Tag: parents
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Friday News Roundup
Time for the Friday News Roundup. From “Bring It On” to “This Policy Is Crazy,” NYC Parents React to Cellphone Ban (The 74) It seems NYC parents are changing their tune regarding their district’s across-the-board cellphone ban. Alina Adams from The 74 reported earlier this week that, “One year after I reported on New York…
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AI Forces a Change in Learning
So much media coverage on artificial intelligence (AI) and its impact on the teaching and learning inside our K-12 public education system is focused on what adults – teachers, administrators, political stakeholders, parents – are saying about what most see as an existential threat to how kids learn moving forward. But we haven’t heard much,…
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No Teachers and No Curriculum
Happy Constitution Day! My wife is convinced that my ideas about a new learning system are not scalable. Hiring a gifted learning coach, one for literacy and one for problem-solving, and paying them upward of $100,000 a year for their services, expecting a learning cohort to show 4 ½ years of reading, writing, and math…
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They’re Not Reading
Kids aren’t reading as much as they did. Popular opinion blames social media. But maybe there are other reasons. Recently, The 74 published an article titled “Why Are So Few Kids Reading For Pleasure?”: … “Over the course of two generations, from 1984 to 2023, the proportion of 13-year-olds who said they ‘never or hardly…
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Old Motels
Kids don’t have to attend school to learn. Today, the world is their classroom, and they should be given credit for their learning wherever and whenever that learning happens. When we ran a personalized learning lab school in Houston, one of the big takeaways was that the city offered a multitude of locations for learning…
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Friday News Roundup
It’s Friday. Time for the News Roundup. Confusion as Kids Head Back to School and RFK Jr. Calls the Shots on Vaccines (The 74) Last week, Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. met with members of the U.S. Senate Finance Committee. Not surprisingly, Democratic members of the committee were especially critical…
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The Social Prescription
Our traditional K-12 system has lost its creativity, if it ever had it. Few thinkers inside that system approach challenges and problems with the question “How can we make this better?” Instead, our K-12 leaders are more than willing to double-down on what they believe has worked for them, and kids, in the past –…
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New Orleans’ Schools – 20 Years After Katrina, Part 2
In the second installment of a two-part ABPTL series, we continue to look at the reasons why New Orlean schools improved and why those schools still have a long way to go to achieve equity between all K-12 learners: “From 60th to 6th.” “In 2005, New Orleans schools ranked 60th among Louisiana’s 68 districts in…
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New Orleans’ Schools – 20 Years After Katrina
It’s been 20 years since Hurricane Katrina destroyed much of New Orleans, Louisiana. My wife and I happened to be in the Crescent City that weekend. I was scheduled to attend a College Board leadership conference, so we decided to make a weekend of it. As I was riding in from the airport, I noticed…
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Grading’s Latest Woes
The way we “grade” learning, still today, is archaic and misguided. It invites misalignment between graders, a false sense of security on behalf of the learner, and a general sense that we really don’t know how well our young learners are meeting their reading, writing, and problem-solving goals. And this just doesn’t happen in our…