Category: Learnings

  • Designing an Effective Learning Team

    When it comes to building athletic and performing arts teams, traditional schools invest time and energy to make these teams highly effective. When it comes to building academic teams within traditional schools? Well, not so much. I recently read with interest an article that appeared in Fast Company earlier this year titled “How Building Teams…

  • Learning Design, Not School Design

    It’s always been perplexing to me why traditional educators have always equated learning space with places called schools. It’s like the traditionalists can’t recognize that learning is happening anytime and anywhere – not just 8 AM to 4 PM, August thru May. Earlier this month, I read with interest an interview published by Education Reimagined.…

  • More on the Re-Do

    Need more reasons to start thinking about what a new learning system might look like for our kids? Take a look at some of these comments from teachers when EducationWeek online asked them why students shouldn’t be allowed to redo assignments. Here are some comments falling under the “students might not try their best the…

  • To Re-Do or Not?

    It’s amazing to me how much school misunderstands and therefore misuses time. In school learning takes place and is therefore rewarded between 8 AM to 3 PM, August to May. Grades are determined and assigned based on a grading period, usually 6 weeks. Assignments are due on a daily basis, and if late, usually penalizes…

  • The Illusive Demanding Parent

    Last week I read with interest an article written by Kelly Young, leader of the Washington-based Education Reimagined group. In her piece, titled “Demand Is Here to Stay (And Might Have Been There All Along), Young writes, “Over the past decade and a half, I’ve been in conversations with thousands of families. From my days…

  • Saving the White Parent and the Rest

    White parents have been catching a lot of heat these days inside public schools. Whether it has them criticizing critical race theory, books in their school library, or the new AP African-American curriculum, white parents have become media darlings when it comes to ranting and raving against our public school system. That’s why I read…

  • The Importance of Planning

    By now, all of you know my loyalty to a “define, plan, execute, and evaluate” approach to deep learning. I’ve seen this cycle work for countless kids in countless situations. The sad news is that not enough teachers and administrators in the traditional public school system believe in this process, and even less train young…

  • Schools Don’t Understand the Use of Time

    I continue to be fascinated with how our current public school system struggles to use time differently. Public schools continue to define their time by 8-hour days, 5-day weeks, 6-week grading periods, and 180-day school years. Even those districts that attempt to deviate from the norm run into challenges. Take for example the 27J school…

  • Learner Accountability is the Future

    I worked in the public education system from 1984 to 2018, at the height of standard-based accountability based on high-stakes testing. Students were held back, teachers and principals fired, campuses labeled “sucky schools”, and school boards voted out because of test results. We were convinced that this type of accountability would fix our public schools.…

  • On This Valentine’s Day, Let’s Show Some Love for the Beaver

    Last fall I read an interesting article written by Adam Haigler. Adam is the co-founder of Open Way Learning, an organization that helps schools and school districts to co-design cultures of sustained innovation. In the article, Haigler uses the beaver as an example of an ecosystem disruptor. Haigler writes, “There are some species in an…