Tag: students

  • Maybe the Shift is Happening

    Good news! According to a recent article posted by Tom Vander Ark, CEO of Getting Smart, there is a shift happening between our traditional K-12 school system and newer, more innovative learning organizations. Vander Ark writes, “After a two-year investigation including hundreds of interviews, Kim Smith and Jen Holleran published a landscape of innovation in…

  • The Art of Positive Feedback

    Impactful learning depends on constructive feedback, both positive and negative. Recently, Arthur C. Brooks, a contributor to The Atlantic and a Harvard professor, wrote an article addressing positive feedback titled “A Compliment That Really Means Something.” Brooks writes, “…The quality of our relationships, in fact, depends on the ratio of praise to criticism that is…

  • Be Careful What You Ignore

    Last week I promised to stop writing about school cellphone controversy for the rest of the year (even though I included a cellphone story in ABPTL’s latest Friday News Roundup). So I’m not going to write about cellphones. But I am going to write about artificial intelligence. Recently, Edutopia posted a story about Chanea Bond,…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday. Time for the Roundup. Richmond Pilot Program Asks: What Happens If a School Year Is 200 Days, Not 180? (The 74) I’ll spare you this article’s details. What happens if a school year is 200 days, not 180? Research tells us that most kids will learn more over 200 days compared to 180.…

  • Closing Schools

    There are schools that need to be closed. They are toxic places when it comes to making kids smarter and stronger, especially black, brown, and poor kids. When I started teaching in 1984 in the Houston public school system, there were at least 20-25 schools, elementary and secondary, in need of closing. Those schools weren’t…

  • The Last Cellphone Rant for 2024

    Kids can’t read. Kids can’t do math. Neighborhood schools are closing. Black, brown, and poor learners are seriously behind their white counterparts when it comes to achievement. And the most important topic discussed in our K-12 world this school year – so far – is whether kids will be allowed to access cell phones in…

  • A Mother’s New Project

    “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed individuals can change the world. In fact, it’s the only thing that ever has.” – Margaret Mead There’s a movement starting in America, and the movement is called “microschools.” And many of the leaders of this microschool movement are women, the mothers of the young learners…

  • The Superintendent’s Dilemma

    Schools back in session here in Des Moines, Iowa. My wife and I split time between Des Moines and Montpelier, Vermont, so I take an interest in what is happening with the largest K-12 public school system in Iowa. Back in July, the Des Moines Register published an article reflecting on Ian Roberts’s first year…

  • Friday News Roundup

    Here’s your Friday News Roundup. Skyrocketing Test Gains in Oklahoma Are Largely Fiction, Experts Say (The 74) Sometimes, high-stakes testing leads to unintended consequences – like cheating. The 74 reported last week that, “Oklahoma school districts got some shocking, but welcome news this month when the state released results of student tests from last school…

  • The Nostalgia Around Learning

    I recently ran across an article written by Chad Aldeman, a reporter for EducationWeek. The article, titled “No Textbooks, Times Tables or Spelling Test: Things My 6th Grader Didn’t Learn” begins, “My daughter recently completed sixth grade at our local public school. She had a wonderful experience with warm teachers and a positive school culture.…