Tag: learning

  • Parent Involvement That Works

    I’m back from a week’s vacation. I spent some of that time in West Virginia celebrating our son’s medical school launch. Let’s be clear about one thing. Parental involvement in a child’s learning does not mean that a small, self-interested group of parents get to decide what is right for young learners who aren’t their…

  • You’re Not Entitled to Your Own Facts

    Summertime Thursdays are usually reserved for “A Little About a Lot.” But today, I wanted to share Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson’s piece printed earlier this week: “Florida’s decision to teach in schools that slavery in this country was of “personal benefit” to some enslaved people is obscene revisionism. It is like teaching that though…

  • If You Don’t Believe Me

    If you’ve read this column more than a handful of times, you’ll know that I think our present public school system is pathetically dysfunctional, so much so that the system itself needs to be replaced with a public learning system focused on learning plans for every kid, learning coaches instead of teachers, and small groups…

  • Chef Sean

    One of my favorite shows streaming these days is “The Bear.” It’s the story of a young chef from the fine dining world who comes home to Chicago to run his family sandwich shop after a heartbreaking death in his family. I like to cook, and read recipes, and learn from chefs, so “The Bear”…

  • Curiosity and Learning

    Have you ever visited a Pre-K classroom and watched the young learner’s eyes? I’ve always told young educators that eyes don’t lie, meaning if you want to see a young learner’s engagement with what they are learning, look at their eyes. Young learners are naturally curious about almost everything. But then something happens, usually while…

  • Friday News Roundup

    Here’s your Friday News Roundup. Brazosport ISD Is Training Its Own Teachers. The Program Might Become a Model for Other Texas Schools (The Texas Tribune) The Texas Tribune reported earlier this week that, “The Brazosport Independent School District is always in need of more teacher – and for a long time, it wasn’t able to…

  • A Little About A Lot

    This past Sunday, Josh Shapiro, Governor of Pennsylvania, wrote an interesting opinion piece for The Washington Post. This past June, Interstate 95 – one of the nation’s busiest highways – collapsed in Philadelphia. The highway reopened in 12 days. When asked how that was accomplished, Governor Shapiro offered four reasons: Empower strong leadership. Speed up…

  • Learning While Playing

    I’ve written about Caroline Pratt before. Pratt was the principal of City and Country School, a play-based campus located in New York City. She also wrote a seminal book titled “I Learn From Children.” Look it up and read it this summer. When we launched our personalized learning lab school in the Houston Museum District…

  • The Slippery Slope of Parent Empowerment

    Before I started writing this column, I helped launch The Education Game with a Houstonian committed to changing the way kids learn moving forward. The Education Game’s theory of action was to educate parents about how most public schools were providing a sub-par learning experience for most children, including their own. Once these parents became…

  • Dysfunctional Richmond

    In late June, Alec MacGillis, a staff writer for The New Yorker, wrote an article highlighting the difficulties the Richmond, Virginia school district was having getting their students back on track after the COVID-19 pandemic. MacGillis writes, “Richmond is a particularly stark example of what education researchers say is nationwide crisis. Student learning across the…