Tag: students

  • An Open Letter to Mike Morath

    I know some of you might not be interested in what is happening in Texas with the Texas Education Agency (TEA) taking over the Houston Independent School District (HISD). Believe me, I’ve tried to stay away from the topic, but I wrote about it a bit last week and it looks like I’ll do the…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday, so it’s time for the News Roundup. Des Moines School Board Approves Doubling Security Spending as Part of $610 Million Budget (The Des Moines Register) The Des Moines Public Schools have experienced three shooting deaths since March of 2022, so their school board has decided to double security spending for the upcoming budget…

  • Anecdotes Don’t Fix Learning At Scale

    We love anecdotes. Public school advocates especially like anecdotes, especially those that explain away the problems our current educational system faces. Recently, the Texas Education Agency (TEA) won a court case allowing it to replace the school board and superintendent in Houston. Mike Morath, the Texas education commissioner, gave an interview to a local Houston…

  • 1 Percent

    I saw recently that the ASU/GSV Summit, a conference for educators along with ed tech folks, is going to award Wendy Kopp their Lifetime Achievement Award this coming April. As many of you are aware, Ms. Kopp started Teach for America, an organization which invites recent college graduates to sign on to a two-year hitch…

  • Money For Nothin…

    I receive thousands of advertisements every year, promising to have the solution to everything that ails our traditional public school system. Like this one: “Hello Scott, We’ve leveraged the process of innovation in a stimulating, multi-disciplinary course that promotes the real-world skills of creativity, problem-solving, and entrepreneurship. The course engages students at all levels for…

  • The Learning Leader Puzzle

    I recently read an interesting piece posted by Will Richardson from the BIG Questions Institute. Richardson writes, “As much as the systems and structures of school seem to be intractable, let’s remember one thing: All of what we do is a choice.” “We don’t have to give grades. Lots of schools don’t. We choose to…

  • The “Whistlers” Will Carry the Day

    I recently listened to a podcast when Ezra Klein interviewed Rick Rubin, the famous recording producer. In the introduction, Klein says this about Rubin: “Reading Rick Rubin’s production discography is like taking a tour through the commanding heights of American music over the past few decades. Jay-Z. Run-DMC. Beastie Boys. Slayer. The Red Hot Chili…

  • Friday News Roundup

    Teacher Pay, School Choice, Literacy: Top Priorities for 44 Governors in 2023 (The 74) The 74 recently reported that a majority of the country’s governors are focusing on teacher pay, school choice, and improved literacy as their states debate how money will be spent within public education. If the past is any indicator of what…

  • Designing an Effective Learning Team

    When it comes to building athletic and performing arts teams, traditional schools invest time and energy to make these teams highly effective. When it comes to building academic teams within traditional schools? Well, not so much. I recently read with interest an article that appeared in Fast Company earlier this year titled “How Building Teams…

  • Learning Design, Not School Design

    It’s always been perplexing to me why traditional educators have always equated learning space with places called schools. It’s like the traditionalists can’t recognize that learning is happening anytime and anywhere – not just 8 AM to 4 PM, August thru May. Earlier this month, I read with interest an interview published by Education Reimagined.…