Tag: students

  • The Met (And I’m Not Talking About the Opera)

    Back in the 1990’s, I attended a school principal’s conference in Denver, Colorado. It was your typical leadership meeting, complete with keynote speakers and breakout sessions. As I perused the conference agenda, I decided to walk into a 45-minute breakout led by Dennis Littky. Littky and his partner Elliot Washor had just launched The Met,…

  • A Learning Tale

    A Learning Tale, in Celebration of Learning Everywhere (including traditional school) From her first day, Maggie had a learning plan. One of the first meetings after Maggie was born included Maggie’s mom, her pediatrician, and a coach from the local learning center. As part of her birthing classes, Maggie’s mom received training to ready herself…

  • Blaming the Victim

    I’ve written about being absent from school before. The traditionalists would like you to believe that being absent from school is somehow being absent from learning. Not true. All the post-pandemic learning loss being measured today is based on how much classroom time a student has missed. It doesn’t consider the learning that could have…

  • AI and Higher Education

    I’ve written a lot about AI and specifically ChatGPT over the past few months. Yesterday, Washington Post reporter Pranshu Verma focused on AI and ChatGPT at the higher education level. Verma writes, “Soon after ChatGPT was released in November, Darren Keast noticed students in his college English composition class turning in essays that read as…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday and here is your News Roundup. The Number of Students in Special Education Has Doubled in the Past 45 Years (EducationWeek) EducationWeek online published a story late last month that reported, “The number of students in special education in the United States has doubled over the past four decades, creating a rising share…

  • A Little About A Lot

    It’s perplexing to me why we can’t let kids learn, and receive recognition for that learning, when young learners are away from places called school. When we ran out personalized learning lab school in the Houston Museum District, we told our young learners and their families that “Houston, Texas was our classroom!” I read last…

  • A New Model is Needed

    I took a graduate course titled “Models of Teaching.” The class was all about exposing us to different models of classroom instruction – direct, group, and inquiry-based to name a few. It’s time to get rid of courses like “Models of Teaching.” In fact, evidence might be telling us it’s time to get rid of…

  • Who the Hell is Mike Miles?

    Who the hell is Mike Miles? Mike Miles is the new superintendent for the Houston Independent School District. The State of Texas assigned Miles to Houston’s public school district after winning a court case that said a “takeover” of Houston’s public schools was acceptable. A new school board was also appointed by the Texas Education…

  • 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…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday! Time for the News Roundup. There’s Lots at Stake for Districts and Kids When Underenrolled Schools Stay Open (The 74) When I worked for the Houston public schools, one of the hardest tasks we had to do was close underenrolled schools. In fact, I would say NOT closing schools that needed to be…