Tag: teachers
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The Unit of Change is the Young Learner – Not the School
A friend of mine wrote this piece recently. He writes, “In my principalship days, the role was incredibly challenging. After leading a small high school that I helped found, I became the principal of a new and very large comprehensive high school. I served for three years, and then it all caught up to me.…
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Still More on Grading
Sometimes we don’t know what we don’t know. But just like we want our young learners to be lifelong pursuers of knowledge and skill, as adult learning leaders, we must demonstrate the drive to learn from our past so it informs our future. Take for example the article Sarah Ruth Morris wrote for EducationWeek online…
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Friday News Roundup
It’s Friday, and here’s your News Roundup. Schooling vs. Learning: How Lax Standards Hurt the Lowest-Performing Students (The 74) According to author Chad Aldeman, writing in this week’s The 74 online, “If someone I care about has a piece of food stuck in their teeth, or a tag is sticking out the back of their…
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Public School’s Market Share Continues to Slip
Our public school system is in trouble. It continues to lose market share when it comes to American families choosing it as their preferred option when it comes to their children’s learning. And it’s biggest competition isn’t private school, or even charters – it’s homeschooling. Just this week, The Washington Post reported, “Home schooling has…
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A Further Indictment
I’m a big fan of The Texas Tribune, an online news organization, focused on everything about Texas. For those who haven’t been paying attention, the Texas Legislature is in special session, trying to figure out school vouchers, along with other issues associated with the state’s public education system. Today The Trib hosted a panel event…
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Columbus, Ohio
The learner-centered movement seems to be growing in Columbus, Ohio. According to a recent article printed in the Education Reimagined online newsletter, “The elements of a learner-centered ecosystem are emerging in Columbus, Ohio. For the last 20 years, the PAST Foundation has been offering learners access to hands-on learning opportunities as global businesses planted roots…
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Social Media Isn’t Going Away
Schools have never figured out how to use social media well. Whether it’s banning cell phones, banning ChatGPT, or failing at providing a quality virtual learning environment during the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s clear the traditional public school system hasn’t made it into the 21st century. And now 41 states have decided to sue Mark Zuckerberg’s…
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Maybe This Is Something Big
In the last Friday News Roundup, I shared news from Education Reimagined that they intend to launch a $20 million research and development project intended to create and enact a new design for a modern public education system that aligns more directly with the needs of learners, their communities and our economy. I said Friday…
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Trust
This article is about trust. I used to be a big fan of The Education Trust, a Washington D.C.-think tank led for many years by Kati Haycock. According to their mission, The Education Trust’s is “committed to advancing policies and practices to dismantle the racial and economic barriers embedded in the American education system.” I…
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Censoring Detracts From Learning
Libraries are under attack these days, and so you might say learning is under attack too. Part of what I try to do in this column is to emphasize the importance of building learners who can define, plan, execute, and evaluate their own learning. Libraries, along with other centers of academic and social capital, assist…