type of public schooling in this country. She is afraid that like-minded people will congregate together to begin their own version of “schooling,” while accessing public dollars to do it. She pleads with me “Scott, do you want learning pods of Nazis? Because that’s what…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It was a slow news week in the world of learning, but nevertheless… It’s Friday! Time for the Roundup. D.C. Needs More Than Phonics to Lift Its Students’ Reading Scores (The 74) The 74 online reported this week that, “A decade ago, Washington D.C. was hailed as a national model for education reform. The charter…

  • A Little About a Lot

    Over the years, I’ve collected tidbits of information related to learning. There really isn’t a connection between any of what I share today – only short vignettes about learning and related subjects that seemed interesting to me at the time. Here’s another edition of “A Little About a Lot.” For reference, I’ve included the year…

  • Embracing the Bogeyman

    If you’ve read most of what I’ve written in this column about AI, social media, smartphones, and traditional schools trying to ban all of these recently, you know that I’m not convinced schools know what they are doing, whether it be banning these potential learning tools or using them more effectively in the learning process.…

  • Flexible Futures

    Earlier this month, I read with interest a story about “Flexible Futures,” a public school program in Germany focused on connecting work with learning. The story, originally published by The Hechinger Report, was re-published by Reasons to be Cheerful. The story begins, “Neriman Raim, a 16-year-old student in Cologne, Germany, thought that after finishing school…

  • Rethinking Student Success

    Traditional school districts have always taken a narrow view of what student success really means. During most of my K-12 career, if a young learner passed a high-stakes test, then that student was judged a success. I can’t tell you how many young learners, in my career at least, were poor readers, writers, and problem-solvers,…