Tag: teachers

  • A New Year’s Manifesto

    Happy New Year! Will Richardson just released something he is calling “A Manifesto” titled “Confronting Education In a Time of Complexity, Chaos, and Collapse.” Richardson was a public school educator for over two decades before he began questioning current practices within our K-12 public school system. An author calling for a different and more creative…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday! Time for the last News Roundup of 2024. Edutopia just published their “2024 in Review,” a collection of stories that highlight what they considered important when it comes to young learners. Here are nine of their 2024 most compelling ideas and passionate debates that sparked important, memorable discussions among educators: “I’m a teacher,…

  • Our Youngest Learners Are In Trouble

    We are still struggling with learning loss caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, but this time the loss is infecting those kids who weren’t even in school when COVID appeared back in March of 2020. This past summer, The New York Times reported that, “The pandemic’s babies, toddlers and preschoolers are now school-age, and the impact…

  • Learner Led

    When I worked in the traditional K-12 public school system, I constantly thought we didn’t ask enough of our young learners. We were content to have them sit passively at their desks, listening to us lecture on and one about things we knew about, and they didn’t. But what if they knew more about subject…

  • A Sad, Sad Trick

    Education savings accounts are currently being used by mostly middle-class families who are interested in leaving our public school system and enrolling in available private schools. What education savings accounts should be used for is to help primarily lower class families to find learning options for their kids so that those youngsters no longer have…

  • Learners as Explorers

    Exploration is one of the best learning models available – for both young and old. Exploring usually begins with a question, and then pursuit toward answer for that question. Exploration almost always involves challenge and struggle, but with the right type of support and encouragement, most questions lead to answers which lead to learning. Last…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday. Time for the News Roundup. Amid Explosion of School Choice, Report Spotlights the Marginalized Families Left Behind (The 74) As feared, the families that need choice the most, when it comes to their child’s education, don’t have real options when it comes to K-12 public schools. The 74 reported this week that, “As…

  • TFA’s Tired Lines

    Elisa Villanueva Beard, CEO of Teach for America, wrote an interesting article for The 74 last week titled “Too Many Students Say School Just Isn’t Relevant. It’s Time to Listen to Them.” I’m no longer a big fan of Teach for America. Like most reform efforts, after making a big scene in their first 10…

  • Kim Reynolds the Copy Cat

    As much as I want to get away from this story, I can’t. I promised my readers – No More Cell Phone Coverage for the Rest of the Year – but the story will never die. Now, it’s Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds making news in the Hawkeye State that she will propose a bill banning…

  • An Innovative World

    Many agree that America’s K-12 education system is stuck, unable to break out from the shackles that prevent too many kids from becoming strong readers, writers, and problem-solvers. But if we look at other countries around the world, their schools seem to be working better for their kids than ours. Why? Recently, Virgil Hammonds from…