Tag: students

  • Raising the Bar

    What makes a great learning organization? The 74 polled 186 educators involved in the Canopy project, a collaborative effort to share information about K-12 innovation, about the information they use to determine whether their schools are doing a good job. Here are excerpts from that post: “School options are proliferating, with the Trump administration and…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday! Time for the News Roundup. Lawmakers Want to Expand Texas’ Teacher Pay Raise Program. Many Educators Will Still Be Left Out (The Texas Tribune) According to The Texas Tribune earlier this month, “The Teacher Incentive Allotment gives raises to teachers base on performance. But it leaves out many educators and school staff who…

  • Crossing the Line

    Today the Supreme Court deadlocked 4-4 to prevent Oklahoma from approving the nation’s first religious public charter school. NBC News reported that, … “The decision by the evenly divided court means that a ruling by the Oklahoma Supreme Court that said the proposal to launch St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School violates both the…

  • Everyone Is Cheating!

    Homa Tavangar from The Big Questions Institute wrote an interesting piece this week titled “If ‘Everyone is Cheating,’ What Questions Should We Be Asking?” Here are excerpts from Tavangar’s post: “At a recent workshop with a few dozen Heads of School at independent schools in the U.S., one of the participants expressed yet one more…

  • What’s In a Grade?

    After almost a month away from the post, I’m back today. I spent the last three weeks in Turkey – specifically Izmir and Istanbul. If you are ever thinking about a place to visit that might not be tops on your list, think Turkey. The food is delicious (“lessetli” in Turkish), the people are wonderful,…

  • A Bad Decision? Part 2

    Did America make a mistake by not keeping K-12 schools open during the COVID-19 pandemic? A new book, authored by David Zweig, titled An Abundance of Caution, suggests so. But an article appearing in The New York Times last month tells us that K-12 leaders are still debating whether schools should have been closed and…

  • A Bad Decision?

    Did America make a mistake by not keeping K-12 schools open during the COVID-19 pandemic? A new book, authored by David Zweig, titled An Abundance of Caution, suggests so. Last week, The 74 posted an article highlighting the story: “Just a few weeks into the COVID pandemic, veteran New York journalist David Zweig began looking…

  • Possibly a New Way Part 2

    Today we continue to explore a new learning leaders’ program at Moravian University, led by Dr. Randy Ziegenfuss and his team. Education Reimagined recently posted a story on the Moravian Ed.D. program, of which Part 1 was shared here last Thursday. Today, Part 2: “In the Moravian Ed.D. program, these five learner-centered principles aren’t just…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday! Time for the News Roundup. Amid National Voucher Push, Missouri Once Again Turns to Open Enrollment (The 74) Missouri is trying to establish “open enrollment” statewide. “Open enrollment” allows a student to enroll in a public school anywhere they choose, so that they aren’t bound to a zoned school based upon the location…

  • Possibly A New Way

    I’ve told this story before, but it’s worth telling again. Years ago, I had lunch with the dean of education at a public university located in Houston, Texas. I wanted to pitch him an idea for a new way to educate adult learning leaders. The idea revolved around training a corps of learning coaches to…