Tag: teachers

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s Friday! Time for the News Roundup. Against Ten Commandments in Schools? Tell Your Kid Not to Look, Governor Says (Washington Post) Earlier this month, the Washington Post reported that, “Parents who oppose the display of the Ten Commandments in public classroom in Louisiana should ‘just tell the child not to look,’ Governor Jeff Landry,…

  • Remembering Ken Robinson

    Read these words and think about what “might be” when it comes to creating a new system of learning for our kids: “So I want to talk about education, and I want to talk about creativity. My contention is that creativity now is as important in education as literacy, and we should treat it with…

  • Motivating Learners

    Opening day for traditional K-12 campuses is right around the corner. Some schools have already started. The opening of a school year is a good time to examine the importance of motivation when it comes to making young learners smarter and stronger. Recently, EducationWeek bundled a group of articles together suggesting how teachers inside traditional…

  • The Choice Challenge

    About a month ago I ran across a podcast called Good on Paper, hosted by Jerusalem Demsas, a reporter for The Atlantic. This podcast episode was titled “A Remarkable School-Choice Experiment: Are Principals the Key to Improving Schools?” The introduction begins this way: “In 2012, Los Angeles Unified School District set up an experiment. It…

  • Second Thoughts on Grit

    I’m back. I used to be a big fan of “grit,” and how important it was to a young learner’s ability to become smarter and stronger. Angela Duckworth, a professor at The University of Pennsylvania, first termed the phrase “grit” back in the 2010’s, referring to a learner’s ability to persevere and become passionate about…

  • Happy Birthday James Baldwin

    Tomorrow will be the 100th anniversary of James Baldwin’s birth. Baldwin was an African-American novelist, essayist, playwright, poet, and social critic. In an article written in October of 1963, Baldwin addressed the challenges of education to prepare to grapple with the myths and realities of U.S. history. An excerpt of this article follows: “I began…

  • The Hole in the Wall Story

    How do you get young learners smarter and stronger when places called schools aren’t available? Back at the turn of the century, in the year 1999, an Indian software engineer named  Sugata Mitra realized that there was no way India was ever going to build enough brick and mortar schools to meet the needs of…

  • Floating Schools, Part 2

    Americans love their brick and mortar schools. It’s part of the traditional public education system. But in other parts of the world, leaders have learned to adapt to their environments by creating learning spaces anywhere and everywhere. Most recently, Getting Smart’s Nate McClennen sat down with Mohammed Rezwan, who has spent over 20 years increasing…

  • Floating Schools, Part 1

    There are millions of kids in the world who do not go to brick and mortar schools (think of rural India and China). Instead, these young learners work on their reading, writing, and problem-solving skills wherever they can find a place to learn. Instead of thinking of these global microschools as strange, like many Americans…

  • Friday News Roundup

    It’s a July Friday. Time for the Roundup. Texas’ Christian-Influenced Curriculum Spurs Worries about Bullying, Church-State Separation (The Texas Tribune) The line between church and state is becoming narrower across the nation, but probably nowhere more than Texas. The Texas Tribune reported last week that, “Andy Wine thinks most children can understand the Golden Rule.…