Tag: teachers
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A Special Friday News Roundup
Lately, I’ve been noticing a disturbing trend from the educational news feeds I follow daily. Most of the K-12 educational news reported isn’t related to how we get kids smarter and stronger at all. I was ready to report on the following news this week: “Vermont Parents Upset Over Lack of Access to Standardized Test…
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More on Grading
One reason our public schools are so damned inequitable to the kids who attend them is because of our inconsistent methods of evaluating learning – or grading. I’ve written about this before, but just this morning I read a posting about a teacher who was fired because she refused to give a 50 instead of…
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I Love Public Schooling – Just Not Public School
Recently I’ve been accused of being anti-public school. On one hand it’s surprising since I worked 35 years in the public school system, 25 years in a Texas urban school district and 10 more as the leader of an influential educational non-profit committed to improving public schools by working on leadership development and classroom practice.…
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One Year Down
Here’s the first article posted when A Better Path to Learning launched one year ago today. I’ve made a few revisions, but the goal remains – The goal of this work is to explain how a new learning system can be created for our kids, with or without schools! 58 years ago, President Lyndon B.…
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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…
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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…
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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…
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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…
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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…
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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…